Richins, Guthrie, Snelling: A Full Legal and Investigative Panel With Coffindaffer and Dreeke
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Three active criminal cases. A murder trial going to the jury. A kidnapping investigation at day forty-one. A manslaughter indictment built on phone evidence and a precise legal threshold. Retired FBI Special Agent Jennifer Coffindaffer and behavioral analyst Robin Dreeke join True Crime Today for a multi-part panel covering all three with the legal and investigative precision each deserves.
The Kouri Richins segment addresses the trial's legal pressure points before deliberations begin. No murder weapon. No recovered fentanyl. A star witness under immunity whose alleged drug supplier now says he never sold fentanyl. And a detective recording that played for the jury in which investigators told that witness she needed to produce details that would "ensure Kouri gets convicted of murder." Coffindaffer breaks down the legal implications of that recording, whether the prosecution's remaining evidentiary case is strong enough to survive it, and what closing arguments must accomplish. Dreeke addresses the behavioral layer — the silence, the texts, and what the absence of testimony communicates regardless of jury instruction.
The Nancy Guthrie segment addresses a 41-day kidnapping investigation that has pivoted to digital forensics with no arrest and a public safety warning from the sheriff. Coffindaffer examines the legal and procedural dimensions of what Nanos said on national television — what the motive theory hedge means, what the public safety warning implies legally, and how the internet disruption investigative thread is built for eventual evidentiary use. Dreeke addresses the behavioral profile of premeditation and what the sustained silence around the alleged perpetrator communicates.
The Laken Snelling segment addresses a first-degree manslaughter indictment carrying up to 31 years, where the charge rests on a specific finding of conscious disregard. Coffindaffer maps the legal case — the phone evidence, the "guessed" language at the hospital, the born-alive determination — and what the prosecution must establish at trial to hold the charge. Dreeke addresses the behavioral underpinning and the jury challenge it creates.
Three cases, examined with the legal clarity they require.
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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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