logo
Australia mushroom trial live: Erin Patterson to continue giving evidence on day 25 of her triple murder trial

Australia mushroom trial live: Erin Patterson to continue giving evidence on day 25 of her triple murder trial

The Guardian2 days ago

Update:
Date: 2025-06-03T00:31:51.000Z
Title: What the jury heard yesterday
Content: While we wait for today's proceedings to get underway, here's a recap of what the jury heard on Monday:
Patterson entered the witness box to begin testifying in her triple murder trial. Members of the Patterson and Wilkinson families, including Ian Wilkinson, were in the court.
The accused said in the months prior to the July 2023 lunch she felt her relationship with the Patterson family, particularly her in-laws Don and Gail, had 'a bit more distance'. She said from the start of 2023 her relationship with her estranged husband, Simon, was 'functional' and the pair communicated mainly about logistical matters.
Patterson had a 'never-ending battle of low self-esteem' for most of her adult life, she told the court. She said around the time of the lunch she was planning to have gastric bypass surgery for weight loss.
Defence lawyer Colin Mandy SC asked his client about the tension in her relationship with Simon, which involved multiple separations between 2009 and 2015. She said the pair 'just couldn't communicate well' when they had a disagreement. 'We would just feel hurt,' she said.
The prosecution closed its case on Monday afternoon before Patterson entered the witness box.
Update:
Date: 2025-06-03T00:29:46.000Z
Title: Welcome
Content: to day 25 of Erin Patterson's triple murder trial.
Patterson, who began testifying on Monday, is expected to continue giving evidence.
We're expecting the trial to resume from 10.30am once the jurors enter the courtroom in Morwell.
Patterson, 50, faces three charges of murder and one charge of attempted murder relating to a beef wellington lunch she served at her house in Leongatha, in regional Victoria, on 29 July 2023.
She is accused of murdering her in-laws, Don and Gail Patterson, and her estranged husband's aunt, Heather Wilkinson. The attempted murder charge relates to Heather's husband, Ian.
She has pleaded not guilty to the charges.
The prosecution alleges Patterson deliberately poisoned her lunch guests with 'murderous intent', but her lawyers say the poisoning was a tragic accident.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ethical questions swarm scientists after discovery that could wipe out pesky mosquitoes
Ethical questions swarm scientists after discovery that could wipe out pesky mosquitoes

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

Ethical questions swarm scientists after discovery that could wipe out pesky mosquitoes

Scientists have developed methods to wipe potentially disease-carrying mosquitoes off of the face of the Earth. But, should they? The implications of such a monumental call remain unknown and bioethicists say they are not 'in favor of remaking the world to suit human desires.' 'The eradication of the mosquito through a genetic technology would have the potential to create global eradication in a way that just felt a little risky,' Christopher Preston, a University of Montana environmental philosopher, recently told The Washington Post. However, we have the technology, which largely targets the female mosquitoes responsible for biting and spreading malaria, dengue, Zika, and other nasty pathogens. Using genetic tools, researchers can edit the genetic makeup of mosquitoes and make the females infertile. In January, scientists in Australia that they were able to alter male mosquitoes to produce venom proteins in their semen that can reduce the lifespan of females. This week, researchers at the University of Maryland said they have successfully created a 'sexually transmitted disease' that would deliver a deadly fungal infection to the females. 'It's essentially an arms race between the mosquitoes and us,' University of Maryland professor Raymond St. Leger said in a statement. 'Just as they keep adapting to what we create, we have to continuously develop new and creative ways to fight them.' The fungus is called Metarhizium. Sprayed on male mosquitoes, it works by producing neuroteoxins that kill when they are injected into a female mosquito. It is harmless to humans. 'The fungus additionally made infected mosquitoes less able to sense insecticides, and much more susceptible to them, so it's really a double blow against them,' St. Leger said. This could be great news in the fight against mosquito-borne illness. Last year, the rare but serious eastern equine encephalitis virus forced New York to declare an 'imminent threat,' a New Hampshire man died, and public parks and other areas closed in Massachusetts as the virus spread. This year, cities across the country have reported cases of West Nile virus, and authorities started spraying adulticide in Houston's Harris County. Malaria also continues to be a leading cause of preventable illness and death, resulting in 608,000 deaths across 85 countries in 2022. But, just how far should humans take the war against mosquitoes? It can be easy to overlook the role they play in our ecosystems. They are an important source of food for fish, frogs, and pollinators, including birds and bats. But, they are also pollinators themselves, and their primary food source is flower nectar — not blood. Of the more than 3,000 species on Earth, just 400 can transmit diseases to people, and most of them don't actually feed on humans at all, Yvonne-Marie Linton, research director at the Walter Reed Biosystematics Unit, told Smithsonian Magazine. Mosquitoes have been around buzzing around since dinosaurs roamed the Earth some 200 million years ago. Earth is currently in the middle of a human-fueled biodiversity crisis, including massive insect loss driven by agriculture and related pollution, in addition to climate change-driven disasters and other events. Without insects that pollinate billions of dollars in crops in North America, we'd have a lot less food and other products. Mosquitoes are one of the only species people have posited should be eliminated. Still, they are the world's deadliest animal. And, especially during the hot and wet summer months, the risk for disease is increasing. Human-caused climate change is creating more favorable conditions for mosquitoes, resulting in population expansion. That's especially true along U.S. coasts. But, even in droughts, they can be 'extra bitey.' 'It's believed that they alone, by transmitting disease, have killed half of all human beings who have ever lived,' St. Leger noted. 'Being able to eliminate mosquitoes quickly and effectively will save people all over the world.'

A woman testifies Sean 'Diddy' Combs gave her night terrors by dangling her from a high-rise balcony
A woman testifies Sean 'Diddy' Combs gave her night terrors by dangling her from a high-rise balcony

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

A woman testifies Sean 'Diddy' Combs gave her night terrors by dangling her from a high-rise balcony

A graphic designer testified Wednesday that she was so traumatized after Sean 'Diddy' Combs held her over a 17th-floor apartment balcony that she sometimes screamed in her sleep afterward. Bryana 'Bana' Bongolan, 33, a friend of Combs' former longtime girlfriend Cassie, said the 2016 assault at Cassie's Los Angeles apartment caused a bruise on the back of her leg, along with back and neck pain. It also left her emotionally scarred, she told the jury. 'I have night terrors and paranoia and I would scream in my sleep sometimes,' said Bongolan, a creative and marketing director who runs her own art agency. Her testimony came in the fourth week of evidence presentation by prosecutors as they seek to prove that Combs oversaw a racketeering organization composed of his employees and associates as he physically and sexually abused women for two decades. Combs, 55, has pleaded not guilty to racketeering conspiracy, sex trafficking and other charges that, if convicted, could send him to prison for 15 years to life. Bongolan is the latest woman to testify that the hip-hop mogul acted violently toward her and Casandra 'Cassie' Ventura, who already testified for four days about the abuse she incurred. Other witnesses described seeing him physically abusing women. Cassie testified that she saw Combs bring one of her friends back over the railing of a balcony at her apartment in the early morning. Cassie said she was asleep in her room when she awoke to the episode. 'I saw him bring her back over the railing of the balcony and then throw her onto the patio furniture,' Cassie testified. When Bongolan recalled the attack, she said Combs barged into Cassie's apartment, lifted her up and put her on the rail. She said she feared that she would plummet to her death as she pushed back against Combs. 'I was scared to fall,' she said. Combs was yelling at her throughout the ordeal, Bongolan said, estimating he held her over the railing for 10 to 15 seconds. She said Combs then threw her onto balcony furniture. Adrenaline helped her power through the ordeal, Bongolan said. She recalled getting up immediately after being thrown down. Bongolan said Cassie, who was sleeping in the bedroom, then came out and asked Combs: 'Did you just hang her over the balcony?' Told that Bongolan's ex-girlfriend was also in the apartment, Combs swiftly left, Bongolan said. Bongolan said she has lasting effects from Combs assaulting her. 'I have nightmares and I have a lot of paranoia and I used to scream a lot in my sleep, but it's dissipated a little bit,' she testified. Part of her paranoia, she said, includes opening doors carefully and peeking into rooms before going inside, and she added that she had a nightmare as recently as a few days ago. Bongolan said Combs gave her drugs on three or four occasions, including ecstasy, cocaine, ketamine and G, a substance she understood was the depressant GHB. She said she also did drugs about once a week with Cassie when Combs wasn't around. Bongolan, testifying in response to a subpoena from prosecutors, was granted immunity after she initially said she would refuse to answer questions and invoke her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. She was at least the third witness given immunity to testify.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store