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So what happens now?
The sentencing comes first, with the court likely to reconvene sometime in the next monthThe court will reconvene [Patterson will] sit there, and the judge will ask for sentencing submissions
At this point, the defence would typically ask for a pre-sentence report
The pre-sentence report is often an independent psychological evaluation, but it could also include an analysis on the defendant’s rehabilitation prospects, her background, criminal history, health or other mitigating factors that could help determine an appropriate sentence.
The matter will then be set down for a future date, and when the reports come in they will be delivered to the judge and court will reconvene.
The submissions on the sentence from the prosecution and defence will then be heard by the judge.

Australian mushroom murders: Erin Patterson guilty verdict ends weeks of laborious detail and ghoulish fascination
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Then the judge will consider [Patterson’s] sentence and probably come back another week later and deliver the sentence
What sentence could Erin Patterson face?
The last triple-murderer to be sentenced in Victoria was Robert Farquharson, who was convicted of murdering his children in 2007 and sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum term of 33 years.Maximum penalty sentences are scaled, with murder and trafficking large quantities of drugs sitting at level 1 – which attracts the highest penalty.
The maximum sentence is life imprisonment, its anticipating that she’ll get a life sentence, and then it just comes down to what the non-parole period will be.
In Victoria, the minimum non-parole period for murder, if the offender has other convictions, is 30 years.
the non-parole period will be between 30 and 37 years.
You have countenanced the fact that there is not just one murder
Patterson is 50 years old, which means her prison sentence could see her incarcerated into her 80s.

Erin Patterson mushroom murder verdict – what happens next?
Legal expert anticipates a life sentence for Australian triple-murderer but her legal team has 28 days to decide if they are going to appeal