Erin Patterson verdict: Jury deliberating in alleged mushroom killer’s triple murder beef Wellington trial

Erin Patterson, the alleged mushroom killer, will soon learn her fate in the triple murder trial over deaths arising from her death cap mushroom, beef Wellington lunch.
The trial, coming out of the usually quiet regional Victorian town of Morwell, has made global headlines, truly becoming a case that fascinated the world.
The Crown argues that Ms Patterson intentionally put death cap mushrooms in the meal, while the accused’s defence argues that it was a tragic accident.
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By continuing you agree to our Terms and Privacy Policy.Now in its 10th week, Justice Christopher Beale has delivered his final remarks from his charge, now tasking the jury to deliberate and reach a verdict.
The lunch on July 29, 2023, was served by Ms Patterson at her Leongatha home to in-laws Don and Gail Patterson, and Gail’s sister and her husband, Heather and Ian Wilkinson.
Only the accused and Mr Wilkinson survived.
It was a “special” lunch, the accused admitted in court, to thank her family and spend time with them amid concerns of growing distance from her separation with former partner Simon Patterson, Don and Gail’s parents.

The evidence the jury will now focus on includes the accused’s court testimony, where she detailed a history of lies that she told, including ones about illness that she didn’t have and the ownership and use of a food dehydrator.
However, Justice Beale has warned the jury that those lies may not be enough to find Ms Patterson guilty.
“That is not to say just because you find she lied about one matter that she lied about everything else,” he told the jury.
“It is for you to decide what significance to give these alleged lies.”
Ms Patterson has pleaded not guilty and denies intentionally killing her lunch guests with a death cap mushroom beef Wellington.
What Erin Patterson has revealed
The court has been told that Ms Patterson had an interest in mushrooms, something that she says developed around the time of the first COVID-19 lockdown in 2020.
It has also heard about her “experiments”, where the accused was dehydrating mushrooms, testing out different timings to see how long was needed to remove moisture.
Ms Patterson told the court how she would put mushrooms that she found and dehydrated into a blender, reducing them to a dust that she could “hide” in food.
She says she did this to give her children more vegetables.
Evidence of internet records has been shown to the jury that indicated devices connected to Ms Patterson had accessed maps that showed the location of death cap mushrooms in Victoria.
Ms Patterson denies foraging for death cap mushrooms, instead suggesting that they likely came from an Asian grocer in Melbourne, where she purchased a pungent-smelling fungi, which she fears made it into the meal.
Ian Wilkinson, the sole-surviving lunch guest, has accused Ms Patterson of using a coloured plate system to distinguish which meal was given to which guest at the fatal lunch, something the accused denied.

He claims that Ms Patterson told her lunch guests that she had cancer, something she denies. The alleged mushroom murderer doesn’t deny insinuating that she was unwell with a fabricated illness, stopping short of agreeing that she said “cancer”, something she claims she did to cover for weight-loss surgery she claims she was planning on having.
After the lunch, Ms Patterson went on with her day-to-day life, despite claiming to be suffering from a violent gastrointestinal illness before she decided that she needed to go to the hospital.
By that time, Don and Gail Patterson, along with Heather and Ian Wilkinson, were already in the hospital, with medical staff working on the suspicion that they were suffering from death cap mushroom poisoning.
Ms Patterson claims she told staff that she had purchased mushrooms from her local Woolworths and used them in the lunch, but didn’t share that she had an interest in mushrooms, that she experimented with dehydrating mushrooms, or that dehydrated mushrooms that she had picked were in her home.

It is a secret that Ms Patterson kept for some time. After being treated and discharged from the hospital, she returned to her home and disposed of her food dehydrator, taking it to a tip, concealed in a bag, and throwing it on a pile of rubbish.
Ms Patterson later admitted she had disposed of the dehydrator because she was worried it might tie her death cap mushroom poisoning of her lunch guests, something she feared could have her children removed from her.
What happens next in Erin Patterson trial?
On Monday, the 14 person jury was reduced to 12 in a random ballot. Jurors then retired to commence their deliberation.
The court has told media and curious on-lookers that once a verdict has been reached, there will be little notice provided before court resumes.