Australia - 3 dead after eating wild mushrooms, Leongatha, Victoria, Aug 2023 #8 *Arrest*

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  • #701
Here are the ones from The Guardian

4h ago14.28 AEST
Ian and Heather Wilkinson initially showed ‘signs of responding well’, court hears

The prosecution’s examination of Dr Christopher Webster has recommenced.

Webster says on the evening of 30 July he did not consider transferring Ian or Heather to a Melbourne hospital because their vital signs were stable and IV fluids could be administered without complications, the court hears.

“There were signs of responding well to the initial treatment,” he says.

4h ago14.39 AEST

‘Grossly abnormal’ hospital test results sparked death cap mushroom fears, court told​

At around 7am on 31 July – two days after the lunch – Webster received a call from Dr Beth Morgan at Dandenong hospital.

Morgan told Webster she had been treating Don and Gail Patterson overnight and they had “grossly abnormal” liver function tests. Morgan said medical staff were concerned about the possibility of death cap mushroom poisoning, Webster says.

Webster organised for blood samples to be sent to Wonthaggi hospital.

Morgan later advised Webster that Dandenong hospital could accept Ian and Heather from Leongatha.

3h ago14.45 AEST
Erin Patterson told doctor she bought mushrooms at Woolworths, court hears

At about 8am that morning Erin arrived at the Leongatha urgent care clinic, the court hears.

“She said I’ve got gastro,” Webster says.

“I recognised her as the chef of the meal,” he says.

Webster told Erin there was a concern about death cap mushroom poisoning. He then asked where the mushrooms were purchased.

She replied: “Woolworths,” the court hears.

“It was a single-word response,” Webster says.

He says a colleague later informed him Erin had discharged herself against advice.

Asked about his reaction, Webster says he “was surprised”.

“I had just informed her she’d been exposed to a potential death cap mushroom poisoning,” he says.

Webster rang Erin’s mobile phone three times, leaving a voicemail each time, he says.

“I was apologetic and informed the voicemail that I would have to contact the police for her health and safety,” he says.

Webster called the hospital’s director of medical services to explain the situation.

3h ago14.58 AEST

Patterson discharged herself from hospital after ‘five minutes’, according to triple zero call audio​

Dr Christopher Webster says he rang police via triple zero.

The jury is played an audio recording of the call made by Webster at 9.25am on 31 July 2023 – two days after the lunch.

He tells the operator:

I have a concern raising a patient that presented here earlier but has left the building but is potentially exposed to a fatal toxin from mushroom poisoning and I’ve tried several times to get hold of her on her mobile phone.
Webster gives the operator Erin Patterson’s mobile number and Leongatha address.

He says Erin presented at the hospital at 8.05am and was there for “five minutes”. She discharged herself at 8.10am, the court hears.

Webster tells the operator five people had eaten lunch together on Saturday. He says two of these people were in intensive care at Dandenong hospital and another two have been transferred to the same facility.

He tells the operator about Erin leaving the hospital:

“It was time for the nurse to begin observations … While I was attending to other patients the nurse informed me she had discharged herself against medical advice.”

3h ago15.10 AEST
Children of mushroom cook ‘can be scared and alive or dead’, court hears

Erin returned to the urgent clinic later that morning, the court hears.

Webster asked Erin if anyone else had eaten the beef wellington and she said her children had eaten the meal but without mushrooms.

At 10.04am, Webster received a call from police officers who said they were at Erin’s Leongatha residence.

Webster asked Erin, who was in hospital, if police could break into her home and collect leftover samples of the beef wellington dish. She provided permission and told them there would be remnants in the bin, the court hears.

Webster says he spoke to Erin before his shift ended that day. He inquired about the whereabouts of her children.

“I stressed the importance of getting the children to a medical facility,” he says.

“Erin was reluctant to inform the children.”

Webster says Erin was concerned the children would be “frightened”.

“I said they can be scared and alive or dead,” he says.

Webster is asked about Erin’s response.

“She, I think, started to understand the importance of contacting them and indicated it would be done,” he says.

3h ago15.14 AEST
Patterson’s claim about mushrooms and Woolworths raised again in murder trial

Patterson’s lawyer, Colin Mandy SC, is cross-examining Webster.

Mandy asks Webster about the initial conversation he had with Erin when she initially attended the hospital.

Webster says it was a “brief discussion” and not longer than a minute.

Mandy also presses Webster on his conversation with Erin when he asked where the mushrooms were sourced from.

“Her answer was Woolworths?” Mandy asks.

Webster says Erin gave a “single-word answer”.

2h ago15.46 AEST

Erin Patterson refused to be assessed by doctors in hospital cubicle, court hears​

The prosecution has called their next witness, Dr Veronica Foote, a GP.

In July 2023 Foote was a GP at Leongatha hospital, the court hears.

Foote arrived for her 24-hour shift at 8am on 31 July and Webster told her two patients were being treated for mushroom poisoning, the court hears.

Foote says the hospital’s director of nursing, Kylie Ashton, later told her Erin had presented to the hospital at about 8.05am.

Ashton said she had asked Erin to enter a cubicle to be assessed which she refused, Foote says.

Ashton asked Foote to speak to Erin because she did not want to be assessed.

Foote recalls speaking to Erin near the doorway in the urgent clinic:

“She was on her way out,” Foote says.

I spoke to Ms Patterson and relayed our concerns for her health and the potential she could become very unwell and that it was our medical advice she stayed.


She told me she wasn’t able to stay at that time. She said she had to make some preparations for her animal and children and that she would return to the hospital.

2h ago15.56 AEST
Court hears Patterson told doctors she would return in 30 minutes – but she did not

The jury is shown a two-minute CCTV video of Foote’s interaction with Erin. The timestamp says 9:55am but the time was actually 8.10am, the court hears.

Erin is wearing a pink jumper, white pants, black sandals with a black handbag and black backpack. She is also wearing a face mask.

Foote and Ashton are seen in the video speaking to Erin near a hospital doorway.

Ashton brings a piece of paper to Erin which she signs.

Foote explains the form is to acknowledge that Erin has discharged herself without medical advice.

She says Erin told staff she would return within 30 minutes, but the court hears Erin failed to do that.

2h ago16.07 AEST
Erin Patterson’s pulse rate was initially ‘high’ but other signs normal, doctor tells murder trial

Foote is asked about Erin’s medical assessment and vital signs.

She says her initial blood pressure and temperature (35.6C) were in the normal range.

Erin’s pulse was 140 beats per minute, which Foote says is “high”.

She says over time Erin’s heart rate settled to about 100 bpm. Foote says stress and anxiety can make a person’s heart rate go up and down.

Foote also conducted a medical examination of Erin.

“I examined her abdomen … I noticed her appearing to be quite upset and found it to be lax or soft.”

“She had some tenderness in the right upper part of her abdomen and the central, lower part of the abdomen.”

Asked about Erin’s reported diarrhoea, Foote says she did not observe this.

1h ago16.48 AEST

End of day seven: what the jury heard​

Day seven of Erin Patterson’s murder trial has now concluded.

Here’s what the jury heard today:

1. Erin discharged herself against medical advice from Leongatha hospital after five minutes on 31 July, two days after the lunch. The court was played an audio recording of a triple zero call Dr Chris Webster from the hospital made to police to raise concerns about Erin’s health and safety.

2. When Erin returned to hospital later that morning, Webster stressed the importance of her children – who she said had eaten leftovers of the beef wellington without mushrooms – being tested. He said Erin said they would be frightened. He replied: “they can be scared and alive or dead,” the court heard.

3. Erin told her brother-in-law, Matthew Patterson, in a phone call at about 10.30am on 31 July – two days after the lethal lunch – that the mushrooms in the beef wellington had been sourced from Woolworths and an Asian grocer, the court heard. Webster said Erin told him the mushrooms in the dish had been sourced from Woolworths.

4. The court heard a written statement from Danielle Romane, an official at the state’s department of health. She said a request to search the state’s cancer registry found no record of Erin having received a cancer diagnosis.

5. Gail Patterson’s daughter, Anna Terrington, said her mother reported the lunch at Erin’s house had gone “well”. She said they had spoken on the phone at about 5pm on the day.

We’ll be back at 10.30am tomorrow with live coverage of the trial.

 
  • #702
She bought such an expensive one, too.

You can get a cheap dehydrator for around forty bucks. I think that's what mine cost.

MOO
Nothing but the best for my relatives!
 
  • #703
Unless I have missed it, I see nothing in today's reporting of EP's bizarre interaction with hospital staff where she inquires about the well being of her dinner guests.

If the hospital witnesses have not been asked about that by either side then I'm quite surprised.
 
  • #704
Unless I have missed it, I see nothing in today's reporting of EP's bizarre interaction with hospital staff where she inquires about the well being of her dinner guests.

If the hospital witnesses have not been asked about that by either side then I'm quite surprised.

I was wondering why the defence didn't ask about Gail's final message to the family on their chat thread - if Erin was a part of that. Surely Erin would have said "I am so sorry, I feel terrible that this happened after a meal at my place!"
 
  • #705
I wonder what people think Simon was doing with his salary, and his annual money gifts from his grandmother.

I think he was likely sinking all of that into the family expenses, perhaps some into mutual income property mortgages and maintenance ..... while Erin did not work.

We already know he was paying the children's school fees from his grandmother's annual monetary gift.

And there had been no reason for Erin not to work for about the last 6 years or so, while her children were in school for most of the day.

Obviously Erin still has a very significant income, if Simon's Child Support payments were determined to be so low.
I imagine she has a whole pile of money in the bank giving her substantial monthly interest payments as income, and perhaps rental property income as well.

imo
I think that there would have been a significant amount of time that Simon was unable to work also when he was also on death's door.
 
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  • #706
The defence continues examining the trail Erin Patterson left through the health system after the lunch.

Mr Mandy asks if he had to tell any other hospital staff about the situation regarding the poisoning victims.

"I didnt need to tell anybody, I have a loud voice and everyone was aware," Dr Webster says.

Dr Webster tells the court about a conversation he had with a Mirboo North police officer, after Erin Patterson had returned to hospital.

The police had travelled to Erin's Leongatha home to look for her, after she had discharged herself from hospital against doctor's advice.

He says he told the police that Erin had returned to hospital, and they no longer needed to look for her.

Then his mind turned to the leftovers from the lunch.

"It occured to me, they're at [Erin's house], they can get some leftovers for me," Dr Webster says.

"Then I realised I better ask the homeowner if its okay for the police to go in.

I really like Dr Webster, no one seems to mess with him & his patient care & a great advocate.
:)

I love his quote about better the child be scared than dead!

He made sure that Erin couldn't go & dispose of the left over Beef Wellington & getting the police to bring it to him. ( edit or was that Dr Veronica Foote? )

1746609816391.webp

Dr Chris Webster.Credit: Jason South

 
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  • #707
I think that thee would have been a significant amount of time that Simon was unable to work also when he was also on death's door.

True. Though if he was a full-time employee he would have received whatever Medical Leave he had accrued. Some people accrue a ton of that because they never take sick days. I haven't seen much in MSM about his employment, other than he is a civil engineer.
 
  • #708
He made sure that Erin couldn't go & dispose of the left over Beef Wellington & getting the police to bring it to him. ( edit or was that Dr Veronica Foote? )

I think Dr Webster asked for the leftovers, and Dr Foote received and bagged them.

Maybe their shifts had changed by the time the police retrieved them from the bin.
 
  • #709
I think Dr Webster asked for the leftovers, and Dr Foote received and bagged them.

Maybe their shifts had changed by the time the police retrieved them from the bin.


At 10.04am, Webster received a call from police officers who said they were at Erin’s Leongatha residence.

Webster asked Erin, who was in hospital, if police could break into her home and collect leftover samples of the beef wellington dish. She provided permission and told them there would be remnants in the bin, the court hears.


The fact that she allowed police to break and enter and also told them the remnants would be in the bin strikes me as odd in the supposed deliberate poisoning circumstances. I would have expected her to make up some story about there being no leftovers or they were fed to the dog, or similar, and then go straight home from the hospital and make sure that there were no locatable remnants.

In fact I would expect the Defence to jump on her 'assisting police' as proof that she had nothing to hide. Hmmm.
 
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  • #710
At 10.04am, Webster received a call from police officers who said they were at Erin’s Leongatha residence.

Webster asked Erin, who was in hospital, if police could break into her home and collect leftover samples of the beef wellington dish. She provided permission and told them there would be remnants in the bin, the court hears.

Yes. Then there was CCTV shown at the trial of Dr Foote taking the leftovers from a brown Woolies bag and putting them in two pathology bags.
 
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  • #711
Here are the ones from The Guardian

4h ago14.28 AEST
Ian and Heather Wilkinson initially showed ‘signs of responding well’, court hears

The prosecution’s examination of Dr Christopher Webster has recommenced.

Webster says on the evening of 30 July he did not consider transferring Ian or Heather to a Melbourne hospital because their vital signs were stable and IV fluids could be administered without complications, the court hears.

“There were signs of responding well to the initial treatment,” he says.

4h ago14.39 AEST

‘Grossly abnormal’ hospital test results sparked death cap mushroom fears, court told​

At around 7am on 31 July – two days after the lunch – Webster received a call from Dr Beth Morgan at Dandenong hospital.

Morgan told Webster she had been treating Don and Gail Patterson overnight and they had “grossly abnormal” liver function tests. Morgan said medical staff were concerned about the possibility of death cap mushroom poisoning, Webster says.

Webster organised for blood samples to be sent to Wonthaggi hospital.

Morgan later advised Webster that Dandenong hospital could accept Ian and Heather from Leongatha.

3h ago14.45 AEST
Erin Patterson told doctor she bought mushrooms at Woolworths, court hears

At about 8am that morning Erin arrived at the Leongatha urgent care clinic, the court hears.

“She said I’ve got gastro,” Webster says.

“I recognised her as the chef of the meal,” he says.

Webster told Erin there was a concern about death cap mushroom poisoning. He then asked where the mushrooms were purchased.

She replied: “Woolworths,” the court hears.

“It was a single-word response,” Webster says.

He says a colleague later informed him Erin had discharged herself against advice.

Asked about his reaction, Webster says he “was surprised”.

“I had just informed her she’d been exposed to a potential death cap mushroom poisoning,” he says.

Webster rang Erin’s mobile phone three times, leaving a voicemail each time, he says.

“I was apologetic and informed the voicemail that I would have to contact the police for her health and safety,” he says.

Webster called the hospital’s director of medical services to explain the situation.

3h ago14.58 AEST

Patterson discharged herself from hospital after ‘five minutes’, according to triple zero call audio​

Dr Christopher Webster says he rang police via triple zero.

The jury is played an audio recording of the call made by Webster at 9.25am on 31 July 2023 – two days after the lunch.

He tells the operator:



Webster gives the operator Erin Patterson’s mobile number and Leongatha address.

He says Erin presented at the hospital at 8.05am and was there for “five minutes”. She discharged herself at 8.10am, the court hears.

Webster tells the operator five people had eaten lunch together on Saturday. He says two of these people were in intensive care at Dandenong hospital and another two have been transferred to the same facility.

He tells the operator about Erin leaving the hospital:

“It was time for the nurse to begin observations … While I was attending to other patients the nurse informed me she had discharged herself against medical advice.”

3h ago15.10 AEST
Children of mushroom cook ‘can be scared and alive or dead’, court hears

Erin returned to the urgent clinic later that morning, the court hears.

Webster asked Erin if anyone else had eaten the beef wellington and she said her children had eaten the meal but without mushrooms.

At 10.04am, Webster received a call from police officers who said they were at Erin’s Leongatha residence.

Webster asked Erin, who was in hospital, if police could break into her home and collect leftover samples of the beef wellington dish. She provided permission and told them there would be remnants in the bin, the court hears.

Webster says he spoke to Erin before his shift ended that day. He inquired about the whereabouts of her children.

“I stressed the importance of getting the children to a medical facility,” he says.

“Erin was reluctant to inform the children.”

Webster says Erin was concerned the children would be “frightened”.

“I said they can be scared and alive or dead,” he says.

Webster is asked about Erin’s response.

“She, I think, started to understand the importance of contacting them and indicated it would be done,” he says.

3h ago15.14 AEST
Patterson’s claim about mushrooms and Woolworths raised again in murder trial

Patterson’s lawyer, Colin Mandy SC, is cross-examining Webster.

Mandy asks Webster about the initial conversation he had with Erin when she initially attended the hospital.

Webster says it was a “brief discussion” and not longer than a minute.

Mandy also presses Webster on his conversation with Erin when he asked where the mushrooms were sourced from.

“Her answer was Woolworths?” Mandy asks.

Webster says Erin gave a “single-word answer”.

2h ago15.46 AEST

Erin Patterson refused to be assessed by doctors in hospital cubicle, court hears​

The prosecution has called their next witness, Dr Veronica Foote, a GP.

In July 2023 Foote was a GP at Leongatha hospital, the court hears.

Foote arrived for her 24-hour shift at 8am on 31 July and Webster told her two patients were being treated for mushroom poisoning, the court hears.

Foote says the hospital’s director of nursing, Kylie Ashton, later told her Erin had presented to the hospital at about 8.05am.

Ashton said she had asked Erin to enter a cubicle to be assessed which she refused, Foote says.

Ashton asked Foote to speak to Erin because she did not want to be assessed.

Foote recalls speaking to Erin near the doorway in the urgent clinic:

“She was on her way out,” Foote says.


I spoke to Ms Patterson and relayed our concerns for her health and the potential she could become very unwell and that it was our medical advice she stayed.


She told me she wasn’t able to stay at that time. She said she had to make some preparations for her animal and children and that she would return to the hospital.

2h ago15.56 AEST
Court hears Patterson told doctors she would return in 30 minutes – but she did not

The jury is shown a two-minute CCTV video of Foote’s interaction with Erin. The timestamp says 9:55am but the time was actually 8.10am, the court hears.

Erin is wearing a pink jumper, white pants, black sandals with a black handbag and black backpack. She is also wearing a face mask.

Foote and Ashton are seen in the video speaking to Erin near a hospital doorway.

Ashton brings a piece of paper to Erin which she signs.

Foote explains the form is to acknowledge that Erin has discharged herself without medical advice.

She says Erin told staff she would return within 30 minutes, but the court hears Erin failed to do that.

2h ago16.07 AEST
Erin Patterson’s pulse rate was initially ‘high’ but other signs normal, doctor tells murder trial

Foote is asked about Erin’s medical assessment and vital signs.

She says her initial blood pressure and temperature (35.6C) were in the normal range.

Erin’s pulse was 140 beats per minute, which Foote says is “high”.

She says over time Erin’s heart rate settled to about 100 bpm. Foote says stress and anxiety can make a person’s heart rate go up and down.

Foote also conducted a medical examination of Erin.

“I examined her abdomen … I noticed her appearing to be quite upset and found it to be lax or soft.”

“She had some tenderness in the right upper part of her abdomen and the central, lower part of the abdomen.”

Asked about Erin’s reported diarrhoea, Foote says she did not observe this.

1h ago16.48 AEST

End of day seven: what the jury heard​

Day seven of Erin Patterson’s murder trial has now concluded.

Here’s what the jury heard today:

1. Erin discharged herself against medical advice from Leongatha hospital after five minutes on 31 July, two days after the lunch. The court was played an audio recording of a triple zero call Dr Chris Webster from the hospital made to police to raise concerns about Erin’s health and safety.

2. When Erin returned to hospital later that morning, Webster stressed the importance of her children – who she said had eaten leftovers of the beef wellington without mushrooms – being tested. He said Erin said they would be frightened. He replied: “they can be scared and alive or dead,” the court heard.

3. Erin told her brother-in-law, Matthew Patterson, in a phone call at about 10.30am on 31 July – two days after the lethal lunch – that the mushrooms in the beef wellington had been sourced from Woolworths and an Asian grocer, the court heard. Webster said Erin told him the mushrooms in the dish had been sourced from Woolworths.

4. The court heard a written statement from Danielle Romane, an official at the state’s department of health. She said a request to search the state’s cancer registry found no record of Erin having received a cancer diagnosis.

5. Gail Patterson’s daughter, Anna Terrington, said her mother reported the lunch at Erin’s house had gone “well”. She said they had spoken on the phone at about 5pm on the day.

We’ll be back at 10.30am tomorrow with live coverage of the trial.

Thank you so much for this summary. Things aren't looking good for Erin, are they?

On a lighter side, I've been researching Beef Wellington through Google - and now my news feed is being bombarded by recipes for Beef Wellington! Algorithms!
 
  • #712
Yes. Then there was CCTV shown at the trial of Dr Foote taking the leftovers from a brown Woolies bag and putting them in two pathology bags.

I have added an afterthought to my post.
 
  • #713
It’s mind-boggling that, after she is told about possible death cap poisoning, she wants to check herself out of hospital.

Now I have a fear of death, so maybe I'm projecting here, but I don’t understand how she could be so cavalier over her health, especially when she has really young children. I would be plugging myself into every machine available and have God on the speed dial :D
 
  • #714
Here are the ones from The Guardian

4h ago14.28 AEST
Ian and Heather Wilkinson initially showed ‘signs of responding well’, court hears

The prosecution’s examination of Dr Christopher Webster has recommenced.

Webster says on the evening of 30 July he did not consider transferring Ian or Heather to a Melbourne hospital because their vital signs were stable and IV fluids could be administered without complications, the court hears.

“There were signs of responding well to the initial treatment,” he says.

4h ago14.39 AEST

‘Grossly abnormal’ hospital test results sparked death cap mushroom fears, court told​

At around 7am on 31 July – two days after the lunch – Webster received a call from Dr Beth Morgan at Dandenong hospital.

Morgan told Webster she had been treating Don and Gail Patterson overnight and they had “grossly abnormal” liver function tests. Morgan said medical staff were concerned about the possibility of death cap mushroom poisoning, Webster says.

Webster organised for blood samples to be sent to Wonthaggi hospital.

Morgan later advised Webster that Dandenong hospital could accept Ian and Heather from Leongatha.

3h ago14.45 AEST
Erin Patterson told doctor she bought mushrooms at Woolworths, court hears

At about 8am that morning Erin arrived at the Leongatha urgent care clinic, the court hears.

“She said I’ve got gastro,” Webster says.

“I recognised her as the chef of the meal,” he says.

Webster told Erin there was a concern about death cap mushroom poisoning. He then asked where the mushrooms were purchased.

She replied: “Woolworths,” the court hears.

“It was a single-word response,” Webster says.

He says a colleague later informed him Erin had discharged herself against advice.

Asked about his reaction, Webster says he “was surprised”.

“I had just informed her she’d been exposed to a potential death cap mushroom poisoning,” he says.

Webster rang Erin’s mobile phone three times, leaving a voicemail each time, he says.

“I was apologetic and informed the voicemail that I would have to contact the police for her health and safety,” he says.

Webster called the hospital’s director of medical services to explain the situation.

3h ago14.58 AEST

Patterson discharged herself from hospital after ‘five minutes’, according to triple zero call audio​

Dr Christopher Webster says he rang police via triple zero.

The jury is played an audio recording of the call made by Webster at 9.25am on 31 July 2023 – two days after the lunch.

He tells the operator:



Webster gives the operator Erin Patterson’s mobile number and Leongatha address.

He says Erin presented at the hospital at 8.05am and was there for “five minutes”. She discharged herself at 8.10am, the court hears.

Webster tells the operator five people had eaten lunch together on Saturday. He says two of these people were in intensive care at Dandenong hospital and another two have been transferred to the same facility.

He tells the operator about Erin leaving the hospital:

“It was time for the nurse to begin observations … While I was attending to other patients the nurse informed me she had discharged herself against medical advice.”

3h ago15.10 AEST
Children of mushroom cook ‘can be scared and alive or dead’, court hears

Erin returned to the urgent clinic later that morning, the court hears.

Webster asked Erin if anyone else had eaten the beef wellington and she said her children had eaten the meal but without mushrooms.

At 10.04am, Webster received a call from police officers who said they were at Erin’s Leongatha residence.

Webster asked Erin, who was in hospital, if police could break into her home and collect leftover samples of the beef wellington dish. She provided permission and told them there would be remnants in the bin, the court hears.

Webster says he spoke to Erin before his shift ended that day. He inquired about the whereabouts of her children.

“I stressed the importance of getting the children to a medical facility,” he says.

“Erin was reluctant to inform the children.”

Webster says Erin was concerned the children would be “frightened”.

“I said they can be scared and alive or dead,” he says.

Webster is asked about Erin’s response.

“She, I think, started to understand the importance of contacting them and indicated it would be done,” he says.

3h ago15.14 AEST
Patterson’s claim about mushrooms and Woolworths raised again in murder trial

Patterson’s lawyer, Colin Mandy SC, is cross-examining Webster.

Mandy asks Webster about the initial conversation he had with Erin when she initially attended the hospital.

Webster says it was a “brief discussion” and not longer than a minute.

Mandy also presses Webster on his conversation with Erin when he asked where the mushrooms were sourced from.

“Her answer was Woolworths?” Mandy asks.

Webster says Erin gave a “single-word answer”.

2h ago15.46 AEST

Erin Patterson refused to be assessed by doctors in hospital cubicle, court hears​

The prosecution has called their next witness, Dr Veronica Foote, a GP.

In July 2023 Foote was a GP at Leongatha hospital, the court hears.

Foote arrived for her 24-hour shift at 8am on 31 July and Webster told her two patients were being treated for mushroom poisoning, the court hears.

Foote says the hospital’s director of nursing, Kylie Ashton, later told her Erin had presented to the hospital at about 8.05am.

Ashton said she had asked Erin to enter a cubicle to be assessed which she refused, Foote says.

Ashton asked Foote to speak to Erin because she did not want to be assessed.

Foote recalls speaking to Erin near the doorway in the urgent clinic:

“She was on her way out,” Foote says.


I spoke to Ms Patterson and relayed our concerns for her health and the potential she could become very unwell and that it was our medical advice she stayed.


She told me she wasn’t able to stay at that time. She said she had to make some preparations for her animal and children and that she would return to the hospital.

2h ago15.56 AEST
Court hears Patterson told doctors she would return in 30 minutes – but she did not

The jury is shown a two-minute CCTV video of Foote’s interaction with Erin. The timestamp says 9:55am but the time was actually 8.10am, the court hears.

Erin is wearing a pink jumper, white pants, black sandals with a black handbag and black backpack. She is also wearing a face mask.

Foote and Ashton are seen in the video speaking to Erin near a hospital doorway.

Ashton brings a piece of paper to Erin which she signs.

Foote explains the form is to acknowledge that Erin has discharged herself without medical advice.

She says Erin told staff she would return within 30 minutes, but the court hears Erin failed to do that.

2h ago16.07 AEST
Erin Patterson’s pulse rate was initially ‘high’ but other signs normal, doctor tells murder trial

Foote is asked about Erin’s medical assessment and vital signs.

She says her initial blood pressure and temperature (35.6C) were in the normal range.

Erin’s pulse was 140 beats per minute, which Foote says is “high”.

She says over time Erin’s heart rate settled to about 100 bpm. Foote says stress and anxiety can make a person’s heart rate go up and down.

Foote also conducted a medical examination of Erin.

“I examined her abdomen … I noticed her appearing to be quite upset and found it to be lax or soft.”

“She had some tenderness in the right upper part of her abdomen and the central, lower part of the abdomen.”

Asked about Erin’s reported diarrhoea, Foote says she did not observe this.

1h ago16.48 AEST

End of day seven: what the jury heard​

Day seven of Erin Patterson’s murder trial has now concluded.

Here’s what the jury heard today:

1. Erin discharged herself against medical advice from Leongatha hospital after five minutes on 31 July, two days after the lunch. The court was played an audio recording of a triple zero call Dr Chris Webster from the hospital made to police to raise concerns about Erin’s health and safety.

2. When Erin returned to hospital later that morning, Webster stressed the importance of her children – who she said had eaten leftovers of the beef wellington without mushrooms – being tested. He said Erin said they would be frightened. He replied: “they can be scared and alive or dead,” the court heard.

3. Erin told her brother-in-law, Matthew Patterson, in a phone call at about 10.30am on 31 July – two days after the lethal lunch – that the mushrooms in the beef wellington had been sourced from Woolworths and an Asian grocer, the court heard. Webster said Erin told him the mushrooms in the dish had been sourced from Woolworths.

4. The court heard a written statement from Danielle Romane, an official at the state’s department of health. She said a request to search the state’s cancer registry found no record of Erin having received a cancer diagnosis.

5. Gail Patterson’s daughter, Anna Terrington, said her mother reported the lunch at Erin’s house had gone “well”. She said they had spoken on the phone at about 5pm on the day.

We’ll be back at 10.30am tomorrow with live coverage of the trial.

I’m sorry but who wears WHITE PANTS when they have supposed gastro symptoms?! Maybe it’s just me but if there’s a chance I’m about to poop myself at any moment, white would not be my colour choice. Just saying!
 
  • #715
It’s mind-boggling that, after she is told about possible death cap poisoning, she wants to check herself out of hospital.

Now I have a fear of death, so maybe I'm projecting here, but I don’t understand how she could be so cavalier over her health, especially when she has really young children. I would be plugging myself into every machine available and have God on the speed dial :D
I think EP’s haste to leave the hospital was less a case of disliking hospitals and more a case of having important things to tend to at home. She says she needed to make preparations for her children and animals….which may be true….she may also have had some evidence to erase or conceal?
 
  • #716
I think EP’s haste to leave the hospital was less a case of disliking hospitals and more a case of having important things to tend to at home. She says she needed to make preparations for her children and animals….which may be true….she may also have had some evidence to erase or conceal?


Yes as she would have had friends who I am sure would have popped in and her husband was fetching the children. So it doesn’t add up.
 
  • #717
I think EP’s haste to leave the hospital was less a case of disliking hospitals and more a case of having important things to tend to at home. She says she needed to make preparations for her children and animals….which may be true….she may also have had some evidence to erase or conceal?
I think she was very surprised at how many people were asking questions so quickly, she thought she could just rock up to ED & no one would question anything ( why did she even go & than leave after 5mins ) only for the medical staff who were switched on make a "fuss" by repeatedly calling her to come back & than when she wouldn't answer , got the police involved - how dare they be so concerned about her & her kids health!
 
  • #718
Thank you so much for this summary. Things aren't looking good for Erin, are they?

On a lighter side, I've been researching Beef Wellington through Google - and now my news feed is being bombarded by recipes for Beef Wellington! Algorithms!
When I made Beef Wellington it took AGES
…which suggests to me that Erin possibly assembled them the previous day, before she may have been aware that Simon wasn’t planning to attend

Gordon Ramsey’s recipe is excellent. You’ll see there’s many steps involved Beef Wellington Recipe | Gordon Ramsay Recipes
 
  • #719
I think EP’s haste to leave the hospital was less a case of disliking hospitals and more a case of having important things to tend to at home. She says she needed to make preparations for her children and animals….which may be true….she may also have had some evidence to erase or conceal?

I would have expected that yet, as I posted a bit earlier, the fact that she gave police permission over the phone from hospital to break and enter and she told police to look in the bin for meal leftovers runs contrary to a need to urgently be rid of potentially damning evidence.

A major in-the-moment slip-up on her part?
 
  • #720
When I made Beef Wellington it took AGES
…which suggests to me that Erin possibly assembled them the previous day, before she may have been aware that Simon wasn’t planning to attend

Gordon Ramsey’s recipe is excellent. You’ll see there’s many steps involved Beef Wellington Recipe | Gordon Ramsay Recipes

Maybe just didn't wrap them in pastry yet, because her FB friend said wrap them at the last minute so the pastry didn't get soggy.
 
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