What Kouri Richins Was Doing From Her Jail Cell Should Have Been Impossible

Jun 03, 03:00 PM
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Most people, when arrested for murder, let their attorneys handle the case. Kouri Richins wrote a six-page letter hidden in an LSAT prep book with scripted testimony for her brother. She read other inmates' letters to her mother over recorded phone lines. She held up documents on video calls for her mother to photograph. And when the letter was found, she told her mother on a recorded call that it was part of a "fictional mystery book" about a Mexican prison.This episode examines the compulsion behind that behavior — not as strategy, but as reflex. The automatic story-generating mechanism that fires under threat regardless of consequences. Kouri's first attorney withdrew after her firm reported an ethical issue. She violated jail communication rules repeatedly while facing life in prison. The need to produce narrative was stronger than self-preservation. That tells you where the wiring is broken — and why no external consequence can reach the mechanism.Part three of five in a psychological breakdown of Kouri Richins' decision-making.

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This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.

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