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Crime and chaos: Victoria's seven most notorious women

Crime and chaos: Victoria's seven most notorious women

Toxicology showed the lunch guests had been poisoned with death cap mushrooms that police quickly found were laced into homemade beef Wellingtons.
Three guests, Don and Gail Patterson, plus Gail's sister, Heather Wilkinson, died while Heather's husband, Ian, against all medical odds, survived. Although Erin Patterson ate the same meal, she did not suffer the same dangerous symptoms.
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This was not a crime of impulse but one that was planned like a science experiment, finding the poisoned mushrooms, luring her victims to a deadly meal on the false claim she had cancer, a protracted cover-up and then performances in front of the media and the jury of a bewildered victim.
As she stood in front of her house sobbing, she told reporters she loved her in-laws. Then there was an involuntary gesture – a finger to her eye and a quick glance to see if there were real tears. There were none. She repeated the action, seemingly overwhelmed in the witness box. Clearly, the jury didn't buy what she was selling.
Her defence team is likely to appeal on the grounds the jury got it wrong. Good luck with that. The trial judge, Justice Christopher Beale, went out of his way to thank the jurors for their exemplary behaviour.
2. Roberta Williams
Wife of gangster Carl Williams, she once tried to run him over outside a bottle shop after an argument. She was anything but the long-suffering wife.
When Williams wanted to kill one of his many rivals, Jason Moran, Roberta was used as bait. She tried to pick a fight with Jason's wife, Trish, outside the school their children attended to lure Moran into an ambush.
When he was finally killed – along with his friend, Pasquale Barbaro – in a van filled with kids, a listening device picked up Roberta's reaction. 'I'll be partying tonight.'
But Roberta did have some sensible boundaries. When she complained about the workload of being a single parent while Carl was in jail (he was killed in custody in 2010), a family friend offered to babysit. It was Greg Domaszewicz, who was acquitted of murdering Moe toddler Jaidyn Leskie.
Roberta declined the offer, adding, 'You are f-----g joking.'
3. Meshilin Marrogi
Probably Victoria's only female crime boss. Her brother, George, king of the jail jungle, ran the Notorious Crime Family from behind bars, where he had spent nearly all his adult life, having first killed at the age of 17.
Hundreds of his calls to his legal team were diverted to allow him to control his crime syndicate while in maximum security.
The brains behind the gang was his sister, Meshilin, who controlled the drug trafficking and the finances.
When she died, aged 30, in 2021 from COVID-19 complications, there was a procession of Rolls Royces used to ferry grieving friends and family to the funeral.
But George's many enemies had no compassion, and long memories. In 2023, they broke into the family crypt and robbed her body of jewellery.
Without Meshlin's guiding hand, the Notorious Crime Family collapsed.
4. Kath Pettingill
Known as Granny Evil, she reared a snake pit of sons, some of whom found no crime was too low. She had 10 children including the notorious drug dealer, informer and multiple murderer, Dennis Bruce Allen.
Two other sons, Victor Peirce and Trevor Pettingill, were charged and acquitted of the 1988 Walsh Street murders of constables Steven Tynan and Damian Eyre. Decades later, Peirce was ambushed in a gangland murder in Bay Street, Port Melbourne.
Kath had an eye shot out in 1978. Police launched an investigation into the crime family, naturally calling it 'Operation Cyclops'.
Aged 90, she lives out of the limelight at Venus Bay, lobbying for community projects including safer streets.
5. Wendy Peirce
From a law-abiding family, she fell for Victor Peirce, placing her in the Allen/Pettingill/Peirce hell-hole of violence.
The family wanted to shoot her in the foot to provide Victor grounds for a bail application so he could look after his injured wife.
After Walsh Street, police persuaded her to change sides and become the star prosecution witness against the four men charged, including her husband. At first, she liked being in witness protection but as the months dragged into years, she saw her future. A new identity, no contact with her family and a life of looking over her shoulder.
She made contact with the Pettingills and changed sides again, effectively sabotaging the case. The four walked free. Wendy was sentenced to 18 months with a minimum of nine for perjury.
For years, I kept in contact with Wendy, first at her home in the outer east while Victor was doing time, and after he was murdered in 2001, near her home in Port Melbourne.
She would speak of the most horrendous violence as if it were an everyday event. Such as the day she discovered Allen's wife, Sissy.
'Dennis opened the boot. Sissy was in there with her throat cut. It wasn't ear to ear, but she lay there just gurgling. He told someone to drive her somewhere and just leave her in a dump master. I got her dropped off at a railway station, so someone would find her and take her to hospital. That saved her life.'
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In 2005, she admitted to me the truth about Walsh Street. 'Victor was the organiser.'
While in witness protection, she insisted on browsing in an expensive South Yarra lingerie shop.
Even though her guards had a fistful of dollars, she tried to shoplift certain garments until a Special Operations Group member threatened to take his Uzi machinegun out of his backpack and shoot her.
Which meant the g-man said no to the g-string.
6. Nicola Gobbo
The dreadful irony of the Gobbo saga is the barrister-turned-informer who spent so much time seeking to be a headline act now has been reduced to living in the shadows.
What is lost in the Gobbo story is what could have been. She had the talent, the drive, the name (niece to the outstanding judge and governor, Sir James Gobbo), and the legal brain to become an elite barrister.
Instead, her desire for centre stage, a weakness for bad men and a flawed moral compass led her to make disastrous decisions, first by getting too close to the crooks and then much too close to the cops.
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If only those in her own profession had moved early to discipline her, the results may have been different.
Instead, we have spent $300 million on inquiries, and some convictions (including against drug boss Tony Mokbel) remain in doubt.
7. Judy Moran
Like Gobbo, Judy's fatal mistake was to believe her own publicity that she was some sort of crime matriarch.
She was a more than competent shoplifter whose family life was destroyed by murder.
The victim of repeated family violence, her husbands, Les Cole (1981) and Lewis Moran (2004), and sons, Mark Moran (2000) and Jason (2003), were killed in underworld murders. And she was a victim of savage domestic violence.
But greed and an ego as big as the Hindenburg would be her undoing and just like the giant airship, she would crash and burn (or more accurately burn and crash).
In 2009, she paid a hit-team to kill her brother-in-law, Des Moran, as he sat at his favourite Ascot Vale café.
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Just before the start of the trial in April, the firm lodged a mortgage over Patterson's home – a standard move to secure future fees. Legal sources speaking on condition of anonymity said the DPP could challenge the mortgage and argue Doogue & George knew at the time it was taken out that the property was 'risky' since Patterson cooked the beef Wellington parcels used to commit the crime in the kitchen. However, the source said Patterson's lawyers could also argue that prosecutors had a chance to restrain the property earlier and failed to do so. They could also argue Patterson had not been convicted at the time, and it was their view that she hadn't committed any offences. 'It's for a judge to ultimately say,' one source said. 'If one of them wants to go off to the Court of Appeal, the Court of Appeal might see it differently.' Patterson served the poisoned meal to her in-laws, Don and Gail Patterson, as well as Gail's sister Heather Wilkinson and her husband Ian Wilkinson, in the Gibson Street property on July 29, 2023. Don, Gail and Heather died less than a week later. Ian, a Baptist pastor in Korumburra, eventually recovered after spending several weeks in hospital, most of those in a coma. Ian, as well as members of the Wilkinson and Patterson families, could be eligible for compensation. The five-bedroom property is likely to be difficult to sell, given its history as the scene of a major crime and the ghoulish attraction it has become for true-crime fans. Loading True-crime aficionados and curious locals have been frequently spotted driving along the quiet road to take a peek at the house. The 1.2 hectare property, surrounded by gumtrees and paddocks, has been labelled 'Erin's Mushroom House' on Google Maps. The listing includes a 5-star review by an online user alongside jokes about the mushroom meal. Just before the 12-person jury began deliberations in the case, black plastic sheeting was used to cover the external fencing of the property – creating a kind of privacy shield. It was taken down days after the guilty verdicts. During the trial, Patterson spoke about her Leongatha house, telling the jury she'd helped design it using Microsoft Paint and wanted it to be her forever home.

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