3.47pm
Panic and premeditation: Defence argues the former, not the latter, led his client to the tip
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A few times now, Colin Mandy, SC, has centred on the prosecution’s narrative around Erin Patterson’s dehydrator.
The dehydrator’s purchase was openly shared on social media, specifically within a true crime group. This suggested a lack of concealment, Mandy told the jury.
Mandy said the dehydrator itself was not disposed of after the mushrooms were dehydrated, or well before the lunch.
“Instead, its purchase was broadcast on social media.”
Instead, he asked jurors to focus on timing. His client disposed of her dehydrator a day after she had a confrontation about the cooking appliance with her estranged husband in hospital.
The timing of the disposal spoke volumes of her state of mind at the time, he said. He also pointed out that his client had driven to the tip in her own car, and had done the transaction using her own details.
“It can only have been panic, not because she is guilty, but because that’s what people might think,” Mandy said.
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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