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Erin Patterson murder trial day 27 as it happened: ‘You thought the lunch guests would die’: A rare invitation and a ‘lie about cancer’

Marta Pascual Juanola and Erin Pearson
Updated ,first published
Pinned post from 4.30pm on Jun 5, 2025
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‘You thought the lunch guests would die’: A rare invitation and a ‘lie about cancer’

By Marta Pascual Juanola

It was rare for Erin Patterson to host guests; having four people over for a meal was not an ordinary, casual event for the mother of two.

Patterson told a jury in her murder trial that her beef Wellington lunch – to which she invited her estranged husband’s parents, Don and Gail Patterson, and Gail’s sister and her husband – Heather and Ian Wilkinson – was not a casual gathering she frequently put on.

After a full day in the witness box, Patterson, 50, confirmed that before that July 29, 2023, lunch she had never hosted the Wilkinsons before.

Erin Patterson, her in-laws, Don and Gail Patterson (bottom right), and Gail’s sister, Heather Wilkinson (top right).Matthew Absalom-Wong

During cross-examination, Crown prosecutor Nanette Rogers asked questions focused on the purpose of the lunch and why those guests were invited.

She then put to Patterson, who is on trial for the murder of Don, Gail, and Heather, and the attempted murder of Ian, whether she had lied about her health to ensure the guests would attend and to explain the children’s absence.

Patterson, her long brown hair out in the witness box for a fourth consecutive day, told the court that this was incorrect.

“I suggest you never thought you’d have to account for this lie about having cancer because you thought the lunch guests would die,” Rogers said.

“That’s not true,” Erin responded.

Today’s evidence has now concluded.

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What happened on day 27 of mushroom trial

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The questions came thick and fast. The denials did, too.

By Erin Pearson and Marta Pascual Juanola

The questions came thick and fast. The denials did, too.

After three days and 30 minutes of softly spoken, slow questioning from defence lawyer Colin Mandy, SC, accused killer cook Erin Patterson was now under cross-examination.

Crown Prosecutor Dr Nanette Rogers, SC, leaves court on Thursday.Jason South

Crown prosecutor Nanette Rogers, SC, rose to her feet quickly, on her lectern a blue binder folder filled with A4 notes.

In quick succession she took Erin Patterson through a string of exhibits. More than a dozen flicked across screens in the courtroom – invoices, photographs.

Day 27 in pictures

By Jason South

Here are some pictures taken outside the courthouse in Morwell by this masthead’s award-winning photographer, Jason South, earlier today.

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Pinned post from 4.30pm on Jun 5, 2025

‘You thought the lunch guests would die’: A rare invitation and a ‘lie about cancer’

By Marta Pascual Juanola

It was rare for Erin Patterson to host guests; having four people over for a meal was not an ordinary, casual event for the mother of two.

Patterson told a jury in her murder trial that her beef Wellington lunch – to which she invited her estranged husband’s parents, Don and Gail Patterson, and Gail’s sister and her husband – Heather and Ian Wilkinson – was not a casual gathering she frequently put on.

After a full day in the witness box, Patterson, 50, confirmed that before that July 29, 2023, lunch she had never hosted the Wilkinsons before.

Erin Patterson, her in-laws, Don and Gail Patterson (bottom right), and Gail’s sister, Heather Wilkinson (top right).Matthew Absalom-Wong

During cross-examination, Crown prosecutor Nanette Rogers asked questions focused on the purpose of the lunch and why those guests were invited.

She then put to Patterson, who is on trial for the murder of Don, Gail, and Heather, and the attempted murder of Ian, whether she had lied about her health to ensure the guests would attend and to explain the children’s absence.

Patterson, her long brown hair out in the witness box for a fourth consecutive day, told the court that this was incorrect.

“I suggest you never thought you’d have to account for this lie about having cancer because you thought the lunch guests would die,” Rogers said.

“That’s not true,” Erin responded.

Today’s evidence has now concluded.

‘Reconstructing backwards’: The change in Simon Patterson’s tax return

By Marta Pascual Juanola

Erin Patterson, after a full day in the witness box in her own murder trial, is currently facing cross-examination regarding her relationship with her estranged husband, Simon, in 2022.

Prosecutor Nanette Rogers pressed Patterson on financial disputes with Simon, including his tax returns and school fees, with Patterson admitting she sought her in-laws’ help to influence Simon’s behaviour.

The 50-year-old accused, dressed in a paisley top and black pants, disputed earlier trial evidence that Simon had offered to amend his tax return.

Erin Patterson and Simon Patterson.

She told the court she was not upset about the prospect of him amending his tax return – the change meant she could claim payments.

Patterson grilled on evidence from child support worker

By Marta Pascual Juanola

During cross-examination, senior Crown prosecutor Nanette Rogers challenged Erin Patterson on whether she had sought advice from child support worker Katrina Cripps regarding how to discuss her purported health issues with her children, with Patterson saying her concerns were purely logistical, not about needing advice for a serious illness.

The following exchange ensued:

Patterson: I think it’s more accurate to say that I’d been talking to them about how to manage the children. My concern was about logistics of the children.

Rogers: Yes, and I’m asking you about advice.

Patterson: I don’t remember anything about advice.

Rogers: I suggest you didn’t need any advice at the time because there was nothing to tell the children and this was a continuation of your pretence that you had told others you had a serious health issue.

Patterson: Don and Gail yes.

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‘I did not tell her that’: Two different memories about purpose of beef Wellington lunch

By Marta Pascual Juanola

In the cross-examination, accused triple murderer Erin Patterson is facing questioning about conversations surrounding her purported cancer diagnosis, particularly what she conveyed to both her father-in-law, Don Patterson, and a child support worker.

Senior Crown prosecutor Nanette Rogers has directed Patterson to evidence given by her estranged husband, Simon, earlier in the trial. Simon told the jury that his dad had told him at Korumburra Hospital that Erin might undergo chemotherapy and surgery on July 30, 2023.

Gail and Don Patterson.

“I don’t remember saying I’d had a diagnosis,” she said.

Patterson said she disputed that she had said that they had found ovarian cancer, and that she said that she expected to have chemo and potentially surgery.

Language surrounding cancer talk at lunch scrutinised

By Marta Pascual Juanola

Resuming her cross-examination, senior Crown prosecutor Nanette Rogers pressed Erin Patterson on the details of what she communicated to her lunch guests about her health.

Rogers referred Patterson to part of her evidence yesterday, where she said she had misled her lunch guests to believe that she might need medical treatment after disclosing she had experienced health issues that led her to believe she had ovarian cancer.

Don and Gail Patterson.

“I can’t remember the exact words I used, as to whether I said I had or I might need to ... but I was trying to communicate that there might be some treatment coming up, but I really can’t give you any precision about the words I used,” Patterson said.

Patterson agreed that she had wanted her lunch guests to believe that she would be needing treatment for cancer. However, she disagreed that she had told the group that she had a cancer diagnosis.

‘Disagree’: Beef Wellington guests not told about cancer diagnosis, court told

By Marta Pascual Juanola

Erin Patterson has denied telling her lunch guests on July 29, 2023, that she had a cancer diagnosis.

The jury is being shown a message sent by Patterson to her mother-in-law, Gail Patterson, on July 7, 2023, that read:

Thanks for your message Don and Gail there’s a bit to digest with everything that’s come out of it. I might talk more about it with you both when I see you in person.

The court heard that nine days after that, the accused mother-of-two invited Gail Patterson and Heather Wilkinson to her home in Leongatha for lunch.

Asked by senior Crown prosecutor Nanette Rogers about why she suggested they might talk more about it in person, Patterson responded she hadn’t decided to have lunch on July 29, 2023, at that point.

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The health lie that ‘kept going’

By Marta Pascual Juanola

Accused triple killer Erin Patterson has admitted to fabricating a serious illness, including hospital appointments, to her mother-in-law Gail Patterson – a deception she maintained because it made her feel “loved and cared for”.

Prosecutor Nanette Rogers is questioning Patterson about information she shared with Gail Patterson about a lump in her elbow and an appointment at St Vincent’s Hospital, which the mother of two admitted she had lied about.

Gail Patterson.

Rogers: You did not have a lump on your elbow on June 28, 2023.

Patterson: That’s true.

Rogers: You did not have an appointment at St Vincent’s hospital.

Patterson: No, I didn’t.

Rogers: You did not have any medical reason …

Patterson: I didn’t have a legitimate medical reason, that’s true.

Rogers: There was nothing to communicate to your kids about your medical issues.

Patterson: No.

Rogers: I suggest that you told Gail Patterson that you had a lump in your elbow … to plant a seed of you having a serious health issue.

Patterson: I … don’t think that’s right, no.

Rogers: Why did you say it?

Patterson: So … I think I gave this in evidence a couple of days ago, but I had initially thought I had an issue with my elbow … had a lot of pain for a number of weeks. I thought I had a lump. I had told Don and Gail about what I was worried about. It started to resolve. I probably whinged a bit too much to Don and Gail about it, and I was a bit embarrassed by that. They made me feel loved and cared for in the way they were asking about my health, and I didn’t want that to stop, so I just kept going.

Rogers asked Patterson whether she was expecting Gail Patterson to pass information about a biopsy and MRI onto her son, Simon, in the expectation that he would not decline any future lunch invitations to Erin Patterson’s house.

“I would not expect her to tell him any of that,” Patterson said.

Rogers has directed Patterson’s attention to a series of messages between her and Gail discussing her health. Patterson agreed that she pretended she was ill with a potentially serious disease.

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