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Erin Patterson murder trial: Accused ‘lied’ to multiple people, and repeatedly changed her story on sourcing mushrooms, prosecutor tells jury

Marta Pascual Juanola and Erin Pearson
Updated ,first published

Unlikely death caps would be found in Asian grocery store, jury told

By Marta Pascual Juanola

Dr Camille Truong, from Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria, gave evidence in the trial about how unlikely it would be for death cap mushrooms to be sold in an independent store since they only grew in the wild, prosecutor Nanette Rogers, SC, told the jury.

Rogers said mycologist Dr Tom May also gave evidence and said death cap mushrooms don’t grow in China and there was “no prospect of stray death cap mushrooms” being imported from China by an Asian grocery store.

Dr Camille Truong outside court on May 14.Justin McManus

“Nobody else got sick. You’d expect that if the death cap mushrooms had been store-bought there might have been other cases of poisoning,” Rogers told the jury in her closing address.

The prosecutor also reminded the jury of evidence that remnants of death cap mushrooms were detected in Erin Patterson’s dehydrator.

Accused repeatedly quizzed over mushroom packaging by health officials

By Marta Pascual Juanola

Prosecutor Nanette Rogers, SC, has told the jury that not only did the possibilities of what suburb Erin Patterson bought the mushrooms from keep growing, but the information about their packaging also changed over time.

Rogers said that when Patterson was interviewed by Professor Rhonda Stuart from the Department of Health, the accused woman told her the mushrooms came in a sealed packet, which she had opened. Patterson told Stuart she put the mushrooms in another container, Rogers said.

Professor Rhonda Stuart outside court on May 13.Joe Armao

When Patterson spoke with Department of Health manager Sally Ann Atkinson, she said the packaging was not resealable and that she had opened it, Rogers said.

The following day, Rogers said, Patterson spoke with Atkinson and was very descriptive about the packaging and said she could recall the size. It was clear with a sticky handwritten white label on it. The prosecutor said Patterson told Atkinson the packet didn’t appear professionally packed and was smaller than a sandwich-type bag and not resealable.

Patterson’s changing accounts of where she bought mushrooms ‘beggars belief’, jury told

By Marta Pascual Juanola

On August 1, 2023 – three days after the lunch – Erin Patterson told Department of Health manager Sally Ann Atkinson that she bought the mushrooms from Leongatha Woolworths and an Asian shop in either Clayton, Mount Waverley or Oakleigh in April 2023, the jury heard.

Prosecutor Nanette Rogers, SC, said Patterson’s conversation with Atkinson was the first time the accused woman mentioned Clayton. The prosecutor said Patterson told Atkinson she could not be sure where the shop was.

About 2.55pm on the same day, Rogers said, Patterson told child protection worker Katrina Cripps she had sourced pre-sliced mushrooms from Woolworths and the remainder from an Asian grocer in Oakleigh or Clayton, but she did not remember which suburb.

Department of Health manager Sally Ann Atkinson outside court on May 26.Jason South

Rogers said Patterson did not mention Mount Waverley to Cripps, despite having named the suburb when she spoke to Atkinson six hours earlier.

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Questions about the source of the mushrooms

By Marta Pascual Juanola

The jury is now being told about Erin Patterson’s interactions with doctors, family members and government officials in the days after the July 29, 2023 lunch over sourcing the mushrooms for the beef Wellingtons.

In her closing address to the jury, prosecutor Nanette Rogers, SC, said the first time Patterson mentioned she had used mushrooms from Woolworths was to Dr Chris Webster at Leongatha Hospital about 8.05am on Monday, July 31, 2023.

Later that day, Patterson also discussed sourcing the mushrooms with Matthew Patterson, the brother of her estranged husband Simon Patterson, and Dr Veronica Foote, also from Leongatha Hospital.

Dr Veronica Foote outside court on May 8.Jason South

Rogers said that about 10.30am, Erin Patterson told Foote she used mushrooms from Woolworths in Leongatha and dried mushrooms she bought from a Chinese grocer in Melbourne in April 2023. Rogers said Patterson didn’t mention a suburb name for the grocer.

Leftover beef Wellington was made for estranged husband, jury told

By Marta Pascual Juanola

Prosecutor Nanette Rogers, SC, has told jurors they should reject Erin Patterson’s suggestion she served her children leftovers of beef Wellington with the mushrooms scraped off, and that instead the leftovers were found by police in a bin at her Leongatha home.

“The prosecution suggests that this is the beef Wellington that the accused [went] to the trouble of making [and] was intended for Simon Patterson,” Rogers said in her closing address.

Erin Patterson and Simon Patterson.

Rogers said Erin Patterson gave evidence that if her estranged husband had attended lunch on July 29, 2023 she would have served him a beef Wellington too.

“The prosecution case is: had Simon Patterson changed his mind and decided to attend the lunch after all, he too would have been served that sixth, poisonous beef Wellington,” the prosecutor said.

She said the only reason Erin Patterson would lie about feeding the leftovers to her children was “because she knew she had included death cap mushroom in the beef Wellington and thought that if she said she had also fed it to her children [it] would deflect any suspicion”.

There was no other reasonable explanation as to why Patterson would tell such a lie, Rogers said.

Erin Patterson lied ‘over multiple days to multiple people’: prosecutor

By Marta Pascual Juanola

Erin Patterson’s actions after the July 29, 2023 lunch are now the focus of prosecutor Nanette Rogers’ closing address to the Supreme Court jury sitting in Morwell.

Rogers accused Patterson of telling lies about giving her children beef Wellington leftovers with the mushrooms scraped off, lies about the mushrooms coming from Woolworths and an Asian grocer, lies about her reasons for getting rid of the dehydrator and had been “deliberately concealing” her usual mobile phone from police.

“Both children gave evidence that it was the accused who told them they were eating leftovers from the day before,” Rogers told the jury.

Prosecutor Nanette Rogers, SC, outside court on Monday.Jason South

She said that the first time the accused told anyone else that the children ate leftovers from the lunch was when she first presented to Leongatha Hospital on Monday, July 31, 2023. Rogers said what followed was a series of lies told “over multiple days to multiple people”.

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A tale of two hospital admissions

By Marta Pascual Juanola

Don and Gail Patterson were taken to the Austin Hospital on July, 31 2023, two days after the lunch. Don was critically ill and intubated as he suffered multiple organ failure.

“At this time the accused was being transported by ambulance to Monash Medical Centre and was calm and chatty,” prosecutor Nanette Rogers, SC, said of Erin Patterson.

By August 1, 2023, all four guests – Don and Gail Patterson and Ian and Heather Wilkinson – were in intensive care at the Austin Hospital with their organs “essentially shutting down”, Rogers said in her closing address. Gail Patterson was also in an advanced state of shock.

Erin Patterson (left) and prosecutor Nanette Rogers, SC.The Age

“This is the day the accused was discharged home from the Monash Medical Centre,” Rogers told the jury.

When the lunch guests began feeling unwell

By Marta Pascual Juanola and Erin Pearson

Prosecutor Nanette Rogers, SC, has taken the jury to the evidence of Erin Patterson’s estranged husband, Simon Patterson, who told the trial that the accused woman said to him that she began feeling unwell about 4pm on July 29, 2023 – the afternoon after the lunch.

Rogers said this was important as it was different from the experience of the four people who were guests at the lunch: Don and Gail Patterson and Heather and Ian Wilkinson.

Don and Gail Patterson.

Don and Gail Patterson, the accused woman’s in-laws, did not report feeling unwell when they spoke to their daughter Anna-Marie Terrington in the hours after the lunch, Rogers said.

The Pattersons began experiencing vomiting or diarrhoea about midnight or 1am on Sunday, July 30, 2023, the jury heard.

Blood tests results and what medical staff didn’t see across 24 hours of care

By Marta Pascual Juanola

After the lunch break, prosecutor Nanette Rogers, SC, has resumed her closing address by taking the jury to evidence from Professor Andrew Bersten about blood tests results for accused killer Erin Patterson.

Rogers said the “most revealing” thing about the state of Patterson’s health following the July 29, 2023 lunch were her blood test results compared to those of her guests.

“We say that the evidence of [Leongatha Hospital doctor] Veronica Foote is that the accused’s results showed no electrolyte disturbance and not metabolic acidosis,” Rogers said.

Professor Andrew Bersten outside court on May 14.Justin McManus

Patterson underwent a number of tests to check her liver, the prosecutor said, and they showed her lactate level – the level that first alerted doctors to the seriousness of the illness of the other lunch guests – was normal.

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Accused’s actions inconsistent with someone who was unwell, prosecutor tells jury

By Marta Pascual Juanola

Prosecutor Nanette Rogers, SC, said Erin Patterson’s evidence that she wanted to pick her children up and get them assessed in hospital because she did not want to scare them didn’t make sense given the circumstances the accused woman was in.

Rogers said Patterson spoke to estranged husband Simon Patterson on the phone about 11am on July 31, 2023 – two days after the lunch – and said that she wanted to drive 90 minutes one way, and a three-hour round trip, to pick up the children and take them to hospital.

Erin Patterson.Matthew Absalom-Wong

Patterson was eventually transported to Monash Medical Centre after returning to Leongatha Hospital that day.

In her closing address to the jury, Rogers said that it was only when Simon Patterson made a comment that he was glad that Erin Patterson was well enough to do the drive that she changed her mind and agreed for him to pick up the children.

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