Erin Patterson murder trial day 33 as it happened: Accused mushroom cook lied to authorities and in witness box, prosecutor says in concluding argument; defence argues no intent, panic explains actions
Inside courtroom four in Morwell, Patterson, on trial for murder, listened intently as prosecutor Nanette Rogers, SC, concluded her closing argument, and defence barrister Colin Mandy, SC, commenced his.
11.18am
The phone that was never recovered by police
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Erin Patterson took a series of deliberate steps to conceal her mobile phone from police, prosecutor Nanette Rogers, SC, has told the jury in her closing address.Rogers said Patterson’s primary phone number was the one referred to through the trial as phone A, a Samsung galaxy handset.
“The phone records indicate that she continued to use this phone with this phone number right through February 2023 up to the lunch and after the lunch as well,” Rogers said.
This is the phone that the prosecution claims was Patterson’s usual mobile phone and the one she used every day to contact people and use data in the first half of 2023, the time before the July 29, 2023 lunch, and in hospital on July 31 and August 1, 2023.
Rogers said that when police asked Patterson to hand over her phone on August 5, 2023, officers expected her to provide her usual mobile phone.
“You should reject any suggestion by [defence barrister Colin] Mandy that [Patterson] had changed her phone over by that point because the phone records indicate that the … phone was still being used [up until the time of the warrant on August 5, 2023],” the prosecutor told the jury.
About five minutes after the police had began executing the search warrant, phone records showed Patterson was using the SIM card ending with the numbers 783 in her usual mobile phone, including to receive text messages.
“The phone records indicate that at an unknown time between 12.01pm and 1.45pm on August 5, 2023, the service number ending in 783 using a Samsung Galaxy a23 handset ... lost connection with the network,” Rogers said.
This could be due to the SIM card being removed, the battery being removed without turning the handset off, or the battery being damaged.
“For any of those three things to occur someone – and we suggest the accused – must have been handling phone A between 12.01pm and 1.45pm in the middle of the search warrant. It certainly wasn’t sitting idly by in a window sill,” Rogers said.
She said that 783 number next connected again to the network at 1.44am on August 6, 2023, at which time it was used in a Nokia smartphone.
“To this day police have never been able to recover phone A, even after executing another search warrant on November 2, 2023 specifically targeting that phone,” Rogers told the jury.
As Rogers speaks to the jury, Erin Patterson is seated in the dock wearing a pink buttoned shirt and looking down and taking notes.