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Colin Mandy SC says if
Patterson made an unpoisoned beef wellington for herself she would need to mark it in a way to differentiate it from the toxic ones.
“In which case you would not need different coloured plates,” he says.
Earlier in the trial,
Ian Wilkinson said Patterson served beef wellingtons for her guests on grey plates while she ate from an “orangey-tan” coloured plate.
Mandy says “it has to be the case that Ian Wilkinson is wrong about what he says.”
He says Ian is “honestly mistaken”.
Mandy says when police searched Patterson’s house a week after the lunch they were aware of the plate issue and found no plates matching Ian’s description.
Simon’s evidence was that Patterson had no sets of matching plates, the court hears.
Simon also testified that the day after the lunch
Heather Wilkinson raised Patterson’s mismatched crockery. Mandy points to the evidence of Patterson’s son’s friend who recalled seeing white plates after the lunch.
The video from the police search at Patterson’s house showed two white plates, a few colourful plates and some black plates, Mandy says.
“There weren’t any orangey-tan plates,” he says.