Utah Mom Gets Life for Fentanyl Murder of Husband

Is Kouri Richins a cold-blooded killer who deserves life in prison or a symptom of a broken detection system?
Utah Mom Gets Life for Fentanyl Murder of Husband
Above: Kouri Richins reacts to family impact statements in Utah's 3rd District Court on May 13, 2026. Image credit: Trent Nelson/Pool/Getty Images

The Spin


Narrative A

Kouri Richins didn't just kill her husband — she planned it meticulously, googling lethal fentanyl doses and deleting hundreds of texts to cover her tracks. Particularly striking was the testimony from her own sons, who said they fear her and feel safer with her behind bars. These details paint a deeply troubling picture, and anything less than life without parole would be a failure of justice for Eric and those three boys.

Narrative B

The Richins case exposes a systemic blind spot — intimate partner poisonings routinely go undetected because fentanyl deaths blend into the overdose epidemic and standard toxicology screens miss the most common poisons. Detection almost never happens through the system working as designed; it takes persistent families, lucky accidents or a second victim. Without reformed screening protocols and cross-jurisdictional tracking, countless cases like this one never get solved.

© 2026 Improve the News Foundation. All rights reserved.Version 7.6.0

© 2026 Improve the News Foundation.

All rights reserved.

Version 7.6.0