
Husband suspected wife of poisoning him before toxic mushroom murders
A judge on Friday lifted a gag order on pretrial evidence that triple murderer Erin Patterson, 50, had wanted kept secret while she attempts to overturn her convictions.
The evidence included the suspicions of Patterson's estranged husband, Simon Patterson, that she had previously attempted to kill him.
Mr Patterson gave evidence at a pre-trial hearing that he had declined the lunch invitation out of fear.
'I thought there'd be a risk that she'd poison me if I attended,' he told the court months before the trial in evidence that was not presented to jurors.
Mr Patterson said that while he had stopped eating food prepared by his wife, from whom he had been estranged since 2015, he never thought others would be at risk.
Simon Patterson said he had stopped eating food prepared by his wife (James Ross/AAP/AP)
Erin Patterson was convicted by a Victoria state Supreme Court last month of murdering her parents-in-law, Don and Gail Patterson, and Gail's sister Heather Wilkinson, at her home in Leongatha, with a lunch of beef Wellington pastries containing toxic death cap mushrooms.
She was also found guilty of attempting to murder Ian Wilkinson, Mrs Wilkinson's husband, who survived the meal but spent weeks in hospital.
Erin Patterson was initially charged with attempting to murder her husband by inviting him to the lunch in July 2023. He had accepted the invitation, then cancelled.
She was also initially charged with three counts of attempting to murder him on three occasions around Victoria between November 2021 and September 2022.
Prosecutors dropped all charges relating to the husband before her trial began in April.
Mr Patterson gave evidence before the trial that he suspected his wife had deliberately made him seriously ill with dishes including Bolognese pasta, chicken korma curry and a vegetable curry wrap. No poisons were ever found.
The three alleged poisonings occurred during family camping trips. Mr Patterson told his poisoning suspicions to his doctor, who encouraged him to create a spreadsheet listing what he had eaten around the time he became sick.
The judge, Justice Christopher Beale, ruled for lawyers representing media who sought to overturn the gag order, ordering that the evidence that jurors had not seen would be made public.
Erin Patterson's lawyers wanted all the evidence that was not deemed admissible at her trial kept secret until an appeals court decided whether to overturn her convictions.
Their reasons included that media interest in the case was unprecedented.
Defence lawyer Colin Mandy argued that reporting of the suppressed evidence, as well as references to it in books, podcasts and a planned television mini-series, would 'leave an indelible impression on the minds of potential jurors in the event that there is a retrial'.
A hearing will begin on August 25 to determine what sentence she will get. She faces a potential life sentence for each of the murders and 25 years for attempted murder.
Prosecutor Jane Warren told the judge on Friday 'a lot' of victim impact statements would be presented at that two-day sentencing hearing.
Once Erin Patterson is sentenced, she will have 28 days to lodge an appeal against the sentence, the convictions, or both.
Her lawyers say they will appeal against her convictions.

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Sunday World
28 minutes ago
- Sunday World
‘There's no way he killed himself' Jeffrey Epstein's former butler claims
'LOVED LIFE' | Former employee claims Trump offered disgraced financier a job during first term in White House In an interview that will heap renewed pressure on the Trump administration to make the Epstein files public, one of his closest aides said he spoke to the paedophile financier before he died and insisted he was in good spirits. Valdson Vieira Cotrin, who ran Epstein's Paris home, said he could not accept the official verdict of suicide and feared his own life was in danger. He also said he believed that Epstein victim Virginia Giuffre, who accused Prince Andrew of rape and died by suicide in April, was a victim of foul play. Mr Cotrin also made the extraordinary claim that Epstein told him he had been offered a job by Donald Trump in his first administration in 2016 – but that Epstein had turned it down. Donald Trump claims he fell out with Epstein in 2004. Photo: Reuters There is no evidence that the allegation is true and Mr Trump has maintained that he stopped speaking to Epstein in 2004 after they fell out over a business deal. But Mr Cotrin's recollection of a conversation with his boss will fuel a growing demand for the full Epstein files – the trove of documents from the criminal investigations into Epstein that allegedly name high-profile celebrities and politicians, possibly including Mr Trump – to be released in full. Jeffrey Epstein with his former butler Valdson Cotrin News in 90 Seconds - Aug 9th In his exclusive interview, Mr Cotrin, speaking on the record for the first time, also alleged: Mr Cotrin remains in possession of a number of photographs taken with friends of Epstein, including a photo of himself with Bill Clinton on the so-called Lolita Express, Epstein's private plane that he used to traffic underage girls and women for sex. The existence of the photo showing Mr Clinton on board Epstein's jet will also fuel demands for the former president to reveal his full dealings with Epstein. Mr Clinton was issued with a subpoena on Tuesday, demanding he give evidence to a congressional committee investigating the financier. Bill Clinton and his wife Hillary have both been subpoenaed to appear before the house oversight committee. Photo: AP Mr Cotrin also shared a photograph of himself with Epstein that was taken in January 2019 on his private jet, which may be one of the last taken of the financier. He looks puffy but is smiling and relaxed and notably wearing an Israel Defence Forces sweatshirt. Epstein has long been accused of being an operative for Mossad, Israel's intelligence service, although last month his former lawyer said that Epstein used to laugh off the claim. 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'I drove him to Le Bourget Airport. It was a Saturday, because on Monday he was supposed to appear before the judge regarding all these accusations. 'When I got home, two young women rang, his main girlfriend who had been with him officially for several years, Karyna [Shuliak] and another who worked for him. And then they told me, 'Mr Epstein has gone to prison. He arrived in New York. The police were waiting for him'.' Mr Cotrin's partner, Maria Gomes de Melo, who also knew Epstein well, recalled that in Paris, Epstein had said goodbye to her and added: 'I'll be back next week', Ms de Melo told him: 'Sir, don't go.' She also questioned the official conclusion that he had killed himself. Epstein's brother, Mark, has suggested the financier may have been murdered, ordering a second post-mortem examination that tended to back up that assertion. 'On the Saturday late, we got the news that he had hanged himself, and honestly, he loved life too much to float away like that,' she said. 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Irish Independent
4 hours ago
- Irish Independent
Mushroom murderer tried to poison husband with rat poison and anti-freeze in meals, suppressed evidence alleges
Erin Patterson (50) was found guilty last month of murdering her husband's parents and aunt in 2023 by lacing their lunch with lethal death cap mushrooms. Prosecutors initially sought to present evidence that she may have put rat poison in a meal prepared for Simon Patterson, the father of her two children. Mr Patterson had also discussed with his doctor the possibility that radiator antifreeze had been added to biscuits his ex-wife had baked for him in February 2023, five months before his parents and aunt died at Erin Patterson's home in Leongatha, south-east of Melbourne. Police initially charged Erin Patterson with four counts of attempting to murder her husband, which she denied. Eventually, police dropped those charges. In pre-trial hearings, the court heard how Mr Patterson had become so concerned of falling ill from meals prepared by his estranged wife that he kept an Excel spreadsheet on his computer to document them. 'I had the idea I got sick from Erin's food. I did not give it too much thought,' he told police in a statement read out to the court. In November 2021, he ate a portion of Bolognese penne pasta from a Tupperware container. Afterwards, he began suffering from vomiting and diarrhoea, and spent a night in hospital. Six months later, in May 2022, he fell into a coma days after eating a chicken korma curry prepared by Erin Patterson on a camping trip in the mountains of Victoria's High Country region. Surgeons were forced to remove a large part of his bowel to save his life. In September 2022, while visiting a stretch of Victoria's coastline, he would become unwell again after eating a vegetable wrap. At first, he felt nausea and diarrhoea coming on, the court heard, before his symptoms escalated. He started slurring his speech, gradually lost control of his muscles and began 'fitting'. ADVERTISEMENT 'By the end of the journey [to hospital], all I could move was my neck, my tongue and lips,' he told the court. The prosecution argued that his symptoms could be consistent with barium carbonate ingestion, a chemical compound that is used in rat poison. Dr Chris Ford, Mr Patterson's GP, told the court that he had asked him to record his symptoms because he 'couldn't understand why' he had had three 'near-death experiences'. 'It didn't fit into any of my medical models that would account for all three of those things,' Dr Ford told the court. 'There was no other reasons that could fit all the different admissions, so it seemed feasible it [the food he was served] could be a possible reason.' The allegations were revealed yesterday after the Supreme Court of Victoria lifted a suppression order that had kept the details secret until the conclusion of one of the most high-profile murder trials in Australian history. Erin Patterson was found guilty of murdering Gail and Don Patterson, and Gail's sister, Heather Wilkinson. She was also convicted of the attempted murder of Ian Wilkinson, the fourth lunch guest, who survived after undergoing a liver transplant. Police yesterday released a 21-minute video of Erin Patterson's interview with detectives a week after the lunch, in which she portrayed herself as a loving daughter-in-law who was committed to helping with the investigation. Simon Patterson's family were 'good, decent people that have never done anything wrong by me, ever', she told police. 'I think Simon hated that I had a relationship with his parents,' she added. She also told police she did not own a food dehydrator − a lie that would later be found out by CCTV showing her dumping one at a rubbish tip. Forensic testing revealed the dehydrator contained traces of the Amanita phalloides fungi, commonly known as the death cap. By the time police arrested Patterson, they had also raided her home and seized phones and computers at the property. On them, they found several pieces of evidence − allegedly including an article about barium carbonate. They also found a social media post she allegedly made asking for advice on how to treat her cat after it ate poisonous mushrooms − even though she did not own a cat. Police included the post in their brief of evidence, but it was ruled as inadmissible. Mr Patterson told the court that his estranged wife had invited him to the July 2023 lunch, but he declined because 'I thought there'd be a risk that she'd poison me if I attended'. He had previously told relatives that he feared his estranged wife was trying to kill him after the series of unexplained medical crises between 2021 and 2022. But he did not warn them against eating at her house because he never thought she would set out to harm them. The pair had remained on friendly terms despite their separation, but had started to argue over finances including child support payments. Patterson's defence lawyer told the court, however, that a medical expert who had analysed Mr Patterson's medical records had concluded his symptoms were consistent with low potassium levels. Several possible explanations for his illnesses were raised, including gastrointestinal conditions, and doctors did not find poison in his system. The allegations were never presented to the jury as the court-ordered prosecutors would need to pursue a separate trial to address claims Erin Patterson had tried to kill husband Simon. She will face a two-day pre-sentence hearing on August 25, when relatives and friends of the Pattersons and Wilkinsons will have an opportunity to read victim-impact statements. Erin Patterson faces a maximum penalty of life in prison without parole. She is expected to appeal her convictions.


The Irish Sun
13 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
Crypto bro begged ‘call my mom' & ratted out pal after he ‘tortured Italian millionaire in luxury pad with chainsaw'
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