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Eric's sister met the detective in the driveway before the investigation even started and told her Eric said Kouri was going to kill him. Detective Jamie Woody caught the Richins case as the on-call detective the morning Eric died. She had never investigated a poisoning. She had no digital forensics background. No forensic accounting experience. Her biggest prior case was a sexual assault. But before she walked into the house that morning, Eric's sister Amy was waiting in the driveway with a statement that would shape everything that followed. The jury also hears the full 911 call from the night Kouri found Eric cold and unresponsive, her voice shaking as she struggles through CPR. Watch what the defense does with this witness. Attorney Nester takes apart the investigation piece by piece: the hydrocodone bottle that was never bagged, the housekeeper whose name didn't ring a bell, the basic questions about Kouri's movements that were never asked. Then Nester gets Woody to admit the investigation went nowhere until the family's private investigator started providing leads. The detective who caught this case is about to tell the jury exactly who built it. --- WATCH WITH JUSTICE 0:07 to 2:50 - Before the jury comes in, the state moves to admit the 911 call. No objection. This is setting the stage for what comes next. 2:50 to 14:15 - The full 911 call plays for the jury. Kouri's voice fills the courtroom for nearly fourteen minutes. She's panicked, shaking, trying to get Eric to the floor for CPR. Listen to the raw emotion and decide for yourself what you hear. 14:15 to 19:00 - Detective Woody takes the stand and drops the biggest statement of the day within minutes. What Amy Richins told her in the driveway that morning changed the entire trajectory of this investigation. 19:00 to 25:46 - The jury steps out. This is where Nester pins down exactly what Amy said, because the detective's live testimony and her written report tell two different versions. Pay attention to the details. 25:46 to 40:33 - Back in front of the jury. Woody walks through the night of Eric's death, what Kouri told her, the limited scene search, and the two weeks that followed. Then the investigation stalls for months until a private investigator hired by the family starts delivering the leads. 40:33 to 56:05 - Nester's cross-examination. No crime scene tape. No vehicles searched. An empty hydrocodone bottle that was never swabbed, never bagged, and nobody knows where it is. The housekeeper was never confirmed. The investigation only moved forward when Todd Gabler, the family PI, started sending emails. This is the section that tells you how this case was actually built. --- COMPLETE CASE COVERAGE justiceisaprocess.com SUBSCRIBE for daily trial coverage and hit the notification bell so you never miss testimony. JOIN to unlock the Case Notebook powered by NotebookLM, where you can chat with the evidence, ask questions about testimony, and go deeper than any comment section allows. CASE BACKGROUND REPORT: https://justiceisaprocess.com/ut-v-ri... 📂 PLAYLISTS & RESOURCES 🌐 Website: https://justiceisaprocess.com ► Full Trial Live Broadcasts: • LIVE BROADCAST: UT v. Kouri Richins ► No Breaks Edition: • NO BREAKS EDITION: UT v. Kouri Richins ► Trial Analysis Podcast: • PODCAST: UT v. Kouri Richins ► Key Moments Playlist: • KEY MOMENTS AND TESTIMONY: UT v. Kouri Ric... ► Subscribe for Daily Coverage: / @justiceisaprocess ⚖️ ABOUT JUSTICE IS A PROCESS This channel continues the work of Steven M. Askin, a criminal defense attorney who was disbarred in 1998 for refusing to violate attorney-client privilege, then criminally convicted in 2010 for teaching people their constitutional rights from a coffee shop in Martinsburg, West Virginia. He passed away in February 2024, but not before he and I started this channel together. I am Steven M. Askin II. I am not an attorney. I am a watchdog. I cover criminal trials to educate the public about due process, the presumption of innocence, and constitutional protections. Every video on this channel is part of building the machine the system feared my father would create: a public trained to watch, question, and demand accountability. This is not entertainment. This is education. This is oversight. This is Justice Is A Process. ⚖️ FAIR USE & EDUCATIONAL PURPOSE This content is produced under Fair Use (17 U.S.C. § 107) for news reporting, criticism, and educational purposes. We provide transformative commentary on public court proceedings, advancing public understanding of the judicial process through timestamps, analysis, and educational context. No copyright infringement is intended. All video content is used for transformative educational purposes with added legal analysis and commentary.