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Being in prison is the punishment.
Anything further than that is beneath contempt.
Anything further than that is beneath contempt.
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Why do you care about her? She is not the victim here.Personally, I believe if she's obviously guilty then it would be a very good lawyer who says to her plead guilty, explain what your motive was, be very remorseful and get a few of your friends to give character references and that way you will be out in 25 years and not die in jail.
If she insisted on going ahead with the trial and thinking she can outwit Nanette Rogers with her 8 days of questioning on the stand, then IMO Mandy should have made it clear to her she will come unstuck with her lies.
If Mandy said to Erin, I'll take your case on and we may be able to get some legalities to come into play, along with the judge who will be making certain there will be no appeal with so many instructions to the jury that it will confuse them into thinking there's reasonable doubt then the $2m may be worth it and we'll see each other again when your 75.
Philip Dunn should have earlier in the proceedings impressed on Erin the opportunity to avoid life without parole by pleading guilty otherwise he also wasn't doing his job imo.
If she had earned the money herself instead of inheriting it then perhaps it's OK but I would like to think she could have passed that money on to her children and not use it to pay lawyers.
She was never going to get away with trying to murder everyone at her lunch, even without the jury knowing she tried to possibly murder Simon using a similar method regularly over the last few years.
If Mandy took the case on without making it clear to Erin that there was no way she could kill three people and get away with it, then I think that's how he did her a disservice.
And if Colin Mandy thinks she came out of the cross examination unscathed, either he's a bloody idiot or was lying when he told the jury that in his closing address.
Her time on the stand was pathetic just like she is IMO.
I care SFA about her. She can die in prison well before her sentence ends for all I care.Why do you care about her? She is not the victim here.
He was great. Look the evidence he managed to keep out - the scientific paper on the computer about the fatal dose of the death caps and the trip to the dump straight after the meal.Why? He gave her the best defense possible with nothing to work with. I wouldn't call it Ineffectiveness of Counsel.
It's a pity she didn't consider her children when she decided to commit these cold blooded murders. Not only are they going to miss out financially, but imagine the emotional impact that this has had on them? Erin Patterson had a privileged life and the financial security that most of us can only dream of and she still wasn't happy. Simon should keep the kids well away from her...I care SFA about her. She can die in prison well before her sentence ends for all I care.
I just hate the idea of her totally innocent kids missing out on their inheritance because it was grabbed by lawyers who achieved diddly squat for their mother.
Now, if someone thinks Erin can do whatever she likes with her money then that is showing care for her because she is a cold blooded murderer and IMO as part of the punishment her assets should be taken away from her.
IMO the victims, apart from everyone she's trying to kill, include her children.
Personally, I believe if she's obviously guilty then it would be a very good lawyer who says to her plead guilty, explain what your motive was, be very remorseful and get a few of your friends to give character references and that way you will be out in 25 years and not die in jail.
If she insisted on going ahead with the trial and thinking she can outwit Nanette Rogers with her 8 days of questioning on the stand, then IMO Mandy should have made it clear to her she will come unstuck with her lies.
If Mandy said to Erin, I'll take your case on and we may be able to get some legalities to come into play, along with the judge who will be making certain there will be no appeal with so many instructions to the jury that it will confuse them into thinking there's reasonable doubt then the $2m may be worth it and we'll see each other again when your 75.
Philip Dunn should have earlier in the proceedings impressed on Erin the opportunity to avoid life without parole by pleading guilty otherwise he also wasn't doing his job imo.
If she had earned the money herself instead of inheriting it then perhaps it's OK but I would like to think she could have passed that money on to her children and not use it to pay lawyers.
She was never going to get away with trying to murder everyone at her lunch, even without the jury knowing she tried to possibly murder Simon using a similar method regularly over the last few years.
If Mandy took the case on without making it clear to Erin that there was no way she could kill three people and get away with it, then I think that's how he did her a disservice.
And if Colin Mandy thinks she came out of the cross examination unscathed, either he's a bloody idiot or was lying when he told the jury that in his closing address.
Her time on the stand was pathetic just like she is IMO.
And the attempted murder charges against Simon too...He was great. Look the evidence he managed to keep out - the scientific paper on the computer about the fatal dose of the death caps and the trip to the dump straight after the meal.
The dump trip must have been especially galling for the prosecution, given that Erin later claimed that’s the rough time period that she was (supposedly) binging on cake.
Personally, I believe if she's obviously guilty then it would be a very good lawyer who says to her plead guilty, explain what your motive was, be very remorseful and get a few of your friends to give character references and that way you will be out in 25 years and not die in jail.
Also her previous digital searches on various poisons...And the attempted murder charges against Simon too...
In Erin's case it was a stupid roll of the dice. I think 90% of the people who saw this case before it went to trial would have thought Erin was guilty and what made the case very intriguing was that she pleaded not guilty.The majority of alleged murderers in Victoria (as per a 2015 study) plead not guilty to murder.
I guess if a person has to roll the dice and take a chance on reasonable doubt VS a definite long sentence, it is not uncommon to plead not guilty.
The study found that younger offenders were more likely to plead guilty than older offenders and those sentenced of harsher crimes, such as murder, were the least likely to plead guilty (only 48 per cent of proven murder charges).
Victorian guilty pleas spike
The requirement to make judges state sentencing discounts has made a huge difference to the number of guilty pleas in Victoria.www.thelawyermag.com
I have referred to the leftovers being left in the bin, which they were.
We know that Erin directed police to the location of the leftovers and that one portion tested positive for toxins.
I am unsure how else to frame this, it’s all based on admissible evidence.
In Erin's case it was a stupid roll of the dice. I think 90% of the people who saw this case before it went to trial would have thought Erin was guilty and what made the case very intriguing was that she pleaded not guilty.
I can see no way that she won't get life without parole. She was callous, unremorseful and totally lacking in empathy for her victims and all without a known motive.
She rolled the dice and lost.
I think she would have been better off to plead guilty early, have a chance at retaining some links with her kids, keep most of her $2m and be out of jail in less than 25 years.
Anything from here on like having a lawyer for her sentencing or having a lawyer to try and get an appeal is like chucking good money after bad.
Pleading not guilty for her was like getting on to a sinking ship and now it's sunk.
There was a bloke in Perth recently, Andre Rebelo, who pleaded not guilty to killing his mum when the whole world knew he did kill her and he's now going to rot in jail for 25 years and hopefully his partner will keep his son well away from him.
Murderers seem to be clogging up the courts with their feeble-minded thoughts about pretending to be innocent.
You need more than a hot shot lawyer to keep the gavel coming down on a guilty verdict. There are exceptions where someone is innocent and pleads not guilty but not many.
I think she was just so used to being in control & thought she could sweet talk her way out & say it was all just a accident & woe is me .What I find quite shocking about her not pleading guilty, is that she knew the evidence they had against her in the brief of evidence, but she still chose to roll the dice.
I get where you're coming from @Aquawoman - because if she plead guilty she would have had a large sentence discount, plus, if she showed remorse, probably more chance of a much lighter sentence. Her inability to take accountability and show mercy and remorse will be her ultimate undoing with the sentencing. I think she will get life without parole. IMO
I read somewhere that Mandy "did an absolute fantastic job with an astonishingly unrelatable and unconvincing client".
It may be correct about the client but anyone could have got her found guilty on all charges.
Erin served up Mandy a big slice of $2 million for his efforts, so he can't be completely ignorant.
From her kid's perspective, I think they are better off not having anything to do with her.In Erin's case it was a stupid roll of the dice. I think 90% of the people who saw this case before it went to trial would have thought Erin was guilty and what made the case very intriguing was that she pleaded not guilty.
I can see no way that she won't get life without parole. She was callous, unremorseful and totally lacking in empathy for her victims and all without a known motive.
She rolled the dice and lost.
I think she would have been better off to plead guilty early, have a chance at retaining some links with her kids, keep most of her $2m and be out of jail in less than 25 years.
Anything from here on like having a lawyer for her sentencing or having a lawyer to try and get an appeal is like chucking good money after bad.
Pleading not guilty for her was like getting on to a sinking ship and now it's sunk.
There was a bloke in Perth recently, Andre Rebelo, who pleaded not guilty to killing his mum when the whole world knew he did kill her and he's now going to rot in jail for 25 years and hopefully his partner will keep his son well away from him.
Murderers seem to be clogging up the courts with their feeble-minded thoughts about pretending to be innocent.
You need more than a hot shot lawyer to keep the gavel coming down on a guilty verdict. There are exceptions where someone is innocent and pleads not guilty but not many.
IMO Mandy did the best he could with what he had to work with. I would love to know whether or not he actively discouraged her from testifying.
As for an appeal, as I've said here before, IMO (as a non-lawyer) any lawyer who took on an appeal would be just taking her money, and that's fine with me.
What I find quite shocking about her not pleading guilty, is that she knew the evidence they had against her in the brief of evidence, but she still chose to roll the dice.
I get where you're coming from @Aquawoman - because if she plead guilty she would have had a large sentence discount, plus, if she showed remorse, probably more chance of a much lighter sentence. Her inability to take accountability and show mercy and remorse will be her ultimate undoing with the sentencing. I think she will get life without parole. IMO