She told the jury she felt confident enough about her research that she began feeding wild mushrooms to her children, cutting them up really small so they couldn't pick them out.![]()
What's scary to me is that Erin comes across as a truly fixated individual. Fixated on perceived slights. Fixated on specific incidents that Simon and his family forgot long ago. Fixated on people like Simon and his family when they don't react the way she wants them to. Fixated on the relationship, even when they're separated. It's terrifying.
I wonder whether the defense might trying to demonstrate that she was too muddled up to ever do something deliberately harmful, and that also explains her evasions afterwords. She was just such a hot mess of misery, she can't be held responsible for anything...I'm starting to see the direction this story is likely heading. She's laying the groundwork by talking about her low self-esteem due to her weight, plans for gastric reduction surgery, and secret bulimia, something she claims no one knew about. That part is probably going to be used to explain why she didn't get as sick as the others because she secretly purged after the meal.
Looks like she will claim she used some of the Tupperware container of dehydrated mushroom mix on the beef Wellingtons, not knowing it contained death cap mushrooms.
But I see some big problems with her story. She threw out the dehydrator and denied ever owning one or foraging for mushrooms when questioned by the police - those actions don’t exactly scream innocence!
She also fed the leftover beef to her kids, claiming she scraped off the mushrooms. But death cap toxins are incredibly potent and can't just be "scraped off, they soak into the food. The kids would have been exposed and incredibly unwell if not worse!
And, if she truly suffers from extreme health anxiety, as she claims, why would she not be in a panic and rush them to the hospital asap? That part makes absolutely no sense to me.
Then there's the issue of her cancer lie. Maybe she’ll try to spin that as the result of health anxiety and self-diagnosis via Google, but it’s a much bigger leap to explain fabricated hospital visits and test results. That's not anxiety that's plain old deliberate deception.
At this point, she's had a couple of years to work on her version of events. It’ll be very interesting to see how she tries to explain away these clear inconsistencies, especially when her story doesn’t match her behavior.
All IMO.
I don’t think it’s the feeling sorry for her - I will say it again, she is extremely privileged - a wealthy heiress with a man that once loved her and two healthy children she’s close to. She just made extremely poor choices well before the lunch.
But are they starting to create reasonable doubt - a crazy mix of foraged and non foraged mushroom and her belief that exotic mushrooms had so much more taste.
Her prelude to bulimia, will she say she made herself throw up after the meal hence never getting really sick?
Will the dumping of the dehydrator, the lies to the police and reset of phones all be blamed on panic?
It reminds me of the Oscar Pistorius trial where the prosecution accused him of constantly tailoring his testimony to fit the evidence.If I’m following the lies correctly, the current one is that she was storing the stinky dried “Asian grocery” mushrooms in a Tupperware container with a mixture of mushrooms she had previously foraged and dehydrated.
It was from this mix of dried mushrooms, plus the fresh Woolworths mushrooms, that the beef Wellingtons were made.
It does seem odd that a mushroom connoisseur would just throw all different types and flavors of mushrooms into one container….but I don’t believe a word she says….as far as I can tell she is now just trying to make some lies fit together.
What a crock! She knows so much about mushrooms but oops! didn’t know to avoid foraging around oak trees? Not buying it; there’s plenty of evidence that she spent time on iNaturalist reading posts about death caps. And who knows how many searches on that reset phone?"Erin says she recalls some oak trees at Korumburra Botanical Gardens and she believes she foraged mushrooms "near to" those trees."
So now she is admitting foraging mushrooms NEAR some Oak trees? Wouldn't she know not to pick 'shrooms near Oaks?
Even I know not to touch mushrooms that are growing near Oak trees and I have never foraged.
It reminds me of the Oscar Pistorius trial where the prosecution accused him of constantly tailoring his testimony to fit the evidence.
Nothing wrong with a thirst for knowledge.
Nothing I've heard about Erin makes me think she had a real thirst for knowledge and that's why she wanted to pursue yet another degree, this time in nursing.
She strikes me as someone who—for whatever reason—could never find her path in life. How many previous jobs has she held? RSPCA admin, air traffic controller, bookshop owner, newsletter publisher, math teacher trainee, etc. I'm sure I'm missing a couple as well. Each of these seems to last a year or so. I don't know if it's tied to an emotional disorder, or she can't get along with her bosses, or whatever, but it seems that when the novelty wears off, she flits off to something else.
I've been trying to keep an open mind from the get-go, but it's become increasingly difficult.
In regards to the Asian Grocery store, I was trying to put myself in Erin's shoes, because I once bought a Sari for a party in a heavily Indian populated shopping strip in Western Sydney. I went to many Indian shops where they sold Saris until I found the one I wanted. I could remember vaguely where it was (I'm terrible with directions/geography), but because I am not familiar with the area I just couldn't remember where to tell a friend where I got it from weeks after the event. I told her the general street area I thought it was from, but I also couldn't remember the name of the particular shop because I think it was an Indian name which I couldn't read.
So I considered this for a moment when thinking about this "Asian store" tale. And I just couldn't get it across the line, because Erin GREW UP in the Glen Waverly area. Surely there were only a couple of places she could have gone to buy them that she was familiar with. Surely she could have narrowed it down to 2 or 3 places. Surely she could have remembered vaguely the streets she purchased them in. But no, she couldn't. No she didn't tell police roughly where it could have been.
Completely Unbelievable.
(Edit: This was before we all had mobiles, GPS and internet banking apps!)
With all due respect, she is not a polymath.Some people would defined her as a 'polymath'.
Even brought in the oak tree. The story has all the words. It just makes no sense.Yes we saw that also with Sarah Boone in the USA - demanding that what evidence was known in order to craft a narrative and retro-fitting her account of events to proof as it emerged.
It's a sign of guilt all by itself it seems. JMO MOO
With all due respect, she is not a polymath.
Definition from Wikipedia...
an individual whose knowledge spans many different subjects, known to draw on complex bodies of knowledge to solve specific problems.
Leonardo da Vinci or Benjamin Franklin were polymaths. They were amongst the foremost thinkers of their time and their myriad accomplishments across multiple fields are remembered to this day.
Erin can't even hold a job. What has she ever done in her life that qualifies her to be in that company?
This is actually the standard route in foraging communities when you are dealing with a mushroom that is new to you. You get as sure of its ID as you possibly can, then if you're certain enough, you fry up a tiny bit in butter, eat it, and wait a number of hours before eating the rest. After all you are never going to be able to do DNA testing at home.Omg. Her way to test mushroom toxicity was to taste them?! Eat half of one to see if it's poisonous???? Who does that???
Jmo
Also, what's the likelihood of a cook who loves mushrooms, to not taste the beef wellington mushroom mixture after it's been sauted?This is actually the standard route in foraging communities when you are dealing with a mushroom that is new to you. You get as sure of its ID as you possibly can, then if you're certain enough, you fry up a tiny bit in butter, eat it, and wait a number of hours before eating the rest. After all you are never going to be able to do DNA testing at home.
She is clearly aware of this accepted best practice here, which makes it even less likely imo that the deathcaps were accidental - as if she knew she was dealing with a mushroom that was new to her (and death caps don't really have any TASTY edible lookalikes IN THAT REGION, as we've seen, so it's unlikely she thought it was another specific mushroom), she would have run the test in advance (and would have got very ill!)
She's blaming the Asian grocer I agree. I think she's trying to confuse the jury to create reasonable doubt. It's sure confusing me, I can't keep up with her lies!!!But she says she didn’t use any of her foraged mushrooms in the BW.
According to her, she used button mushrooms from Woolworths & some dried ones from the Asian Grocer - so she’s blaming the Asian Grocer ( who’s whereabouts she can’t divulge, although she often buys dried mushrooms from the / an Asian grocer down there ) for having DC in their mix. .. thank goodness EP got that packet, as someone else not as well versed in mushroom identification could have become very ill from eating them - perhaps even die.
She's blaming the Asian grocer I agree. I think she's trying to confuse the jury to create reasonable doubt. It's sure confusing me, I can't keep up with her lies!!!