
Why the Erin Patterson trial is like an Olympic high jump event - as defence says their client is not an atheist
Erin Patterson is a God-fearing mother who had every reason to want her lunch guests alive, a jury has heard.
On Thursday, Patterson's barrister Colin Mandy, SC compared the trial to the sport of high jump as he finally completed his defence to the jury, which has been sitting on the trial for eight long weeks.
Patterson, 50, has pleaded not guilty to the murders of Don and Gail Patterson, and Gail's sister, Heather Wilkinson.
They died after consuming death cap mushrooms served in beef Wellingtons during lunch at her Leongatha home on July 29, 2023.
Only Pastor Ian Wilkinson survived the lunch, with a charge of attempted murder also hanging over Patterson's head.
Mr Mandy urged the jury not to believe any suggestions that his client had not been a legitimate Christian.
'Erin Patterson was not an atheist,' he said.
The suggestion had been made at the beginning of the trial when a witness who had been in a Facebook group with Patterson claimed she had told them she was one.
The jury heard Patterson had been an atheist when she met Simon, but converted to Christianity as a result of his influence.
Mr Mandy said members from a smaller chat group that Patterson was in weren't asked questions about her religious beliefs by the prosecution.
'As to what Erin's religious beliefs might be, and that's an example we say of picking and choosing the evidence that suits them and ignoring the others.
'Picking a misleading, we say, piece of evidence about her being two-faced and constructing a theory around that and ignoring the overwhelming weight of the other evidence that points in the opposite direction.'
Mr Mandy had been critical of Crown prosecutor Dr Nanette Rogers' closing address to the jury earlier this week, suggesting she had mislead the jurors by cherry-picking evidence to suit her narrative.
He told the jury the prosecution had a 'high bar' to leap to establish Patterson was guilty of murder.
'A trial like this sometimes seems like a competition - naturally, one side against another, like we're competing against each other like a boxing match or a football match or netball - or whatever it is,' Mr Mandy said.
'The truth is, it is more like the high jump. This is important. Only the prosecution has to get over the bar.
'Defence doesn't have to do anything. Defence doesn't have to jump any bar. Erin Patterson doesn't have to jump any bar at all.'
Mr Mandy said if the jury thought his client 'maybe' deliberately poisoned the meal, it must find her not guilty.
'If you think that she probably deliberately poisoned the meal, you must find her not guilty,' he continued.
'If you think it's possible that she intended to kill or cause really serious injury to Don, or Gail or Heather, you must find her not guilty.
'If you think maybe she intended those things, then you must find her not guilty.'
'If you think probably she intended those things, you must find her not guilty.'
'And if you think it's possible Erin intended to kill Ian, you have to find her not guilty. Maybe she intended to kill Ian: not guilty.'
Mr Mandy claimed to the the jury it had been sold 'convoluted' and 'ridiculous' propositions by Dr Rogers during her closing address.
These included that Patterson would murder without any motive to do so and lie about cancer to get her guests to attend the lunch.
He further dismissed the prosecution view that Patterson believed her lunch guests would 'take her secrets (about her medical issues) to the grave with them'.
Mr Mandy suggested there was no way his client would have committed the crime knowing she would be under the spotlight of investigators.
The jury heard Patterson ought be commended for choosing to enter the witness box and facing off with Dr Rogers in person.
'When she chose to do it, she made that decision as an innocent person,' Mr Mandy said.
Mr Mandy said Patterson had answered questions carefully, 'even pedantic', he said.
'You would not have had the impression that she was trying to charm you or persuade you,' Mr Mandy said.
'She was going about the job she had.'
He explained his client had told lies after the lunch, dumped her dehydrator and wiped her mobile phone in acts of sheer panic.
The wiping of her phone, Mr Mandy told the jury, had been a 'stupid thing'.
Listen to The Trial Of Erin Patterson on your favourite streaming platform
'There's all sorts of reasons why an innocent person can engage in that type of behaviour,' he said.
'Erin got into the witness box and told you she did those things because she panicked when confronted with the terrible possibility, the terrible realisation, that her actions had caused the illness of the people she loved.'
Mr Mandy said she told the truth even when it was 'deeply embarrassing' and admitted she told lies.
He declared that his client came out of extensive cross-examination 'unscathed'.
'Her account remained coherent and consistent day after day,' he said.
Mr Mandy insisted his client is and had always been innocent of the charges.
'Our submission is the prosecution case cannot get over that high bar of beyond reasonable doubt,' he said.
Hashtags

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


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Print at Louisa Dunne crime scene 'positive match for defendant'
Experts called upon as part of a murder trial have told a court the 92-year-old defendant's palm prints match those found at the crime scene in Headley is accused of forcing entry into the Bristol home of Louisa Dunne, 75, before sexually attacking and fatally strangling recovering a palm print on a rear window of the Easton property and collecting thousands of prints from men and boys, detectives were unable to identify a suspect at the Headley, of Clarence Road in Ipswich, denies raping and murdering Mrs Dunne. Police launched an investigation after the mother-of-two's body was discovered by neighbours on the morning of 28 June was only during a cold case review last year that convicted rapist Mr Headley was identified as a suspect, Bristol Crown Court was told. Following his arrest, fingerprint experts compared his palm print to the one recovered from Mrs Dunne's Hobbs told the court she found "13 characteristics in agreement" between the two prints, which satisfied her it was a positive Benson KC, representing Mr Headley, asked: "What I am going to suggest is that you made a mistake?"She replied: "I disagree. This is an identification of the left palm in the fingerprint form of Ryland Headley to the crime scene mark."A second expert then undertook the analysis again with no knowledge of the case or the earlier expert, Neville Williams, found he was able to "exclude" Mr Headley from his blind verification exercise, the court heard. Due to the difference in opinions, Mr Williams re-examined his work having discussed his findings with Ms Hobbs, the jury was told."She showed me where she found her first two matching characteristics, and it was then that I realised that I'd been starting in a different area of the palm," he said."Now that I had what I refer to as a jumping off point, I was then able to make more points of comparison, find more ridge characteristics in a coincident sequence," he told Bristol Crown Williams said he found 19 characteristics between the two palm prints."At which point I stopped my comparison work because I was confident in my evaluation that there was in fact an identification to the palm on the fingerprint form," he told the court his colleague "didn't assist in any way shape or form", simply giving the "two starting points". Mr Benson questioned the witness about his first conclusion, suggesting it was a "little embarrassing" he and Ms Hobbs had reached different conclusions."No embarrassment was involved at all," Mr Williams replied, adding he was "100% confident" with his final findings and had started in the wrong area of the palm on the initial assessment."I'm going to suggest that actually the prints were inconclusive," argued Mr expert replied: "I did not come to the result inconclusive on my second examination."The court heard a third expert undertook the same exercise and concluded the palm print matched Mr were previously told advances in forensic science enabled samples recovered from Mrs Dunne's body to be tested for DNA, which were a billion-to-one match to the trial was adjourned until Monday.


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Teacher who sent student 35,000 messages before pursuing sexual relationship learns her fate
A female teacher who sent 35,000 messages to one of her students before having a sexual relationship with them after they graduated, has been banned from her job. Former Carey Baptist Grammar teacher Eleanor Louise Yorke was 26 in 2020 when she began dating an 18-year-old former student of hers, who cannot be named for legal reasons. Yorke had started working at the illustrious co-ed private school in 2017, teaching biology and chemistry to Year 12 students. During the Covid-19 lockdowns, Yorke and the Year 12 student talked online over Microsoft Teams. In 2020, the then-17-year-old student sought additional help with schoolwork, as they struggled with lockdowns, which turned into the pair speaking daily. The Victorian Institute of Teaching found Yorke sent the student 35,000 messages. 'It was also alleged that Ms Yorke then began a sexual relationship with the student after they had graduated and turned 18 and this relationship continued for a year,' a VIT statement read. On Thursday, the institute cancelled the now 31-year-old's registration and banned her from education for three years, starting from March, The Age reported. The disciplinary panel highlighted in its decision that there were several incidents. '[It] occurred over a period of years, changing in nature from professional interactions into personal, intimate discussions and culminating in a sexual relationship. 'This deliberate rejection of professional standards by a teacher whose skills and talents had led to rapid promotion was one for which the panel could find no justification, nor was there any satisfactory explanation.' 'The emails show an increased emotional bonding developing through the extensive number of messages,' the panel also said. 'There were also increasingly frequent references to taking the teacher's relationship with the student to a new level once the student had completed year 12.' In March, VIT had heard there was no sexual or intimate relationship between the pair while the student was studying at the school. On one occasion, Yorke asked the student if they should end their communications and told the hearing she tried to 'reset' boundaries. Yorke said their relationship was, however, entirely consensual, but she was worried about the circumstances. 'Even though we spoke about our concerns with [the power imbalance], it still exists,' she told the regulator. In the decision this week, the disciplinary panel noted the relationship had happened anyway. 'This relationship occurred despite [Yorke] being aware of the clear warnings against violating professional relationships with students,' the panel said. Yorke also told the March hearing she had been 'deeply lonely' at the time and had not yet 'come out'. Carey Baptist Grammar became aware of the relationship in 2023 and stood Yorke down over concerns for professional standards. Yorke, who described losing her job as 'horrible', has previously said she is now pursuing a career in psychology and claimed she had no desire to return to teaching.


BreakingNews.ie
2 hours ago
- BreakingNews.ie
16 knife injuries inflicted on Kildare man does not fit murder accused's account of self-defence, court told
Evidence of 16 separate knife injuries suffered by a 50-year-old man during a "ferocious attack" in a Co Kildare apartment does not fit with a murder accused's account of having stabbed the deceased in self-defence, a prosecution barrister has told a murder trial. The 12 jurors were also told by the State on Thursday that the accused Ryan Kearney had told the first garda who arrived at the scene that it was "balaclava-clad men who had carried out the attack". Advertisement Mr Brendan Grehan SC, for the Director of Public Prosecutions, said the jurors would also hear that when the defendant was cautioned by gardaí, he had replied: "I stabbed Jeffrey but did not murder him, he was my friend, that's it". Mr Kearney (39), with an address at Loughnamona Drive, Leixlip, Co Kildare, has pleaded not guilty to murdering Jeffrey Jackson (50) at The Lamps, School Street, Kilcock, Co Kildare on February 8th, 2024. In his opening address to the Central Criminal Court jury on Thursday, Mr Grehan, prosecuting, said "The Lamps" on School Street is a two-storey apartment complex in Kilcock, which was home to witness Breda Kearney, who the jury will hear from in due course. Counsel said the deceased Mr Jackson, had been in a relationship with Ms Kearney for over a year in February 2024. Advertisement Mr Grehan added: "Ryan Kearney was a nephew through marriage to Breda Kearney in so far as the accused's uncle Michael Kearney had been married to Breda Kearney, but that relationship was no longer in existence". In relation to the evidence against the accused, Mr Grehan said Ryan Kearney had arrived at Ms Kearney's apartment with two bags of shopping shortly before 2pm on Thursday, February 8, 2024. He said Ms Kearney and Mr Jackson were in the apartment at the time. A short time after Ryan Kearney arrived, Ms Kearney left the apartment around 3.24pm to go to the local supermarket to get more alcohol; "perhaps a bottle of vodka". Counsel said Ms Kearney was visible on CCTV footage returning in the direction of the apartment at 3.34pm. Mr Grehan added: "It's a very tight timeframe and a very small window of opportunity for things to occur". Advertisement Detailing the evidence that will be heard, counsel said when Ms Kearney arrived back at her apartment she found Mr Jackson "in a very bad way" on the sofa, not conscious and bleeding from various wounds. The barrister said the accused had said something to the effect of "I think I killed him, I stabbed him in the neck". Mr Grehan said the evidence will be that Ms Kearney rang the emergency services at 3.41pm. The barrister said the call taker was told a man had been stabbed in the apartment. "Specifically, one of the things the call taker was told, which the prosecution says was by Ryan Kearney, was to the effect that a number of men in balaclavas were responsible for what had occurred inside". Advertisement The jurors, he said, would hear from a paramedic who had administered First Aid to Mr Jackson. He said the paramedic made a decision that there was no point in carrying out emergency resuscitation. The lawyer said the panel would also hear that Ryan Kearney repeated to the first garda at the scene "the suggestion that it was balaclava-clad men who had carried out the attack". Counsel said a knife was found on the kitchen sink and that blood was noted in various places, as well as "various wounds the deceased had suffered to the stomach and chest area". Ryan Kearney, counsel said, was arrested at the scene by Detective Sergeant Gerard Moore at 4.30pm. Advertisement During his interviews Ryan Kearney claimed he had acted in self-defence and been attacked by Mr Jackson "coming at him with a knife". When the accused was released from detention, Det Sgt Moore charged him with the murder of Mr Jackson. Mr Grehan said the jurors would hear that when Ryan Kearney was cautioned, he had replied: "I stabbed Jeffrey but did not murder him, he was my friend, that's it". The barrister said it is the State's case that when all the evidence had been heard the jurors would be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that Ryan Kearney had murdered the deceased and that he had "lied to the call taker about others involved as he had lied to the first garda on the scene suggesting it was men wearing balaclavas who had attacked Mr Jackson". Ireland Man (42) spared trial for threatening to slit thro... Read More The lawyer also said it was the prosecution's contention that the accused's subsequent suggestion that he had acted in self-defence was not supported by the evidence in the case. He said the injuries inflicted on the deceased suggest a "fairly ferocious attack" on Mr Jackson. Mr Grehan said State pathologist Dr Sally Anne Collis found 16 separate knife injuries on the deceased. "They were distributed all around the body, head, face, chest, some on the legs; It did not fit with the scenario where Ryan Kearney suggested he had jabbed a few times, having taken the knife off Mr Jackson, who attacked him". Counsel said the accused had no injuries except a small cut to one of his fingers. In conclusion, Mr Grehan said the prosecution will submit to the jurors that the evidence doesn't fit with the accused's account of having acted in self-defence. The trial continues this afternoon before Mr Justice Paul Burns and a jury of three men and nine women. It is expected to last two weeks.