This is the kind of stuff that the jury need to be highlighted!!Today under cross examination:
Did you tell people at the lunch you had cancer?” the prosecution asked.
“I did not,” Ms Patterson replied.
Erin’s own evidence yesterday:
“Not proud of this, but I led them to believe I might be needing some treatment … in regards to [ovarian cancer] in the coming weeks and months,” she said
“I remember thinking I didn’t want to tell anybody what I had done (gastric bypass), I was really embarrassed about it, so I thought letting them believe I had something that required serious treatment … [would] help me with logistics around the kids, and I wouldn’t have to tell them.”
Which version would you like the jury to believe Erin?![]()
Didn't she tell us exactly how it happened yesterday?This is going to be interesting to hear her explanation of exactly how the Death Caps got into the Beef Wellingtons if she didn't actively place them into it. I'm guessing that she's heading into the "I wasn't aware" realm.
Patterson says she remembers giving this evidence.I mentioned I’d had an issue a year or two earlier when I thought I had ovarian cancer...
Then – I’m not proud of this – but I led them to believe that I might be needing some treatment in regards to that in the next few weeks or months.
I would assume the case worker would have had notes about her conversations/visits, will have to go back over her testimony.Throwing a child protection worker under the bus. Amazing. Vomit emoji.
Key Event
1m ago
Erin Patterson says child protection witness was wrong
By Joseph Dunstan
Dr Rogers then takes Erin Patterson to evidence from child protection worker Katrina Cripps, who told the court that Erin had told her that the lunch was organised "to discuss a medical issue". Erin disagrees with this.
"Ms Cripps is wrong, is she?" Dr Rogers asks.
"Yes," Erin replies.
Erin says her recollection of the conversation is "clearly different".
When asked if she sought advice from Ms Cripps on how to approach the issue with her children, Erin says "something like that, yeah".
"So to be very clear, I'm suggesting that you did tell Katrina Cripps that you'd invited the four people to lunch to discuss a medical issue," Dr Rogers says.
Erin says her recollection is that while she told Ms Cripps the "medical issue" was discussed during the lunch, she did not tell her it was the purpose for the lunch being organised.
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.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.
Rogers: Did you tell people at the lunch that you had cancer?
Patterson: No.
Rogers: Did you say to your guests at the lunch that you were very concerned because you believed it was very serious, life-threatening?
Patterson: I don’t remember using those words.
Rogers: What words did you use?
Patterson: I can’t remember the precise words, but I do know what I was trying to communicate was that … I am undergoing investigations around ovarian cancers that might need treatment in that regard in the future. I can’t say that that was the specific words that I used, but that’s what I remember I was wanting to communicate.
Asked about evidence from surviving guest Ian Wilkinson earlier in the trial that Patterson had been anxious about how to tell the children about her health issues – and asked for advice on whether she should tell them – Patterson said she remembered telling her guests that she didn’t want to tell the children.
Rogers: Did you ask the lunch guests for advice on whether or not to tell the kids about this threat to your life?
Patterson: No.
Rogers: Did you tell the lunch guests that you had cancer?
Patterson: I did not.
Rogers: Ian Wilkinson’s evidence is that you went on to talk about a diagnostic test. Did you mention [a diagnostic test]?
Patterson: I think I talked about that, I’d been undergoing some testing.
Rogers: Ian Wilkinson’s evidence is that [the testing] showed a spot on the scan that was a tumor.
Patterson: I remember him saying that in his evidence, but I don’t believe I said that [at the lunch].
Roger: Might you have said it?
Patterson: I don’t think so, no.
Rogers: I suggest to you that you told your lunch guests that you had received a cancer diagnosis. Do you agree or disagree?
Patterson: Disagree.
Rogers: I also suggest that you told them that it was not a suspected cancer.
Patterson: I’m very confused about that question.
This case is the first time I'd heard of picking mushrooms referred to as mushrooming.
I had always known it as a term to describe something growing and expanding.
Ie: mushrooming out of all proportion.
Rogers says Patterson used the cancer information to allow her to have a reason for inviting her lunch guests. Patterson says:
I didn’t use any reason when I invited them. I just invited them.
I find it bizarre that Erin P left residue in the dehydrator (later found and tested by forensics) which her children might have found and tasted out of curiosity / boredom one day . . .2m ago02.52 BST
Patterson denies intentionally dehydrating death caps
Patterson is shown a photo of the dehydrator at the tip and asked if this is the one she owned.
“I presume so,” Patterson says.
“And why do you presume so again?” Rogers asks.
“Unless somebody else put in a dehydrator as well as me I presume this is the one I put in,” Patterson says.
Rogers tells Patterson it is an agreed fact in the trial that analysis by a fingerprint expert found the fingerprints on the dumped dehydrator matched Patterson’s fingerprints.
Rogers puts to Patterson: “You knew they were death cap mushrooms you’d been dehydrating?”
“No, I didn’t know that,” Patterson says.
Rogers says Patterson was “keen” to dispose of evidence she had dehydrated death cap mushrooms.
“No, I didn’t know they’d been in it,” Patterson says.
Patterson denies Rogers’ suggestion that the reason she rushed out of Monash hospital was to dispose of evidence she had dehydrated death cap mushrooms.
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ie: a lot like Erin's lies...This case is the first time I'd heard of picking mushrooms referred to as mushrooming.
I had always known it as a term to describe something growing and expanding.
Ie: mushrooming out of all proportion.
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