Coming Soon: BendFilm Gala, a fundraiser for local efforts coinciding with the biggest night in Hollywood

Silas Moreau

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — BendFilm will host its annual fundraising Gala on Sunday, March 15th at The Pavilion at Tetherow to support student summer camps and the annual Bend Film Festival. The event features a live screening of the Academy Awards, a red carpet entrance, dinner and auctions.

The Gala raises money for year-round initiatives including free movies in the park, as well as the organization’s Basecamp program. The evening runs from 2:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. at the Pavilion and includes a best-dressed prize for guests in formal attire.

Individual tickets for the fundraising event are available for $160, while a table of 10 is priced at $1,500. All entry options include dinner, two drinks and a welcome glass of champagne. BendFilm has requested that those purchasing full tables submit guest names and email addresses to the organization prior to the event date.

The event schedule begins with check-in and a silent auction at 2:30 p.m. at the venue located at 61240 Skyline Ranch Road. Welcome remarks are scheduled for 3:30 p.m., followed by the start of the Academy Awards broadcast at 4 p.m. Due to limited parking at Tetherow, attendees are encouraged to use ride-share services or carpool to the Gala.

Supporters can also participate in a digital Oscar Ballot Prediction Contest for an additional fee. Digital ballots are distributed via email starting March 8 and participants must complete their entries by 4 p.m. on the day of the gala. The contest offers prizes to those who achieve the highest prediction scores.

Participants interested in bidding on live or silent auction items are required to have a credit card on file. This information can be saved during the initial ticket checkout process or provided in person at the event. Additionally, attendees have the option to purchase scholarship spots for the 2026 filmmaking summer camps.

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Oregon State Legislature approves $42M for OSU-Cascades student health and recreation center

Kelsey Merison

(Update: adding video, comments from students, dean of OSU-Cascades, and local lawmakers)

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — Years of growth are continuing here in Central Oregon, as OSU-Cascades is taking another major step to support student wellness and campus life.

The Oregon Legislature has approved $42 million for a new Student Health and Recreation Center, giving students access to on-campus fitness and health services.

The 40,000-square-foot facility is designed to fill a long-missing gap in the student experience.

“We have residence halls, dining halls, classrooms, and laboratories, but we don’t have a space for students to access recreational opportunities,” said Sherm Bloomer, chancellor and dean of OSU-Cascades.

“This will be a huge step forward that will help students succeed, stay in school, and graduate,” Bloomer added.

The new building will house a variety of recreational and clinical services — including exercise space, medical care, and mental health counseling — allowing students to stay healthy without leaving campus. 

For many students, it also represents a space for connection and community.

“It’s going to give students more of an opportunity to connect with one another at a place that’s not the dorms or the dining hall,” said student Damon Iraggi.

Fellow student Kait Rodriguez added, “I also think it’ll bring departments closer together and more engaged with students. I’m really excited for it.”

Central Oregon lawmakers also highlighted the broader economic benefits of the investment, pointing to the university’s role in developing and retaining local talent.

“This is a large part in making sure we have a complete campus here,” said Rep. Jason Kropf (D-Bend). “We’re building the workforce of the future so people can be educated here, live here, work here, make a career here.”

State Sen. Anthony Broadman (D-Bend) added, “It’s incredible to have brilliant people from Bend, Redmond and Sisters be able to stay in this community, go to school for four years, and become the next business owners.”

State funding will cover about half of the project’s cost. OSU-Cascades students themselves contributed $20 million through a fee they approved in 2017. 

The project will also fund remediation of the former landfill and pumice mine adjacent to campus, paving the way for future expansion as the university continues to grow.

Construction of the new facility is expected to begin in 2028. Once complete, leaders and locals alike say the new Health and Recreation Center will play a central role in supporting students — in turn, strengthening the future workforce that will stay and serve Central Oregon.

Earlier Story — BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — The Oregon State Legislature has approved $42 million in state-backed bonds to fund the construction of a new student health and recreation center at Oregon State University-Cascades. The 40,000-square-foot facility will be the first comprehensive on-campus center for wellness and clinical services at OSU-Cascades.

The project aims to provide expanded physical activity areas, preventive care, and mental health counseling for students on the Bend campus. This investment follows years of advocacy from student leaders. In 2017, students voted to increase student fees in response to the need for on-campus recreation and health services and committed $20 million for the project.

The center will include flexible indoor spaces for fitness and recreation alongside dedicated areas for clinical health services and mental health counseling. Outside the building, the project includes the construction of two all-purpose recreation fields. Currently, student fitness options on the Bend campus are limited to a single small room in the residential hall.

“The student health and recreation center will deliver essential services that directly support student life, learning and retention, and reap rewards for student success and the local, regional and state economies,” said Sherm Bloomer, the chancellor and dean of OSU‑Cascades.

Bloomer noted that the center is particularly important for first-generation, rural, and low-income students. These populations often have less access to wellness and health services. The new facility will provide these resources directly on campus to support academic performance.

“Students have said for years that access to health and wellness resources is essential to our success. This investment shows student voices matter, and we’re proud to have helped make this project a reality,” said Whitney McFarlane, the president of the Associated Students of Cascades Campus.

The legislative funding will also pay for the remediation of 24 acres of land. This effort will create buildable sites for the recreation center as well as future student housing and academic buildings. The university anticipates needing more space as enrollment numbers continue to grow.

Construction is scheduled to begin in 2028 following the completion of land remediation efforts. The new building will be connected to the campus geo-exchange system for heating and cooling to help meet net-zero energy goals.

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Gun threat leads to arrest in Bend, cocaine and firearms seized

Kelsey Merison

(Adding suspect’s name and formal charges filed after arraignment)

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — Bend Police arrested 32-year-old Bend resident Zachary Lee Coelho on March 6th after he allegedly threatened a security guard outside of a local bar with a gun. The arrest follows an investigation into a confrontation that occurred on March 1st at Cascade West on SW Century Drive.

Coelho was formally charged and arraigned on March 9th and faces the following formal charges:

Delivery of Cocaine

Unlawful Use of a Weapon

Felon in Possession of a Firearm

Unlawful Possession of Cocaine

Menaicng

Harrasment

The incident began around 12:09 a.m. when a security guard denied the man entry to the establishment. According to police, the suspect became upset and engaged in a physical altercation with the guard before threatening to shoot him, cocking a firearm, and pointing it into the air before fleeing the scene.

Officers identified the man as the suspect during their investigation and located him five days after the initial report. At approximately 7:55 p.m. on March 6th, police conducted a traffic stop on the suspect’s silver Subaru WRX near NE 15th Street and U.S. Highway 20, where he was taken into custody.

Following the arrest, investigators obtained search warrants for the suspect’s vehicle and his home in the 1700 block of SE Tempest Drive. Inside the residence, officers reported finding two firearms and ammunition.

Police also seized a significant amount of cocaine and smaller bags of the drug. Investigators located materials commonly used for measuring and packaging controlled substances during the search. These findings led to additional charges related to the manufacture and delivery of cocaine

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Jury convicts Idaho Falls woman in illegal massage parlor trafficking case

Seth Ratliff

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (KIFI) — A 60-year-old woman faces a potential 40-year prison sentence in connection with an illegal massage parlor.

On March 6, a jury found Xue Fang Lu, 60, guilty of felony Interstate Trafficking of Prostitution and felony Procurement of Prostitution. The charges stem from Lu’s illicit massage business operated out of the Fairbridge Inn in Idaho Falls from March until May 2024.

The Idaho Falls Police Department led the investigation, utilizing digital forensics support from the Idaho Office of the Attorney General and the Idaho Transportation Department.

“Law enforcement agencies throughout Bonneville County are committed to working together to keep these kind of illegal activities from getting a toehold in our community,” Neal said.

Sentencing is scheduled for May 13, 2026, and Lu could face up to twenty years in prison on each count.

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Idaho woman celebrates 109th birthday, crediting healthy living for her long life

KIVI Staff

Originally Published: 09 MAR 26 11:57 ET

By Leslie Solis

Click here for updates on this story

    CALDWELL, Idaho (KIVI) — Juanita Sibert has lived to see more than a century of American history — and on Saturday, she celebrated 109 years of it with cake, ice cream, and the people who love her most.

Born March 7, 1917, in Marland, Nebraska, Sibert blew out her candles surrounded by family and community members who gathered in Caldwell to mark the milestone.

When asked the secret to her long life, Sibert kept it simple.

“Well, I didn’t drink, I didn’t smoke. I lived a healthy life,” Sibert said.

The Sibert family sold their farm and ranch in Nebraska and moved west to Idaho in October of 1946. Today, her legacy spans four generations across Idaho and Wyoming, with more than 50 living descendants.

“I come from a big family,” Sibert added.

Sibert recalled a moment when someone once read the lines of her palm and made a prediction that has since proven difficult to argue with. “I don’t know where the line is myself, anyways, he said, ‘My gosh, you are going to live forever.”

Her granddaughter, Mietta Sibert, said watching her grandmother’s life unfold across more than a century of change has been nothing short of remarkable.

“I look at it, and I’m blown away — from no phone, to a flip phone, to Bluetooth,” Mietta Sibert said.

Mietta said her grandmother has remained joyful throughout it all — a quality reflected in Juanita’s longtime nickname, “Happy.”

“Just learning about her stories and the impact and life that her family has built around her has been tremendous. Most people don’t survive past 89, 90, and for her to just keep on going, I think it’s her strong connection with family and friends and just love, pure love and joy,” explained Mietta Sibert.

Juanita said one thing she has learned throughout this century is to never stop laughing and to enjoy time with family.

This story was initially reported by a journalist and has been, in part, converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. KIVI’s editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

The-CNN-Wire™ & © 2026 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

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Seeds of Abundance: Limits, Loss & Regeneration; a new, interactive exhibit calls for your contribution

Silas Moreau

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — Scalehouse Gallery in Bend is currently hosting “Seeds of Abundance: Limits, Loss & Regeneration,” a solo exhibition by artist Michele Guieu. The exhibition, which is sponsored by the City of Bend, opened March 6th and will run through April 24th.

The show invites visitors to reflect on ecological limits, loss and the potential for regeneration. Guieu uses immersive installation work to examine the intersection of the natural world and modern societal crises. The exhibition is free and open to the public.

The installation features a variety of immersive works created from natural and reclaimed materials. Guieu designed the space to encourage visitors to slow down and reconnect with nature and one another.

The artist focuses on the systems that shape modern lives while acknowledging the beauty of the natural world. The work specifically addresses current global crises. These include biodiversity loss, ecological overshoot and the increasing complexity of thermo-industrial society.

The exhibition suggests that these challenges require resilient and thoughtful responses rather than immediate solutions. Guieu drew inspiration for the exhibition in part from “The Great Simplification,” a podcast by Nate Hagens.

These acts are intended to nurture responsibility while acknowledging ecological limits. The gallery has scheduled multiple events to accompany the show. An Artist Talk is set for March 19th at 5:30 p.m. A Small Mobile Workshop will follow on April 11 from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. The opening reception for the exhibition was held Friday, March 6th.

The exhibition will remain on view at the Scalehouse Gallery through April 24th. Gallery officials stated that further programming will be announced at a later date.

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Idaho Falls pastor returns home after harrowing escape from Israel-Iran conflict zone

Danielle Mullenix

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (KIFI) — What began as a spiritual journey to the Holy Land quickly transformed into a desperate mission for survival. Alicia Ramos, an Idaho Falls pastor, is finally home after being caught in the crossfire of the escalating conflict between Israel and Iran.

Ramos was part of a group of 117 women pastors from across the United States. As the only representative from Idaho, she found her pilgrimage abruptly interrupted by the sound of sirens and falling bombs.

As the conflict intensified, her group traveled by bus through danger and even walked to the border in Egypt, all to make it back to her family. Ramos says she quickly realized their pilgrimage had turned into a test of their courage.

“Is it safe? Is it wise that we keep going?” Ramos recalled asking. “…But there was just this clear consensus across the board that we were supposed to be there.”

Faith Amid Conflict

While explosions echoed above, the pastors didn’t scramble in panic. Instead, they turned to their faith.

“As much as it was alarming to hear it, the calm and the peace that was over everyone on our trip, there wasn’t like a scrambling, running, to the bomb shelters,” said Ramos. “There was just this calmness.”

With airports shuttered by Iranian retaliatory strikes, the group’s mission shifted from ministry to evacuation.

“What do we do next? We’re in the middle of Israel with the 117 women now – how do we keep everyone safe?” Ramos recalls. “How are we going to get out of here? The airports are shut down.”

Ramos says in the middle of chaos — inside bomb shelters while sirens echoed above — the group made a decision. Instead of panicking, they prayed. She believes those hours of worship helped them find the peace and focus needed to begin mapping out their journey to safety.

“Even though there were still alarms going off, it was decided that the best option was for us to pray, and make our way across Israel, out of Israel, and into Egypt.”

Eventually, the pastors were evacuated from the Galilee region by bus. But even that escape was dangerous. The final leg of their escape required the women to turn off their phones for security and cross into Egypt on foot.

“I think, honestly, when we were told to turn off our phones, my biggest thought was my family back home,” said Ramos. “I feel like – to some extent – our families back home were working through much more difficulty than we were here.”

The Long Road to Idaho Falls

While Ramos was navigating the border, her husband was 6,000 miles away in Idaho Falls, caring for their five children, all under the age of ten, and waiting for word that his wife was safe.

“It’s a war. You never know how long this is going to last,” said Ramos.

Late Friday night, her family’s fears quickly dissolved. After days of uncertainty, Ramos finally stepped through the airport doors — greeted by those who had been waiting for her the entire time.

“It was a relief. Just the comfort of being home,” said Ramos. “I have five young kids at home, so they were definitely excited to see their mom.”

Ramos mentions that she is still processing everything that occurred during those chaotic days abroad. One thing she will never forget is how ordinary bomb shelters are for families in Israel. Experiencing this reality firsthand has given her a new perspective on the daily challenges people there face.

“This is their normal, you know, it almost becomes like just kind of a routine to them,” said Ramos. “They would come hop-johnson into the bomb shelters, and there was still joy in their hearts because this is just their life.”

Ramos confirmed that all 117 women from the delegation have returned safely to the United States.

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Trip to Hawai’i is a sweeping success for Cal Poly Baseball

Mike Klan

HONOLULU, Hawai’i — Junior right-hander Carson Turnquist turned in his best outing on the mound as a Mustang while Cam Hoiland and Ryan Tayman combined to knock in three runs in the fourth inning to give Cal Poly the lead for good in a 7-3 victory over Hawai’i, completing a three-game Big West series sweep Sunday at Les Murakami Stadium.

Turnquist (1-0) replaced starter Josh Volmerding in the second inning and pitched 5 1/3 scoreless innings in relief for the victory, scattering three hits with two walks and three strikeouts. It was the longest stint on the mound as a Mustang for the former Paso Robles High School standout, who underwent Tommy John surgery following his lone season at Oklahoma in 2023.

“Volmerding was feeling badly with lower body issues, so we brought in Turnquist and he came in, pounded the strike zone right away and gave us length and quality innings which allowed us to work our offense for some runs, shorten the game and turn it over to (Nick) Bonn,” said 24th-year Mustang head coach Larry Lee.

“Turnquist’s performance was very beneficial for our team today,” Lee added. “He checked all the boxes we needed, especially after losing (Laif) Palmer on Saturday.”

Palmer suffered a double fracture of his left ankle in the first inning of Saturday’s 11-inning 10-7 Mustang victory and will undergo surgery next week.

Hawai’i took the lead for the first time in the series Sunday with three runs in the second frame for a 3-1 advantage before Cal Poly battled back with a run in the third on an RBI single by Dylan Kordic and three more in the fourth as Hoiland singled up the middle to drive in two and Tayman followed with a run-scoring double to left.

Turnquist made sure that the Mustangs would never look back, throwing 76 pitches, retiring the side in order once and not allowing a hit from the fourth through seventh innings. Senior right-hander Nick Bonn earned his second save of the series and third of the season with two scoreless frames of one-hit baseball.

With Sunday’s win, Cal Poly stretched its winning streak to four games, improved to 8-7 overall and kept pace with UC Santa Barbara, the only two teams in the Big West to open their conference schedules with 3-0 marks. The Gauchos swept Long Beach State at Caesar Uyesaka Stadium.

Hawai’i, playing its first 16 games of the 2026 season at home, fell to 8-7 and 0-3. The Rainbow Warriors close out the long home stand Tuesday against Chaminade before playing their first two road series of the year next weekend at Long Beach State and in two weeks at UC Santa Barbara.

Cal Poly, which took advantage of a Hawai’i error to score a run in the first inning for the third straight game, tallied single runs in the eighth and ninth frames to pull away. Nate Castellon singled up the middle to knock in the run in the eighth while Casey Murray Jr. led off the ninth by belting his second home run of the season, a solo shot to right field.

Hawai’i, held to five hits in the game, scored all of its runs in the second inning, loading the bases on two hit batters and a walk before No. 9 hitter Jake Redding drove all three runners home on his double to right field.

Castellon, Kordic and Gavin Spiridonoff each had two of Cal Poly’s nine hits. Redding finished with a pair of hits to lead Hawai’i at the plate.

Cal Poly, which entered last week’s four games with a .236 team batting average, banged out 12 hits in a 12-2 win over Pepperdine and hit an even .300 in the Hawai’i series with 36 hits, including 15 extra-base hits, nine of them doubles.

“You never know when things will turn around from an offensive standpoint,” said Lee. “Getting Hoiland back in the lineup helped and we really utilized the ballpark to our advantage. It is a difficult place to hit because of the prevailing wind blowing from left to right.

“Hopefully this series will get us kickstarted from an offensive standpoint as our hitters get more comfortable with their plate appearances and finding our identity as an offensive team,” Lee added.

Hoiland, who missed several games with a hamstring injury three weeks ago, was 6-for-15 (.400) in the Hawai’i series with two doubles, a home run and five RBIs while Castellon, Spiridonoff and Murray all collected five hits. Castellon scored four times while Murray produced a double, two triples and one home run, scoring five times. Tayman was 4-for-12 with two doubles and three RBIs.

The Mustang pitching staff allowed 3.72 earned runs per game in the Hawai’i series and posted a 3.32 ERA for the week’s four games, allowing just 14 runs in the four victories.

Cal Poly, now 5-1 in road games this season, returns home for its next seven games inside Baggett Stadium.

This week the Mustangs host Fresno State on Tuesday at 5:05 p.m. before entertaining Cal State Bakersfield next weekend and UC Davis in two weeks for Big West series.

(Article courtesy of Cal Poly Athletics).

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A rocky marriage, secret affair and millions in debt: What we’ve learned so far in Kouri Richins’ murder trial

CNN

Originally Published: 08 MAR 26 09:30 ET

By Nicki Brown, CNN

(CNN) — Over the last two weeks, jurors in Kouri Richins’ murder trial have heard wide-ranging testimony about troubles in her marriage, her secret affair and the millions of dollars she owed in debt – all factors prosecutors say led her to fatally poison her husband.

Prosecutors say the Utah mother of three killed her husband, Eric Richins, with a lethal dose of fentanyl in March 2022. She is also accused of attempting to kill him by lacing his sandwich on Valentine’s Day, weeks before his death.

Nearly 40 witnesses have testified so far, including the woman who allegedly gave Richins the drugs, friends who said they had heard about the couple’s marital problems and the man with whom she was having an affair.

“The evidence will prove that Kouri Richins murdered Eric for his money and to get a fresh start at life,” Brad Bloodworth, chief prosecutor in the Summit County Attorney’s Office, said in his opening statement. “More than anything, she wanted his money to perpetuate her facade of privileged affluence and success.”

Kouri Richins has pleaded not guilty to aggravated murder and other charges, with her defense arguing she has been wrongfully blamed for Eric Richins’ death and that prosecutors are unable to prove how the fentanyl entered Richins’ body. If convicted of the most serious charge, she could face up to life in prison.

“They’re going to spend weeks in this trial trying to convince you that Kouri had reasons to kill her husband, because they can’t show you that she did kill her husband,” defense attorney Kathy Nester said in her opening statement.

With prosecutors expected to conclude their case in the coming days, here are five key revelations from their witnesses so far:

Kouri Richins dreamed of future with another man, texts show

Robert Josh Grossmann, the man with whom Kouri Richins had a yearslong affair, wiped his eyes and put his head down as their affectionate text messages were displayed in court.

“I do want a future together. I do want you. Figure life out together,” Kouri Richins texted Grossmann roughly two weeks before her husband died. “If he could just go away and you could just be here! Life would be so perfect!!! I love you.”

Grossmann worked on houses Kouri Richins bought for her real estate business, he said, and their relationship became romantic around early 2020. She let him live in a home she was flipping, bought him two trucks and gave him money whenever he needed it, Grossmann said. He loved her, he testified, and believed she loved him, too.

The jury saw dozens of texts where the two expressed their love and dreamed about being together in the future – though both acknowledged the idea was more fantasy than reality.

Grossmann and Richins planned to get brunch together on March 4, 2022, to celebrate her closing on a valuable property, he testified. The night before, he sent her a GIF – a type of animated image – of two people kissing with the caption, “love you,” according to messages shown in court.

Hours later, Eric Richins was dead.

The two stayed together for several months after Eric Richins’ death, Grossmann said. About a month after her husband died, Kouri Richins texted Grossmann, “I think I want you to be my husband one day.”

But their relationship soon ended. Grossmann said, “Things changed after Eric passed.”

Kouri Richins appeared to be grieving after Eric Richins died, Grossmann said on cross-examination.

Under questioning by defense attorney Wendy Lewis, Grossmann said after Richins’ arrest in May 2023, he spoke with a private investigator hired by Eric Richins’ family. The P.I., Grossmann said, told him Richins had killed her husband.

“I was blown away,” Grossmann said, “and then I’m like, looking at everything in our past with a different set of goggles on, through different lenses. And I was trying to figure out if she did it.”

He told the investigator about a sprawling conversation he had with Kouri Richins about two weeks after Eric Richins’ death, in which they discussed dying, God, bowhunting and “supernatural stuff.” During that conversation, Grossmann said Kouri Richins asked if he had killed anybody while serving in Iraq and how it made him feel.

“Today, sitting here, when you think back on that conversation, does that conversation seem like it was a strange conversation to you?” Lewis asked.

“I can’t tell one way from the other anymore,” Grossmann responded. “I’ve been confused for years.”

Kouri Richins felt ‘trapped’ in her marriage, friends said

Several witnesses testified there were difficulties in the Richins’ relationship, with two of Kouri Richins’ friends saying she told them she felt “trapped” in her marriage.

“She felt like she was frustrated in the relationship but also it would be difficult to leave – Eric would end up financially secure and her the opposite,” said Allison Wright, the wife of Eric Richins’ business partner. “She feared what would happen in divorce.”

Another friend testified Kouri Richins told her in December 2021 she couldn’t see an “easy way forward out of the marriage.”

“She said that, in many ways, it would be better if he were dead,” Becky Lloyd said.

During cross-examination, defense attorneys tried to undercut Lloyd’s testimony, playing recordings in which she expressed uncertainty about what was said in the conversation. But Lloyd stood by her testimony on the stand.

“I don’t want to be here saying it,” she said, “but I know that that is what was said.”

The jury also heard two recordings of phone calls between Kouri Richins, her best friend and Eric Richins’ best friend.

“We were in a rocky spot two years ago,” Kouri Richins said of her marriage during one of those calls, which occurred about two weeks after her husband’s death.

Eric Richins’ friend then referenced Kouri Richins kicking her husband out of the house for a couple weeks after she learned he had been seeing another woman.

Two divorce attorneys testified they met with Eric and Kouri Richins individually in 2020 and 2021, respectively, although neither filed for divorce.

Kouri Richins’ finances were ‘collapsing,’ accountant said

While Richins’ friends said she appeared to be financially successful, a forensic accountant testified her business flipping homes was “imploding.”

“As of the date that Eric Richins died, Kouri Richins was in financial distress and her financial enterprise was collapsing, had been collapsing – and but for a significant infusion of cash and capital, would have continued to collapse,” said Brooke Karrington, who analyzed financial records in the case.

Kouri Richins’ debt problems began after she took out a $250,000 home equity line of credit, or HELOC, against their family home in 2019, around the same time she registered her real estate business, Karrington said. The loan was taken out in her husband’s name and signed by Kouri Richins as his attorney-in-fact, according to records displayed in court.

By the time Eric Richins died, Kouri Richins had taken out multiple loans and owed thousands in debt payments every week, so her bank account was “perpetually in the hole,” Karrington said. Her net worth was negative $1.6 million the day after her husband’s death, according to Karrington’s analysis.

In financial records Richins submitted as part of four loan applications, she reported her bank accounts contained significantly more money than they had, Karrington said.

Eric Richins’ life was insured for approximately $2.2 million through several policies, according to Karrington. Prosecutors allege Kouri Richins forged an application for one of his life insurance policies that went into effect on February 4, 2022, 10 days before they say she first tried to poison her husband and a month before his death.

Richins received about $1.3 million in life insurance payments in the months after her husband’s passing, Karrington said. By September 2022, most of the money had been spent – much of it toward paying down her debt.

“If, in fact, Ms. Richins was in financial distress, you’re not here to say she killed her husband, are you?” Nester asked the forensic accountant during a testy cross-examination.

“That’s for the jury to decide,” Karrington said. “I’m not making any conclusion about that at all.”

2 witnesses described alleged drug deals prior to Eric Richins’ death

Carmen Lauber, a house cleaner who worked for Kouri Richins, testified she sold pills to the Utah mother four times in early 2022 at the defendant’s request.

“She’d called me and asked me if I could reach out to somebody for some pain meds for an investor that she knew,” Lauber testified. She bought illicit opiate pills for Richins, who later asked for something stronger, the house cleaner testified.

Lauber got in touch with Robert Crozier, who said he had pills containing fentanyl, Lauber said. When she texted Richins about the fentanyl pills, Richins responded, “OK, go ahead and get them,” according to Lauber’s testimony.

Lauber testified she bought pills from Crozier at a gas station in Draper, Utah, twice before Eric Richins’ death and a third time shortly after.

Chris Kotrodimos, a digital forensics analyst, showed the jury location data from Lauber and Crozier’s phones. The devices were both near the Draper gas station on February 11, February 26, and March 9, 2022, according to his analysis.

When Eric Richins was found dead on March 4, 2022, he had roughly five times the lethal dose of fentanyl in his system, according to charging documents.

On the stand, Crozier confirmed he gave Lauber pills at the gas station but insisted he did not sell fentanyl at the time.

In early 2022, Crozier was selling pharmaceutical oxycodone pills he received from people with prescriptions, he said, and didn’t start selling fentanyl until late that year.

Crozier had previously confirmedhe sold Lauber fentanyl in a jailhouse interview with law enforcement during the investigation into Eric’s death. In footage of the interview shown in court, Crozier struggled to remember details about his interactions with Lauber and which drugs she asked for. But he said, “She knew what she was buying.”

“So, she knew that there was fentanyl in those pills?” an investigator asked.

“Absolutely,” Crozier said.

On the stand, Crozier said he didn’t remember that conversation.

“I was on a lot of drugs at that time, so I was detoxing from those drugs,” he testified.

Though he was called as a witness for the prosecution, Crozier’s testimony is key to Kouri Richins’ defense: In her opening statement, Nester argued if Crozier only sold oxycodone as he now claims, his pills could not have killed Eric Richins.

“The pills that were purchased by Carmen Lauber could not have been the cause of Eric’s death,” Nester told the jury. “The fentanyl must have come from somewhere else.”

Attorneys on both sides tried to undercut Lauber and Crozier’s credibility by questioning their recollections, histories of drug use and inconsistencies between their testimonies and their previous statements.

Crozier and Lauber both received immunity in exchange for their truthful testimonies. The defense has suggested Lauber altered her story to fit the prosecution’s narrative.

Kouri Richins’ phone records show searches about fentanyl, life insurance payments

Although lots of data from early 2022 was deleted from Kouri Richins’ phone, Kotrodimos testified about some of her cellphone activity around the time of her husband’s death.

Kouri Richins told investigators she left her cellphone in the master bedroom while she slept in her children’s bedroom the night her husband died and she called emergency services as soon as she returned to find him cold and unresponsive, according to court documents.

Kouri Richins’ cellphone was locked at 9:32 p.m. on March 3, 2022, and remained locked until 3:06 a.m. the next morning, according to Kotrodimos’ analysis. It moved 35 feet around 10:30 p.m. and then moved 243 feet at 3:08 a.m. The phone was unlocked six times in the 15 minutes before she called 911 at 3:21 a.m., he said.

Around 8:30 a.m., hours after she called 911, cellphone records show three GIFs were accessed on Kouri Richins’ phone: One was captioned, “Idiots. Idiots everywhere,” while another showed a woman wiping away her tears with dollar bills. A third included the caption, “I’m really rich.”

Kotrodimos testified he can’t determine who sent or received the GIFs – or if Kouri Richins even viewed them.

Kotrodimos showed the jury dozens of internet searches made on the phone Kouri Richins used beginning in April 2022, after her other phone was seized by law enforcement. The searches included queries about remotely deleting cellphone data, how investigators recover deleted messages, women’s prisons in Utah, and life insurance payments.

According to Kotrodimos, the searches included: “what is a lethal.dose.of.fetanayl (sic),” “kouri richins kamas net worth,” and, “if someone is poisned (sic) what does it go down on the death certificate as.”

Kotrodimos testified the searches were all made after Kouri Richins knew she was under investigation, and he confirmed he couldn’t say with certainty who made the searches nor what prompted them.

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ABC-7 at 4: Minerva Torres Shelton Wins GOP Nod for County Judge

Nichole Gomez

KVIA-TV (El Pas, TX) – Minerva Torres Shelton, the former law enforcement officer, secured the Republican nomination against consultant Guadalupe Giner. Incumbent Ricardo Samaniego is running unopposed in the Democratic primary. He is seeking his third term.

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