Posted on 11/02/2023 1:06:42 PM PDT by simpson96
It's the kind of story a mystery novelist might conjure. But for months, a real murder case has been playing out in a small Australian town where three people died after eating a family meal that was suspected to contain poisonous death cap mushrooms.
The prime suspect in Leongatha, a country town some 84 miles southeast of Melbourne in Victoria, has long been seen as Erin Patterson, who hosted the lunch in late July whose four guests quickly fell gravely ill. The menu included a beef Wellington dish that Patterson said included mushrooms.
Police arrested Patterson on Thursday; she is now charged with three counts of murder and five counts of attempted murder. The authorities did not name Patterson directly, but the details and circumstances align closely with her case, and national media quickly reported her arrest.
Patterson has maintained that she did nothing wrong, in the face of intense media scrutiny and public speculation.
"I am now devastated to think that these mushrooms may have contributed to the illness suffered by my loved ones," she said in August, in a statement to police obtained by Australian broadcaster ABC. "I really want to repeat that I had absolutely no reason to hurt these people whom I loved."
The cook's relatives were apparently poisoned Three people died in the days after the July 29 lunch at Patterson's home. From early on, police said the stricken people showed symptoms consistent with consumption of death cap mushrooms, which are known to grow in Victoria.
The victims in the case are: Don and Gail Patterson, both 70, who were Patterson's former in-laws; Heather Wilkinson, 66, who was Gail Patterson's sister; Ian Wilkinson, 69, Heather's husband who was sickened but recovered; A 48-year-old man who became ill after three other meals dating to 2021.
Police did not identify the 48-year-old man listed as a fifth victim, but he is widely believed to be Simon Patterson, Erin's estranged husband. He had reportedly been invited to that fateful lunch, but he canceled.
The time frame police provided for the three earlier incidents matches social media postings attributed to Simon Patterson, including one in which he described being in an induced coma for more than two weeks and having emergency surgery as he battled life-threatening stomach and intestinal issues.
The case ignited public curiosity Tom May, a mycologist at the Royal Botanic Gardens in Melbourne, inspects a death cap mushroom in 2021. The mushrooms are suspected to have been used to poison several members of a family in Victoria. William West / AFP Via Getty Images / AFP Via Getty Images Tom May, a mycologist at the Royal Botanic Gardens in Melbourne, inspects a death cap mushroom in 2021. The mushrooms are suspected to have been used to poison several members of a family in Victoria. The deaths in the case were not quick: The victims spent roughly a week in the hospital before dying. It wasn't until Sept. 23 the survivor, Ian Wilkinson, was well enough to leave the hospital.
Patterson's arrest followed "an incredibly complex, methodical and thorough investigation," Detective Inspector Dean Thomas of the Victoria Police Homicide Squad said on Thursday.
Patterson reportedly told police that she also ate the beef Wellington and that she also became ill.
The suspicious circumstances sparked "incredibly intense levels of public scrutiny and curiosity," Thomas said — but he also urged the public to keep in mind that the case centers on the loss of "three people who by all accounts were much beloved in their communities and are greatly missed by their loved ones."
The detective inspector also thanked "members of the public who have reached out and provided information in relation to this incident."
Death cap mushrooms cause painful symptoms "About 9 out of 10 fungi-related deaths are attributable to the Death Cap mushroom," according to the Victorian government, which says symptoms normally begin six to 24 hours after the mushroom is eaten.
In her statement to police, Patterson reportedly told investigators that she prepared her beef Wellington using a mix of mushrooms from a supermarket and dried mushrooms she got from an Asian grocery. The dish features a beef tenderloin baked in puff pastry.
Months before Patterson had her relatives over for lunch, the Victoria Department of Health issued an advisory warning that death cap mushrooms were growing in the state.
Death cap mushrooms, or Amanita phalloides, commonly grow under oak trees and "are extremely poisonous," even after drying or cooking, the health agency said. "Consuming just one mushroom can kill an adult."
Symptoms can include "violent stomach pains, nausea, vomiting and diarrhoea," it said, adding that the mushroom's toxins can leave a survivor's liver seriously damaged.
Goot lort, why is everyone so fat? Have some respect, people.
she poisoned the in laws correct? time served.
I wonder about those dried mushrooms she got at the Asian grocer. But mushroom people know about Amanita Phalloides so I find this hard to believe.
Based on that photo, I think we can safely rule out a love triangle.
How many months has it been?
It's easy to see through that claim. If it were the Asian grocery mushrooms,
there would be dozens more sick in the community, people not connected
with the killer in any way.
Lame excuse.
They were magic mushrooms. They made her in-laws disappear...
Doesn’t seem to be anything about motive.
whatever works. :)
She said she also ate the Beef Wellington and got sick. Maybe she ate while avoiding the mushrooms so she could appear innocent.
You know what they say...
"Gillty"
One year I was shopping for Thanksgiving. I saw rat poison on an end cap. I like to put it around my shop and crawlspace in the winter so I grabbed a box. When checking out, the teen cashier held up the rat poison and gave me an inquisitive look. With a straight face I said “Inlaws are coming for Thanksgiving”. She shrugged her shoulders and rang it up. Still makes me chuckle to think about it.
ha! See, she GETS it, lol.
It’s probably just my imagination, but eating anything with a name like Death Cap, Destroying Angel, Autumn Skullcap, Deadly Webcap, Poison Fire Coral, Deadly Dapperling, or Say Goodbye To The Wife And Kids, might be a little suspect...
LOL. I know I should not laugh but this reminded me of an old Carol Burnett comedy skit on the Garry Moore show about sixty years ago in which she poisons her family, including Durward Kirby because she got tired of being a great mom to them all.
https://www.paleycenter.org/collection/item/?q=cbs&p=412&item=B:13297
“In another installment of “That Wonderful Year,” Moore celebrates 1948 and describes its famous cultural events, including the film “I Remember Mama.” Burnett appears in a parody of the film as the matriarch of an overly affectionate Norwegian family, whom she eventually doses with toadstools.”
Midsomer Murders, Season 4 Episode 2 - Destroying Angel
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