Current:Home > MyUtah mom accused of poisoning husband and writing book about grief made moves to "profit from his passing," lawsuit claims -SecureWealth Vault
Utah mom accused of poisoning husband and writing book about grief made moves to "profit from his passing," lawsuit claims
SignalHub View
Date:2025-04-11 09:59:41
A lawsuit against a Utah woman who wrote a children's book about coping with grief after her husband's death and now stands accused of his fatal poisoning was filed Tuesday, seeking over $13 million in damages for alleged financial wrongdoing before and after his death.
The lawsuit was filed against Kouri Richins in state court by Katie Richins-Benson, the sister of Kouri Richins' late husband Eric Richins. It accuses the woman of taking money from the husband's bank accounts, diverting money intended to pay his taxes and obtaining a fraudulent loan, among other things, before his death in March 2022.
Kouri Richins has been charged with murder in her late husband's death.
"Kouri committed the foregoing acts in calculated, systematic fashion and for no reason other than to actualize a horrific endgame - to conceal her ruinous debt, misappropriate assets for the benefit of her personal businesses, orchestrate Eric's demise, and profit from his passing," the lawsuit said.
An email message sent to Kouri Richins' attorney, Skye Lazaro, was not immediately returned on Wednesday.
Prosecutors say Kouri Richins, 33, poisoned Eric Richins, 39, by slipping five times the lethal dose of fentanyl into a Moscow mule cocktail she made for him.
The mother of three later self-published a children's book titled "Are You with Me?" about a deceased father watching over his sons.
In Richins' book, the boy wonders if his father, who has died, notices his goals at a soccer game, his nerves on the first day of school or the presents he found under a Christmas tree.
"Yes, I am with you," an angel-wing-clad father figure wearing a trucker hat responds. "I am with you when you scored that goal. ... I am with you when you walk the halls. ... I'm here and we're together."
Months before her arrest, Richins told news outlets that she decided to write "Are You With Me?" after her husband unexpectedly died last year, leaving her widowed and raising three boys. She said she looked for materials for children on grieving loved ones and found few resources, so decided to create her own. She planned to write sequels.
"I just wanted some story to read to my kids at night and I just could not find anything," she told Good Things Utah about a month before her arrest.
CBS affiliate KUTV reported the dedication section of the book reads: "Dedicated to my amazing husband and a wonderful father."
According to the 48-page lawsuit, Kouri Richins "began having serious financial troubles" in 2016 and started stealing money from her husband. In 2020, "Eric learned that Kouri had withdrawn" more than $200,000 from his bank accounts and that she had charged over $30,000 on his credit cards, the suit says.
"Eric confronted Kouri about the stolen money and Kouri admitted she had taken the money," the lawsuit says.
The lawsuit also seeks to bar Richins from selling the book and to turn over any money made from it, saying it makes references to events and details from Eric Richins' life and his relationship with his children.
In the criminal case, the defense has argued that prosecutors "simply accepted" the narrative from Eric Richins' family that his wife had poisoned him "and worked backward in an effort to support it," spending about 14 months investigating and not finding sufficient evidence to support their theory. Lazaro has said the prosecution's case based on Richins' financial motives proved she was "bad at math," not that she was guilty of murder.
- In:
- Lawsuit
- Fentanyl
- Utah
veryGood! (7)
Related
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- Olympic golf broadcaster Morgan Pressel apologizes for seeming to drop 'F-bomb' on live TV
- A Roller Coaster Through Time: Revisiting Bitcoin's Volatile History with Neptune Trade X Trading Center4
- Trump is putting mass deportations at the heart of his campaign. Some Republicans are worried
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- Rev It Up: MLB to hold Braves-Reds game at Bristol Motor Speedway next August
- How this American in Paris will follow Olympic marathoners' footsteps in race of her own
- Plane carrying Panthers players, coaches and staff gets stuck in the mud after landing in Charlotte
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- Russian man held without bail on charges he procured US electronics for Russian military use
Ranking
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Walz ‘misspoke’ in 2018 reference to ‘weapons of war, that I carried in war,’ Harris campaign says
- USA wins men's basketball Olympic gold: Highlights from win over France
- Off-duty California cop shoots and kills man involved in roadside brawl
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- Casey Affleck got Matt Damon to star in 'The Instigators' by asking his wife
- How Kevin Costner Really Feels About the Change in Plans for Horizon: Chapter 2
- Lydia Ko claims Olympic gold as USA's Nelly Korda, Rose Zhang fail to medal
Recommendation
EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
Olympics changing breaking in sport’s debut as dancers must put scores above art
Inside Hailee Steinfeld and Josh Allen’s Winning Romance
The last known intact US slave ship is too ‘broken’ and should stay underwater, a report recommends
$73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
Think TikTok or Temu are safe? Cybersecurity expert says think again, delete them now
Plane carrying Panthers players, coaches and staff gets stuck in the mud after landing in Charlotte
US men's 4x400 relay team wins gold at Paris Olympics