logo
Australian woman on trial for mushroom murder of in-laws says she was trying to fix a 'bland' lunch

Australian woman on trial for mushroom murder of in-laws says she was trying to fix a 'bland' lunch

Independent7 days ago

Before Erin Patterson's in-laws and their relatives arrived at her home for lunch, she bought pricey ingredients, consulted friends about recipes and sent her children out to a movie.
Then, the Australian woman served them a dish containing poisonous death cap mushrooms — a meal that was fatal for three of her four guests.
Whether that was Patterson's plan is at the heart of a triple murder trial that has gripped Australia for nearly six weeks.
Prosecutors in the Supreme Court case in the state of Victoria say the accused lured her guests to lunch with a lie about having cancer, before deliberately feeding them toxic fungi.
But her lawyers say the tainted beef Wellington she served was a tragic accident caused by a mushroom storage mishap. She denies murdering her estranged husband's parents, Don and Gail Patterson, and their relative, Heather Wilkinson.
The mother of two also denies attempting to murder Heather's husband Ian Wilkinson, who survived the meal. In a rare step for a defendant charged with murder, Patterson chose to speak in her own defense at her trial this week.
On Wednesday, she spoke publicly for the first time about the fateful lunch in July 2023 and offered her explanations on how she planned the meal and didn't become sick herself.
Adding more mushrooms to a 'bland' meal
No one disputes that Patterson, 50, served death cap mushrooms to her guests for lunch in the rural town of Leongatha, but she says she did it unknowingly.
Patterson said Wednesday she splurged on expensive ingredients and researched ideas to find 'something special' to serve. She deviated from her chosen recipe to improve the 'bland' flavor, she said.
She believed she was adding dried fungi bought from an Asian supermarket from a container in her pantry, she told the court.
"Now I think that there was a possibility that there were foraged ones in there as well,' she told her lawyer, Colin Mandy. Patterson had foraged wild mushrooms for years, she told the court Tuesday, and had put some in her pantry weeks before the deaths.
The accused says she 'shouldn't have lied' about cancer
Patterson, who formally separated from her husband Simon Patterson in 2015, said she felt 'hurt' when Simon told her the night before the lunch that he 'wasn't comfortable' attending.
She earlier told his relatives that she'd arranged the meal to discuss her health. Patterson admitted this week that she never had cancer — but after a health scare, she told her in-laws she did.
In reality, Patterson said she intended to have weight loss surgery. But she was too embarrassed to tell anybody and planned to pretend to her in-laws that she was undergoing cancer treatment instead, she said.
'I was ashamed of the fact that I didn't have control over my body or what I ate,' a tearful Patterson said Wednesday. 'I didn't want to tell anybody, but I shouldn't have lied to them.'
Patterson says she threw up her mushroom meal
The accused said she believes she was spared the worst effects of the poisoned meal because she self-induced vomiting shortly after her lunch guests left. She had binged on most of a cake and then made herself throw up — a problem she said she had struggled with for decades.
Patterson also said she believes she had eaten enough of the meal to cause her subsequent diarrhea. She then sought hospital treatment but unlike her lunch guests, she quickly recovered.
At the hospital where her guests' health was deteriorating, her estranged husband asked her about the dehydrator she used to dry her foraged mushrooms, she said.
'Is that how you poisoned my parents?' she said Simon Patterson asked her.
Growing afraid she would be blamed for the poisoning and that her children would be taken from her, Patterson said she later disposed of her dehydrator. She told investigators she'd never owned one and hadn't foraged for mushrooms before.
While still at the hospital, she insisted she'd bought all the mushrooms at stores even though she said she knew it was possible that foraged mushrooms had accidentally found their way into the meal.
She was too frightened to tell anyone, Patterson said.
Also later, Patterson said she remotely wiped her cell phone while it sat in an evidence locker to remove pictures of mushrooms she'd foraged.
Prosecutors argued in opening their case in April that she poisoned her husband's family on purpose, although they didn't suggest a motive. She carefully avoided poisoning herself and faked being ill, they said.
The trial continues on Thursday with Patterson's cross-examination by the prosecutors. If convicted, she faces life in prison for murder and 25 years for attempted murder.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Chidinma Ojukwu testimony so far inside Usifo Ataga murder case as she take di stand again today
Chidinma Ojukwu testimony so far inside Usifo Ataga murder case as she take di stand again today

BBC News

time40 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Chidinma Ojukwu testimony so far inside Usifo Ataga murder case as she take di stand again today

Trial of Chidinma Ojukwu di alleged killer of Super TV boss Usifo Ataga dey resume today for Lagos State High Court, Tafawa Balewa Square. Di former 300-level Mass Communication student of di University of Lagos dey stand trial for di alleged murder of Ataga for 2021. She also dey charged wit stealing and forgery alongside her sister, Chioma Egbuchu and one Adedapo Quadri. Wen di case go continue today, Chidimma go continue her defense to prove say no be she commit di crime. Na her defense head Onwuka Egwu dey lead am for di testimony. Wen she complete her testimony, di prosecution team go begin cross examination. Cross examination na wen di prosecution team go ask am questions based on her testimony and oda evidence and facts wey dem get on di case to establish her guilt or innocence ontop di matter. Chidinma testimony so far So far for di case, di prosecution team don conclude dia presentation and sample all dia witnesses, while Chidinma don begin her defense. Last time di case come up in court for April, court admit two different statements wey Chidinma write wen dem bin arrest am. She bin don earlier tell court say no be she kill di deceased, say she come back to dia hotel room and meet di man in di pool of im own blood. During her recent testimony for court, Chidinma tell court say afta she comot from di apartment to go buy food and juice, she bin comeback to di apartment, knock di door but she no get any response. She push di door open, na wen she see a disturbing scene: blood stains for floor and Ataga dey lie down motionless in a pool of blood. "I drop evritin wey I bin dey hold, I rush go meet am," she testify. "Im eye dey half-open and im pulse bin no dey." Chidinma describe her relationship wit Ataga, she say na for November 2020 e start, afta dem bin introduce am to her by one mutual friend, Fiyin wey be di girlfriend of Ataga friend, James. She say Ataga dey supportive and generous, she claim say im bin don pay her school fees and give financial support for her cosmetics business. She tell court say Ataga bin contact her on 13 June, 2021, wen im inform her say im birthday dey come and im invite her to spend time wit am bifor im scheduled trip to Abuja for a family celebration. Sake of renovations for wia im dey stay for Victoria Garden City (VGC), she say Ataga bin suggest make dem book hotel or short-let apartment for Lekki, wia im bin get business meetings. She get one apartment for 19 Adewale Street, off Ologolo Road, Lekki, wey Ataga approve. For evening dat same day, dem bin meet for di apartment, dem go out togeda go eat for Ango Villa restaurant wia dem bin buy wine, dem later go back to spend di night togeda, drinking, eating, and smoking. She also tell di court say di following day wey be 14 June, Ataga bin ask her to help am buy loud (one type of Igbo) and rohypnol. Im send her N15,000 to buy am, im later send anoda N25,000 for food. On 15 June she tok say Ataga request for di loud again, im tell her to pay for am sake of say im bin no fit do bank transfer dat time. Im bin also give her money for food and juice. Wen she comeback to di apartment wen she finish her shopping, Chidinma narrate how she bin struggle to reach Ataga becos of di food order. Wen she eventually arrive, she see say di door dey slightly open, and as she enta inside, she see im deadibody. "I bin dey in shock, I wipe di blood off myself, change my clothes, and pack my belongings," she tok Among di items wey she agree say she bin take from di apartment na brown envelope wey contain Ataga bank statements, im ID cards, documents wey belong to one Mary Johnson, and some pieces of jewelry.

Tasmania election: state to head to polls again after governor grants embattled premier's request
Tasmania election: state to head to polls again after governor grants embattled premier's request

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Tasmania election: state to head to polls again after governor grants embattled premier's request

Tasmania will hold an early election on 19 July – just 16 months after last going to the polls – after the state's governor agreed to an extraordinary request from the Liberal premier, Jeremy Rockliff. It followed a dramatic week in which the parliament narrowly supported a no confidence motion in Rockliff moved by the Labor leader, Dean Winter, and the state's three main political parties each argued a fresh election could be avoided. Rockliff visited Government House in Hobart on Tuesday night to advise the governor, Barbara Baker, that he believed a new poll was needed. She took 24 hours to consider the state's options, including asking Winter if he could form a government, before inviting Rockliff back and agreeing to his request. It will be the state's fourth election in seven years. The last poll was 23 March 2024. More to come

WA senator Dorinda Cox accuses Greens of being ‘deeply racist' and says ‘I am not a bully'
WA senator Dorinda Cox accuses Greens of being ‘deeply racist' and says ‘I am not a bully'

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • The Guardian

WA senator Dorinda Cox accuses Greens of being ‘deeply racist' and says ‘I am not a bully'

The former Greens senator Dorinda Cox has accused the Greens of being 'deeply racist' and insisted that she has never been a bully. Cox, a Noongar Yamatji woman and Western Australian senator, announced last Monday she had defected to Labor, saying her views were more closely aligned with Labor than the Greens. In a resignation letter sent to Greens leader Larissa Waters' office on Tuesday night, Cox claimed the party had 'cultural problems they refuse to acknowledge or address' and that she had experienced an 'unremitting campaign of bullying and dishonest claims'. Sign up for Guardian Australia's breaking news email 'I have seen and survived trauma, discrimination and harassment in previous work environments. I have seen the impact of psycho social violence on my family and my community. I am not, and have never been, a bully. I do not perpetrate it,' she said. Cox has been the subject of a number of workplace behaviour complaints, as first reported by the Nine newspapers last October. At the time, the WA senator apologised for 'the distress this may have caused' but said there had been 'significant missing context' in the reports of bullying allegations within her office. Cox said in her letter that at the time she resigned, there were no grievances pending against her in the party's conflict resolution process, and none had been put to her during the period she was a senator. 'The Greens failed me as its last First Nations MP, and continue to fail First Nations people,' Cox wrote. 'In my experience, the Greens tolerate a culture that permits violence against First Nations women within its structures. In this respect, the party is deeply racist. 'Instead of dealing with its toxic culture, the Greens sought to shut me down. The Greens failed in their duty of care for my staff and me, and disregarded the reported and obvious impact of what was occurring.' Cox accused the federal and Western Australian Greens' leadership for embracing 'untrue' claims and amplifying them. The WA Greens announced an external inquiry into grievances it received against Cox in mid-January by former staff members within the party after the allegations were publicly reported. The inquiry has now ceased. The WA Greens said 'the co-convenors of Greens (WA) went to great lengths to ensure the process was culturally safe and delivered due process to all parties'. An Australian Greens spokesperson said the claims were 'disappointing' and ignored the 'substantive work undertaken by the party to find a resolution to the complaints made both by and against Senator Cox, and to address the breakdown in her relationship with Greens' First Nations members'. 'As the IPSC [Independent Parliamentary Standards Committee] and PWSS [Parliamentary Workplace Support Service] are the bodies created by Parliament to address complaints from staff, they can continue to investigate ongoing matters. This is unchanged by the senator's decision to move to a party that continues to destroy First Nations cultural history through approving coal and gas projects.' Sign up to Breaking News Australia Get the most important news as it breaks after newsletter promotion Anthony Albanese was asked about historical bullying complaints against Cox last Monday. The prime minister said Labor had 'examined everything that had been considered in the past' and felt that the 'issues were dealt with appropriately'. In October 2024, Cox said she took responsibility for 'any shortcomings' in her office and apologised for any distress that may have been caused but said there had been 'significant missing context' in the reports of bullying allegations within her office. Cox said she had an 'immense amount of respect and gratitude to my team who prepare and support me for the work I undertake' and that she had 'always taken a proactive approach to staff wellbeing, including my own' and had undertaken executive coaching and mentoring from former MPs. Cox's former colleague, Lidia Thorpe, revealed last week she was one of the people to complain to the parliamentary watchdog about Cox, disputing Albanese's claim that allegations about Cox had been 'dealt with'. Thorpe, a former Greens senator who is now independent, said she raised a complaint against Cox in late 2022 to the Greens' leader's office and PWSS. Thorpe formally submitted the complaint to the PWSS in March 2023. Thorpe said on Wednesday her case remained unresolved because Cox declined to attend a mediation. Thorpe, a Gunnai, Gunditjmara and Djab Wurrung senator, told ABC on Wednesday morning she had also experienced racism in the Greens. 'There's a lot of work that the Greens and many other organisations need to do to stamp [racism] out, particularly the parliament of this country,' she said.

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