On December 21, 2015, Thomas Nick, a 33-year-old former youth football coach, murdered four people in Rupperswil, Switzerland—a mother, her two sons, and her older son's girlfriend. He posed as a school psychologist to gain entry, then robbed, sexually assaulted, and killed them before setting the house ablaze.
Kouri Richins, a Utah mother, has been found guilty of murdering her husband Eric with a lethal fentanyl overdose in March 2022. The case drew international attention after Richins published a children's book about grief while under investigation for his death.
TrueCrime.News searched verified English-language sources for true crime events, verdicts, or developments scheduled for May 4–10, 2026 (week 19), but found no matching documented facts for this period.
Kouri Richins, a 35-year-old Utah mother, has been found guilty of murdering her husband Eric by poisoning his cocktail with a lethal dose of fentanyl on March 3, 2022. The conviction came after a three-week trial in Park City, with jurors deliberating just three hours before returning guilty verdicts on all five counts, including aggravated murder and attempted murder.
In May 2009, a security executive in Illinois staged an elaborate home invasion to cover up a triple homicide. But FBI handwriting experts discovered he had made a critical mistake—writing the threatening messages himself—that would prove his guilt beyond doubt.
U.S. Air Force Major Andre McDonald was convicted of manslaughter in January 2023 for the death of his wife Andreen McDonald, whose remains were discovered months after she vanished from their San Antonio, Texas home in February 2019.
Brian Scott Lorenzo, 56, was found guilty on July 12, 2024, of murdering Deborah Meindl, a 33-year-old woman killed in her Tonawanda, New York home on February 17, 1993. The verdict comes after the original convictions were overturned in 2023, leading to a retrial that lasted nine days.
A 62-year-old Danish businessman has been sentenced to 21 months in prison for laundering 6.2 million Danish kroner (approximately €830,000) in drug proceeds through the country's mink skin trade. The case reveals how criminals exploit legitimate industries to disguise illicit funds in Nordic economies.
Reports suggest a Danish court has ordered the dissolution of Bandidos Danmark, but verified English-language sources contain no specific details about the case, timeline, or legal basis for the decision.