The ongoing murder trial of Kouri Richins in Summit County, Utah, has featured extensive testimony about the night of March 4, 2022, when her husband, Eric Richins, 39, died from what toxicology confirmed was approximately five times the lethal dose of fentanyl in his system. Prosecutors allege Kouri deliberately laced his celebratory Moscow mule cocktail with illicit fentanyl amid financial desperation (millions in debts from real estate and business dealings), marital strife, and an extramarital affair—then delayed calling for help while he lay unresponsive.

A neighbor’s account has surfaced in sensational online claims, stating they noticed lights still on in the Richins home “late that night, long after the neighborhood had gone quiet,” with emergency crews arriving by morning. This is said to fuel the “biggest mystery” of the timeline inside the house. However, no credible trial coverage from major outlets (ABC4, KSLTV, TownLift, KPCW, CBS News, FOX13, or live blogs as of March 9, 2026) references any neighbor testimony specifically about lights remaining on late into the night or observing unusual illumination tied to the death scene.

Trial testimony has focused on the sequence of events:

Eric consumed the drink around evening (after closing a major house flip), went to bed, and Kouri reportedly left him alone briefly (to tend to a child with nightmares).
She accessed her phone around 3:06 a.m. but didn’t call 911 until 3:21 a.m., when she found him cold and unresponsive in their bedroom.
First responders arrived shortly after, with bodycam footage showing Kouri distraught, attempting CPR, and expressing shock (“He was active, he didn’t just die in his sleep, this is insane”).
Deputies and paramedics testified about the scene, Eric’s cold body, and no immediate signs of drug paraphernalia (though later searches uncovered hidden evidence).

Neighbor-related testimony in court has centered on earlier conversations, not the night of death. For example, Becky Lloyd (a neighbor, friend, and employee at Eric’s C&E Stone Masonry business) testified on March 5, 2026 (Day 9), about a 2021 discussion while wrapping Christmas presents: Kouri reportedly said “in many ways it would be better if Eric were dead” after a marital fight. Lloyd stood by her recollection despite defense playing a prior interview where she said she was “90% sure.” Other friends (e.g., Chelsea Barney) described marital complaints, texts like “If I die, Eric did it,” and post-death events, but nothing about late-night lights or neighborhood observations of the house that fatal night.

The “timeline inside the house” remains a key prosecution focus: the massive fentanyl dose (no opioid history for Eric), delay in emergency response, deleted phone data, suspicious texts/calls linked to drug purchases, and alleged affair communications. Prosecutors argue these point to premeditation and cover-up, not accident. Defense maintains Eric’s death could stem from pain management issues, accidental overdose, or other causes, with no direct evidence tying Kouri to administering fentanyl.

The trial (nearing prosecution’s close as of early March 2026) continues amid scrutiny of Kouri’s post-death actions, including promoting her children’s grief book “Are You With Me?” a year later as a grieving widow. No neighbor has publicly testified to lights-on observations in reliable reports; such details seem amplified in viral social media/Facebook posts or clickbait aggregators (common in high-profile cases to heighten drama).

Eric’s family continues to seek justice, while the case highlights themes of hidden financial strain, deception, and the exploitation of grief. Proceedings are expected to wrap in late March, with a verdict potentially forthcoming.