
Mushroom killer accused of 'tampering with with prison food'
The allegation was allegedly made by the inmate who said they became ill after eating the food she prepared at Melbourne's Dame Phyllis Frost Centre in Australia where she's being held.
Patterson was found guilty earlier today of three counts of murder and one of attempted murder today after serving a beef wellington lunch containing poisonous death cap mushrooms she had foraged.
The inmate says she fell ill after having a dispute with Patterson and believes the 50-year-old was to blame, the Herald Sun reports.
According to a Corrections Victoria source who spoke to the Daily Mail Australia, Patterson had been given a job in the prison kitchen despite the nature of the crime she was charged with.
Her supporters say the inmate's poisoning accusation is baseless.
Following her conviction at the Supreme Court in Melbourne, Patterson faces life in prison and will be sentenced at a later date.
In 2023 the mother-of-two served the individually cooked beef wellingtons at her home in Leongatha to her parents-in-law, Don and Gail Patterson, Gail's sister Heather Wilkinson and Heather's husband pastor Ian Wilkinson.
All four guests became ill, with all but Wilkinson dying.
During a nine-week trial the jury was asked to decide if she knew the lunch contained death caps, and if she intended for her guests to die.
Prosecutors did not offer a motive for the killings but had pointed out strained relations between Patterson and her estranged husband, and frustration that she had felt about his parents in the past.
The defence claimed there was no reason why she would want to kill the couples, as she had just moved to a beautiful new home, was financially comfortable and was due to begin studying for a degree in nursing and midwifery.
But prosecutors suggested Patterson had two faces – the woman who publicly appeared to have a good relationship with her parents-in-law, while her private feelings about them were kept hidden. More Trending
Her estranged husband Steven Patterson was also invited to the deadly lunch but decided to not to go.
Police have previously said she may have attempted to poison Simon on three separate occasions between 2021 and 2022.
Patterson claimed she did not become ill after eating the wellington because she threw up afterwards because of an eating disorder.
Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.
For more stories like this, check our news page.
MORE: YouTuber arrested on suspicion of causing '£30,000' of damage to F1 car at British Grand Prix
MORE: Teenage girls arrested after woman left with 'life-changing' stab wounds
MORE: Hero sniffer dog killed by 'cowards' who gave him sausages with nails in them

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
16 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Who is mushroom killer Erin Patterson's dearest bosom buddy? Ali stood by her throughout everything - and was her ONLY friend in court when the jury found her guilty of murder
Apart from Erin Patterson 's own legal team, who were paid to be there, just one person turned up in court every single day to support the triple killer. Alison Rose Prior, known as Ali, has been the most devoted loyal friend Erin - or anyone else - could ever have hoped for. Day after day, regardless of the incriminating evidence, bitter cold or ever-growing media pack, Ms Prior stuck by her friend through thick and thin. And when the jury delivered its damning series of ' verdicts, it was Ms Prior the killer immediately turned to. 'See you soon,' Patterson told her bosom buddy before being led away to begin her likely life sentence behind bars for the three murders and one attempted murder. Ms Prior left the court thronged by media, and as she fought back tears behind large sunglasses, she told reporters: 'I'm saddened.' Escorted by G4S security staff through the precincts of Morwell Law Courts - where the Supreme Court had held Patterson's ten-week trial - Ms Prior battled to keep her composure. 'I didn't have any expectations,' she added. 'It's the justice system and it is what it is.' Patterson was later whisked away to Dame Phyllis Frost prison, 200km away on the other side of Melbourne, far from her Leongatha home in Gippsland. But despite the distance, Ms Prior immediately vowed to remain Patterson's best mate as the mother-of-two now faces decades behind bars. 'I will see her,' Ms Prior defiantly insisted to a reporter's question. 'I'm her friend and I'll see her - I'll visit with her.' Ms Prior begged media to leave her alone so she could get to her car. As a sign of the intensity and closeness of their relationship, Patterson has granted Ms Prior complete power of attorney over her estate, giving her carte blanche over her substantial wealth and property. The pair are believed to have met through Facebook, where Patterson was an avid contributor to several True Crime groups. Ms Prior, who has a daughter with a rare genetic condition, had previously campaigned locally to reform the law on registering sex offenders and to prevent them living near schools. In the weeks after the agonising deaths of her estranged husband's parents, Don and Gail Patterson, and Gail's sister, Heather Wilkinson - who were fatally poisoned by the beef Wellingtons she laced with death cap mushrooms - Patterson fled her Leongatha home as the net closed in on her. Patterson is said to have bunkered down at Ms Prior's four-bedroom bungalow, set in lush woodlands on the edge of rural Healesville, 65km north-east of Melbourne, as detectives pored over her own home looking for murder clues. Black sheets appeared around Patterson's Leongatha home ahead of the jury's verdict The night before Patterson was finally arrested, she threw a party at her home for Ms Prior and three other close female friends. On the evening of Wednesday, November 1, 2023, Patterson held the knees-up at the Leongatha property for her dwindling inner circle of friends. The weeknight gathering is believed to have been small and included Patterson's two children, a girl and a boy (who can't be identified for legal reasons). But it was still noisy enough that it was noticed by neighbours, who speculated Patterson threw the party in the certain knowledge that those murder charges were imminent. As the jury retired to consider her guilt 18 months later, it was rumoured Patterson would once again return to Ms Prior's home to hide out from the media if she was found innocent. Instead though, the jury unanimously found her guilty - and she was transported by prison van to her new jail cell as one of Australia's most notorious killers. The verdict ends one of the nation's most intriguing homicide cases - and now Patterson likely only has prison visits from Ms Prior to look forward to.


Daily Mail
19 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Fate of Erin Patterson's $1.2million 'forever' home hangs in the balance
The $1.2million idyllic country property where Erin Patterson served the fateful mushroom lunch that killed three members of her family is now only an eerie reminder of one of Australia's most disturbing domestic murder cases. The two-storey weatherboard home, set on a hectare of land in Victoria's Gippsland region, was supposed to be the place Patterson would grow old. But it was inside that very home that Patterson dished up the deadly beef wellington laced with death cap mushrooms that killed her former in-laws Don and Gail Patterson, and Gail's sister Heather Wilkinson. Heather's husband, Reverend Ian Wilkinson, was the sole survivor of the lunch. At her highly-publicised trial, the 50-year-old was asked her plans for the house. 'I saw it as the final house,' she told the jury. 'Meaning I wanted it to be a house where the children would grow up, where once they moved away for uni or work, they could come back and stay whenever they liked, bring their children, and I'd grow old there. That's what I hoped.' Patterson reportedly bought the 1hectare block in 2019 for $260,000 after selling her parent's beachfront retirement home in Eden for $900,000. While Patterson still owns the Leongatha home, it is now burdened by a mortgage taken out to fund her mounting legal costs. Just weeks after she was charged with three counts of murder and one count of attempted murder in November 2023, Patterson sold her Mount Waverley investment unit for $1.025 million. Despite her conviction, questions remain about why her assets, including the Leongatha property, are yet to be frozen by authorities. Victims' families may yet seek compensation, but legal experts believe what remains of her estate will end up in a trust for her two children. Black tarps were erected around the Leongatha house in the lead-up to the verdict, shielding the front door, carport, and verandah from view. The thick plastic sheeting was reportedly installed by a supporter of Patterson's, possibly in anticipation of her return. But just days after the guilty verdict, the tarps were mysteriously removed. Patterson is being held at the maximum-security Dame Phyllis Frost Centre in Ravenhall, more than two hours away from her forever home. Prison sources say the convicted mushroom chef has been targeted by other inmates and was even separated last year over claims she tampered with prison food. Patterson is expected to be sentenced later this year.


The Guardian
a day ago
- The Guardian
Two years ago, Erin Patterson's lunch guests were admitted to hospital. This week she became a convicted murderer
It's a case so well-publicised it barely needs introduction. Erin Patterson, a middle-aged mother of two, hosted a lunch at her home in Leongatha, a regional town in the Australian state of Victoria, on 29 July 2023. After being served individual beef wellingtons laced with death cap mushrooms, three of her relatives died and one barely survived. After a two-and-a-half month trial that made global headlines, Patterson was on Monday found guilty of murdering her parents-in-law, Don and Gail Patterson, and Gail's sister, Heather Wilkinson, and attempting to murder Heather's husband, Ian Wilkinson. Erin Patterson hosts lunch for estranged husband Simon's parents, Don and Gail Patterson, and his aunt and uncle Heather and Ian Wilkinson. Patterson serves beef wellington. All four lunch guests are admitted to hospital with gastro-like symptoms. Gail Patterson and Heather Wilkinson die in hospital. Don Patterson dies in hospital. Victoria police search Erin Patterson's home and interview her. Ian Wilkinson is discharged from hospital after weeks in intensive care. Police again search Erin Patterson's home, and she is arrested and interviewed. She is charged with three counts of murder relating to the deaths of Don and Gail Patterson and Heather Wilkinson, and the attempted murder of Ian Wilkinson. Jury is sworn in. Murder trial begins. Jury hears that charges of attempting to murder her estranged husband Simon are dropped. Jury finds Erin Patterson guilty of murdering Heather Wilkinson, Don and Gail Patterson and attempting to murder Ian Wilkinson. 'Guilty, guilty, guilty, guilty,' the jury's foreperson read in quick succession. Patterson didn't flinch. She looked straight at the jury, her face unreadable. It was all over within minutes. Patterson's lawyers, led by Colin Mandy SC, left the courtroom without making comment. The lead prosecutor, Nanette Rogers SC, wasn't even there. There were no members of the Wilkinson or Patterson families in courtroom four to hear the verdict, either. Just one friend of Erin Patterson's, quietly wiping away tears. It was a sudden end to a trial that lasted more than 10 weeks, featured in excess of 50 witnesses and was forensically covered by the biggest media contingent to follow Victorian supreme court proceedings in recent history. According to the supreme court, more than 250 journalists registered for updates on the trial. Nine authors, seven podcast producers, seven documentary crews and a television drama series were among those who attended Latrobe Valley law courts, alongside court watchers and the victim's families. The media circus contributed to an economic boom in both Morwell, where the court is located, and Traralgon, the biggest town in the region and where most visitors stay. Throughout the trial, there was no dispute that Patterson had served a lunch containing death cap mushrooms that killed three of her guests and made the fourth seriously ill. But had she meant to poison them? Her lawyers had argued it was a tragic accident. They said when the lunch turned deadly, Patterson panicked and lied to police, saying she had never foraged for mushrooms. Prosecutors offered another narrative: Patterson deliberately poisoned her lunch guests 'with murderous intent' and then attempted to cover it up. They did not provide a motive, nor is one required by law. But the court heard that Erin and Simon Patterson's relationship was punctuated by repeated ruptures and reconciliations after their 2007 marriage, until they separated permanently in 2015. The split, which was not formalised through divorce, was amicable, Patterson's estranged husband told the court, until about October or November 2022, when he said a miscommunication between himself and his accountant resulted in him being listed as 'separated' on a tax return form for the first time. In a message shown to the court, Erin wrote it had family tax benefit and child support implications that could cost her up to about $15,000 a year. Simon told the court he was advised by child support authorities not to pay any expenses relating to the children, including school and medical fees, while the amount he had to pay in child support was calculated. It spelled an end to their 'chatty' relationship. Simon said Erin became 'extremely aggressive'. In a series of messages written in December 2022, Erin told friends she was disappointed Simon's parents would not help mediate the dispute. '[Don] said they can't adjudicate if they don't know both sides … This family I swear to fucking god,' one message read. Others said she wanted 'nothing to do' with her parents-in-law, that she was 'sick of this shit' and 'fuck em'. Six months later, she invited them to lunch. Simon also agreed to go, but the night before the lunch he texted her to cancel, saying he felt 'too uncomfortable'. Patterson replied: 'That's really disappointing. I've spent many hours this week preparing lunch for tomorrow which has been exhausting in light of the issues I'm facing and spent a small fortune on beef eye fillet to make beef wellingtons because I wanted it to be a special meal, as I may not be able to host a lunch like this again for some time.' Ian Wilkinson told the court he recalled Patterson plating the individual beef wellingtons on four large grey plates and a smaller plate – an 'orangey, tan' colour. Patterson, he said, ate from the odd plate. After the group had finished eating, Patterson 'announced that she had cancer', the Korrumburra Baptist church pastor said. 'In that moment, I thought, 'This is the reason we've been invited to lunch',' he said. Patterson's four guests all were admitted to hospital the next day. Taking to the witness box herself, Patterson admitted she had never been diagnosed with cancer. She said she had told the lie as she was embarrassed about her plan to undergo gastric bypass surgery for weight loss. It later emerged in court that the clinic where she said she had an appointment offered no such surgery, with Patterson saying she must have been mistaken in her evidence, though it did offer liposuction. She said she was a binge eater who had struggled with her body image since she was a child. On the day of the lunch, she said she binge ate two-thirds of an orange cake brought by Gail, then vomited it up – a plausible explanation, the defence said, for why she was less unwell than her guests later. Much of the trial centred around Patterson's actions after the lunch. She refused treatment on her first presentation at Leongatha hospital and discharged herself against medical advice; was reluctant for her children to be taken to hospital for assessment after she said they had eaten leftovers of the lunch; disposed of a food dehydrator she had used to dry mushrooms; lied in a police interview; and performed a series of factory resets on one of her mobile phones. Another phone, believed to be primarily used by Patterson, was never found by police. The prosecution said Patterson told so many 'lies upon lies' that it was 'hard to keep track of them'. 'When she knew her lies had been uncovered, she came up with a carefully constructed narrative to fit with the evidence – almost. There are some inconsistencies that she just cannot account for so she ignores them,' Rogers said. She said the jury should have 'no difficulty' in rejecting the argument that 'this was all a horrible foraging accident'. They did just that. Now a convicted triple murderer, Patterson will face a sentencing hearing later this year. Her lawyers will have 28 days from the date of her sentence to decide if they are going to appeal. If an appeal does proceed, the saga that has gripped the globe will continue.