
Kouri Richins Trial: Defense Exposes What Investigators Didn't Test, Didn't Search, Didn't Do
The Case Against Kouri Richins · Hidden Killers Podcast
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Show Notes
The defense in the Kouri Richins trial is winning on what investigators didn't do—and that strategy may be enough. Through meticulous cross-examination, attorneys Kathy Nester, Wendy Lewis, and Alex Ramos have exposed a pattern of forensic tests never performed, evidence never collected, and investigative decisions that raise serious questions about whether this case was built on assumptions rather than proof.
Tony Brueski and Robin Dreeke sit down with defense attorney Bob Motta for analysis of Part 2 of this critical interview. Dr. Erik Christensen admitted hair follicle testing could have determined whether Eric was a chronic fentanyl user—and that those results would have influenced his manner-of-death determination. The test was never ordered. Crime scene tech Chelsea Gipson acknowledged the kitchen and basement weren't searched the night Eric died. The copperware wasn't tested. An empty hydrocodone bottle wasn't analyzed.
Carmen Lauber's credibility took significant damage under Wendy Lewis's cross-examination. She admitted testing positive for methamphetamine, changing her story after receiving immunity from three jurisdictions, and being told by a detective that "the goal is to convict Kouri for aggravated murder."
The toxicology creates an interesting problem for the prosecution. Eric's system showed fentanyl but no oxycodone. The defense has acknowledged Kouri sought oxycodone for Eric's chronic pain. If Carmen provided oxy but Eric died of fentanyl, the fatal dose had to come from somewhere else. The prosecution's own narcotics detective testified he'd never seen prescription Roxies with fentanyl—only street counterfeits. Eric recently traveled to Mexico.
The defense has 35 witnesses ready. Bob Motta breaks down what they need to accomplish when their turn comes—and whether there's strategic risk in having already exposed so much through cross-examination.
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