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Cancer diagnosis the first of four ‘calculated deceptions’
ByMarta Pascual JuanolaSenior Crown prosecutor Nanette Rogers, SC, has risen to her feet to deliver her closing address to the jury.
Ian Wilkinson, who survived the July 29, 2023 lunch at Erin Patterson’s home, is among those watching in court, along with other members of the Wilkinson and Patterson families.
“At the heart of this case are four calculated deceptions made by the accused,” Rogers has told the jury.
The first of those deceptions, Rogers said, was Patterson’s claims that she had a cancer diagnosis.
“She fabricated a cancer claim to provide a reason for her otherwise unusual lunch invitation,” the prosecutor said.
“You heard that it was very rare for the accused to invite people to her home.”
Rogers said that when Patterson invited her estranged husband, Simon Patterson, to lunch she told him that she had received some medical news and she needed advice on how to tell their children.
“She gave him multiple incentives to attend,” Rogers told the jury.
Child protection worker Katrina Cripps outside court on May 15.Credit:Justin McManus
She said this also matched evidence by child protection worker Katrina Cripps, who told the trial Patterson had said to her at the hospital that she had wanted to share medical news with her guests.
“Yet in the evidence before you, the accused claimed that the reason she invited Don and Gail [Patterson] was because they had such a good time in the lunch in June that she wanted to do it again,” Rogers said.
Rogers also reminded the jury of Ian Wilkinson’s evidence, as he told the court that Patterson had told her lunch guests she had cancer and that she wanted to know whether she should tell her children.
“You should completely reject the accused’s claim that she never had a cancer diagnosis,” Rogers said.
“This was the accused simply trying to minimise the lie she told her lunch guests.”
Rogers said this was an elaborate lie.
“The accused planted the seed of her lies well in advance,” Rogers said.
This included telling Don and Gail that she had a needle biopsy of her elbow and an MRI booked in, as captured by a series of text messages read to the jury during the trial, Rogers said.
Erin Patterson murder trial: Accused ‘lied’ to multiple people, and repeatedly changed her story on sourcing mushrooms, prosecutor tells jury
Prosecutor Nanette Rogers, SC, is arguing to the jury that accused killer Erin Patterson faked a cancer diagnosis to her lunch guests and deliberately deviated from a beef Wellington recipe.