4.03pm
A neighbour’s bin? Buried in the backyard? Defence asks why leftovers weren’t hidden
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Why would a guilty woman direct police to the bin?
This, claims Colin Mandy, SC, would be an action that seems inconsistent with guilt? Instead, he argues, it is an action that points to his client’s belief that the food was harmless.
His client – Erin Patterson – has pleaded not guilty to three charges of murder and one of attempted murder following a fatal beef Wellington lunch she served in 2023.
As part of his closing address, Mandy is examining part of the prosecution’s theory that his client ate her whole portion of beef Wellington – and that the leftovers in the bin amounted to a whole beef Wellington parcel.
“There is no evidence at all as to how big those beef Wellingtons were,” Mandy told the jury.
Mandy said the prosecution’s assertion that those were “clearly two halves” was speculation.
“There’s not enough evidence or information to say that,” Mandy said.
“It’s speculation. Clearly two halves. Which you heard for the first time in the closing address.”
Mandy said that assertion was never put to Patterson or Ian Wilkinson, who were present at the lunch.
He described the prosecution’s proposition that she did not volunteer where the leftovers were to the police by the prosecution as a “pedantic point” that amounted to “nonsense”.
Mandy said Patterson had told the police in her record of interview that she volunteered the location or access to the leftovers of the meal.
“She must have been confident there was no poison in them in order to do that. She was wrong,” Mandy said.
Mandy said a guilty person, who had carefully planned the lunch and who had been at the premises for some time that morning, would have already thrown out the leftovers.
“Put them in a neighbour’s bin, bury them in the backyard ... instead of directing police where to find the evidence that there were death cap mushrooms in the bin,” Mandy said.
He said that at that time on Monday morning, July 31, 2023, the only inference that the jury can draw from Patterson’s behaviour is that she did not believe that there were death cap mushrooms in those leftovers.
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.
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