Kouri Richins: The Narrative She Built After Eric Died — and the Cases Where Victims Said It Out Loud

Kouri Richins: The Narrative She Built After Eric Died — and the Cases Where Victims Said It Out Loud

30:14 Mar 22, 2026
About this episode
This week in Hidden Killers' Week in Review, the behavioral analysis that matters most on the Kouri Richins case goes beyond the trial record and into the psychological architecture underneath it — the compulsion to perform grief publicly, and the documented history of victims who recognized what was being done to them and couldn't escape it anyway.After prosecutors say Kouri Richins killed her husband, she wrote a children's book. "Are You With Me?" A father who dies and becomes a firefly. She appeared on morning shows. She performed. Tony Brueski examines that behavior through the case that documents the narcissist's narrative compulsion at its most explicit — Nancy Crampton-Brophy, who published an essay in 2011 titled "How to Murder Your Husband," discussing methods and motivations under her real name, then shot her husband Daniel twice in the chest seven years later. The essay was excluded from her trial. The jury convicted her anyway. She bought the gun with traceable purchases. She drove herself to the crime scene. The need to be recognized as clever — to be seen — overrides the operational instinct to disappear. Kouri wrote herself as the bereaved mother. Nancy wrote herself as the expert. Both stepped into public light that ultimately exposed them.The victims' side of that dynamic is equally documented. Eric Richins told people after Valentine's Day 2022 that he believed Kouri was poisoning him. He had been violently ill. Prosecutors say she killed him with five times the lethal dose of fentanyl approximately a month later. Bobby Curley, in a hospital on September 22, 1991, physically grabbed a nurse and said clearly: "Please help me. My wife is trying to kill me. She is not as she seems." He died the next morning. Joann had been poisoning his iced tea with thallium for nearly a year — eleven months confirmed by hair analysis, nine hundred times the lethal dose — while collecting a $1.7 million settlement two days before he died.Both men named it. The behavioral framework that explains why naming it wasn't enough is the work this week's coverage does.Join Our SubStack For AD-FREE ADVANCE EPISODES & EXTRAS!: https://hiddenkillers.substack.com/Want to comment and watch this podcast as a video? Check out our YouTube Channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8-vxmbhTxxG10sO1izODJg?sub_confirmation=1Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hiddenkillerspod/Facebook https://www.facebook.com/hiddenkillerspod/Tik-Tok https://www.tiktok.com/@hiddenkillerspodX Twitter https://x.com/TrueCrimePodThis publication contains commentary
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