'Truth' protester interrupts mushroom murder trial
Your web browser is no longer supported. To improve your experience update it here BREAKING Victoria to ban sale of machetes after shopping centre brawl A high-profile murder trial over a poisonous mushroom meal has been interrupted by an outburst from a protester inside court. Erin Patterson, 50, is facing the fifth week of a trial over a toxic beef Wellington that she served up to her estranged husband's family. She has pleaded not guilty to three counts of murder and one of attempted murder, over the July 2023 meal which caused the deaths of her former in-laws Don and Gail Patterson, 70, and Gail's sister Heather Wilkinson, 66. A courtroom sketch of Erin Patterson. (Paul Tyquin) Following a mid-morning break today, moments after the jury was brought into the court room, a protester stood up in the public gallery and addressed Justice Christopher Beale. "How can you be a judge?" the man, wearing a yellow T-shirt with "all we are saying is give truth a chance" written on it, said. He made a number of allegations against the judge before he was quickly escorted out of the court, in Morwell, regional Victoria. The trial resumed shortly after, with Victoria Police forensics officer Shamen Fox-Henry cross-examined by defence. In his fourth day on the witness stand, Fox-Henry was questioned about his training in software used to analyse devices seized from Patterson's home. Fox-Henry previously told the jury he used a program called Magnet Axiom to examine a Cooler Master PC seized from Patterson's property during a police search on August 5, 2023. Defence barrister Colin Mandy SC asked him if he had received any formal training on Magnet Axiom before using it to extract data from three storage devices found on the computer. He followed steps given from another member of the Victoria Police cyber crime unit on how to extract the material. Under re-examination by prosecutor Jane Warren, Fox-Henry confirmed he had used Magnet Axiom before this and his training in digital software was a combination of formal training with certification and "on the job use of tools". "A large majority of the governing principles behind the applications we use are the same if not similar," he said. Mandy also asked Fox-Henry about "phone B", a Samsung mobile which had been factory reset four times, including once the day after it was seized from Patterson's home. He did not find any data on the phone, apart from the record that it had been factory reset in February and August 2023. "The information available to the people conducting the extraction on this phone is limited because of the fact of the factory reset?" Mandy asked. "That is correct," Fox-Henry said. LISTEN NOW: The Mushroom Trial Say Grace is the latest podcast from Nine and The Age. Join journalists Penelope Liersch and Erin Pearson as they take listeners inside the case that's grabbed global headlines. You can listen on Apple here and Spotify here. courts
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2 hours ago
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It's not every day, we might safely assume, that a murder trial begins with the jury being shown a page from a cookbook that begins with the words 'Gordon Ramsay, eat your heart out'. But there it was. Day 30 of the trial of accused killer mushroom cook Erin Patterson had barely got under way when there appeared on the courtroom's big video screen a beef Wellington recipe from a RecipeTin Eats cookbook by Nagi Maehashi. Beneath the cheeky tilt at the salty-tongued British celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay, whose beef Wellington is a signature dish at his famed Savoy Grill in London, was the following printed warning by Maehashi to would-be cooks. 'Even professional chefs tell me that Beef Wellington gives them nightmares and they've always struggled with it.' It is impossible, of course, to know what, if anything, the jury made of this. What we do know from earlier evidence is that this was the recipe that Patterson told police she had used to guide her preparation of a luncheon that led to the deaths of three of her guests, and the near-mortal illness of a fourth. Patterson has pleaded not guilty to three counts of murder and one of attempted murder. Her defence is that the deaths and the illness were a terrible accident. The beef Wellington recipe shown to the jurors advised that a duxelles involving mushrooms should be used.


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