How a Pharmacist Poisoned Her Husband to Cover Up a $2M Ponzi Scheme

By Jennifer A. • Feb 21, 2025
How a Pharmacist Poisoned Her Husband to Cover Up a $2M Ponzi Scheme-1

For nearly two decades, Michael Cochran believed he and his wife, Natalie, had built a stable life together. As a respected pharmacist in West Virginia, Natalie appeared to have a promising career. But behind the scenes, she was running a $2 million Ponzi scheme, defrauding investors under the guise of a government contracting business. By early 2019, Michael started asking questions about missing money. Instead of coming clean, Natalie used her medical knowledge to silence him — with a fatal dose of insulin.

A $2 Million Scheme Comes Crashing Down

Between 2017 and 2019, Natalie convinced investors that she operated a successful government contracting business. Prosecutors later revealed that instead of funding real contracts, she used the money to buy luxury items, including real estate, jewelry, and a 1965 Shelby Cobra, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office.

Her fraudulent empire started crumbling when Michael began questioning the finances. He expected a payout from their business, but Natalie couldn't produce it. She faced two choices: admit the truth or eliminate the risk.

Murder by Insulin

On the day Michael suddenly fell ill, Natalie reportedly told friends he wasn't feeling well. When they urged her to take him to the hospital, she refused, saying she would let him "sleep it off," according to CourtTV. But Michael wasn't just under the weather — he had been injected with a lethal dose of insulin, a drug he had not been prescribed.

Five days later on Feb. 11, 2019, Michael died.

At first, his death seemed natural. But as authorities started investigating Natalie's fraudulent business dealings, suspicions grew.

Years of Secrets Unravel

Authorities began looking into Natalie's finances in 2019 after Michael's death, ultimately uncovering her shocking multimillion-dollar Ponzi scheme. In 2020, she pleaded guilty to federal wire fraud and money laundering charges and was sentenced to 11 years in prison. However, at that time, she had not been charged with killing her husband.

That all changed on Nov. 19, 2021, when prosecutors indicted Natalie for first-degree murder, believing she had poisoned Michael to keep him from exposing her crimes.

The Exhumation That Exposed the Truth

In 2023, prosecutors requested the dismissal of the original murder charges against Natalie, which then allowed authorities to exhume Michael's body and reexamine to conduct further testing. Forensic pathologist Dr. Paul Urbie later confirmed that nonprescribed insulin had caused Michael's death, ruling it a homicide. Armed with this evidence, prosecutors refiled the murder charges in October 2023.

Guilty in Just 2 Hours

Finally, on Jan. 29, 2025, after hearing the case, a jury in Raleigh County, West Virginia, took just two hours to convict Natalie of first-degree murder. Natalie reportedly broke down in tears when the verdict was read, according to PEOPLE.

A jury sentenced her to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

A Chilling Pattern of Poisonings

Natalie Cochran is not the only spouse who has turned to poison. In recent years, a string of high-profile cases has followed a similar pattern: financial desperation, betrayal, and a calculated murder.

A Utah woman was accused of killing her husband with fentanyl. A Colorado dentist allegedly slipped cyanide into his wife's protein shakes. A former Mayo Clinic doctor was charged with fatally poisoning his pharmacist wife.

Each case reflects a chilling reality — when lies begin to unravel, some people would rather kill than face the consequences.

Michael Cochran never saw it coming. After 19 years of marriage, the person he trusted most became his executioner.

References: Pharmacist Killed Husband with Insulin Injection So He Wouldn't Learn About $2M Ponzi Scheme | West Virginia pharmacist convicted in poisoning death of her husband | WV v. Natalie Cochran: Ponzi Scheme Murder Trial | West Virginia pharmacist convicted in poisoning death of her husband is sentenced to life in prison | Cochran trial: Doctor says insulin killed Michael Cochran, state rests

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