Australia mushroom trial live: cross-examination of Erin Patterson continues on day 31 of her triple murder trial

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Erin Patterson says she didn’t use her phone to look up death cap mushrooms on iNaturalist

Prosecutor Nanette Rogers SC shows the court a photo of Patterson in hospital on 31 July 2023. The image shows a phone in a pink case on top of a black pack.

Patterson agrees this is the phone she used as her primary device from February 2023 until August 2023.

Rogers says this is the phone, dubbed Phone A in the trial, she used to research death cap mushrooms. Patterson disagrees.

Rogers says it is the phone to look up the citizen science website iNaturalist. Patterson rejects this.

Rogers suggests she saw the posts on iNaturalist about sightings of death cap mushrooms posted by mycologist Dr Thomas May and retired pharmacist Christine McKenzie in the months before the lunch on this phone. Patterson rejects this.

Patterson says: “I didn’t see that post.”

Rogers says the police never located Phone A.

Patterson agrees.

Erin Patterson says she is not lying about claim ex-husband accused her of poisoning using dehydrator

Prosecutor Nanette Rogers SC takes Erin Patterson to her evidence that while in Monash hospital in the days after the lunch Simon asked her if she had used a dehydrator to poison his parents.

Rogers suggests Simon never accused her of using the dehydrator to poison his parents.

Rogers says this is “another lie” to explain why the next day she disposed of the dehydrator at a local tip.

Patterson rejects this.

Erin Patterson says she was drinking herbal tea, not coffee, day after lunch

Prosecutor Nanette Rogers SC says the health department official Sally Ann Atkinson gave evidence about a conversation she had with Patterson’s estranged husband, Simon, on 31 July 2023 – two days after the fateful lunch.

Atkinson said she asked if Patterson could have picked the mushrooms herself, Rogers says.

Simon said it was not something he knew Patterson to do, the court hears.

Patterson says she cannot comment about what Simon knew.

Simon Patterson, Erin’s estranged husband
Simon Patterson, Erin’s estranged husband. Photograph: Diego Fedele/AAP

Rogers says Patterson’s son gave evidence that on the morning after the fateful lunch he saw his mother drinking coffee at the dining room table.

Patterson says she thinks her son made an “assumption” because she generally drinks coffee. Patterson told the jury she was drinking herbal tea that morning.

“I suggest you wouldn’t be drinking coffee if you were experiencing serious diarrhoea issues,” Rogers says.

Patterson agrees with this.

Rogers says Patterson lied about drinking herbal tea on the Sunday morning.

Patterson rejects this.

Patterson shown images of mushrooms on SD card seized from her home

Prosecutor Nanette Rogers SC is cross-examining Erin Patterson.

Rogers shows Patterson images of mushrooms found on an SD card that police seized from her Leongatha home a week after the lunch.

Patterson put her glasses on as she looks at the screen in front of her in the stand.

Rogers says the photos were taken between 23 April 2020 and 5 May 2020.

“Did you eat any of these mushrooms or are you unable to remember?” Rogers says.

Patterson says she cannot remember.

Asked if she fed any of these mushrooms to her children, Patterson says she cannot remember.

Crown prosecutor Nanette Rogers SC
Crown prosecutor Nanette Rogers SC. Photograph: James Ross/AAP

The jury has entered the court room.

Erin Patterson, dressed in a dark-coloured shirt with white polka dots, is seated in the witness box.

We’re waiting for the jurors to enter the court room.

While we wait, revisit this report from our justice and courts reporter, Nino Bucci, about day 30 of the triple murder trial.

Erin Patterson
Composite: AP/Guardian Design

Here’s a recap of what the jury heard yesterday

1. Under cross-examination, Erin Patterson denied leading Department of Health authorities on a wild goose chase to find the Asian grocer she reported buying dried mushrooms from.

2. Patterson agreed the Enrich Clinic, where she says she was booked in for a pre-surgery appointment for gastric bypass, has never offered this procedure.

3. Patterson denied she foraged for death cap mushrooms two hours before buying a Sunbeam food dehydrator on 28 April 2023.

4. Patterson said beef wellington was the “perfect dish” for the dried mushrooms she says she purchased from an Asian grocer months before the lunch.

5. Patterson denied she made up a history of foraging edible mushrooms from 2020.

Welcome to day 31 of Erin Patterson’s triple murder trial

Erin Patterson is expected to continue giving evidence for an eighth day.

Prosecutor Nanette Rogers SC will continue cross-examining Patterson from 10.30am.

Patterson, 50, faces three charges of murder and one charge of attempted murder relating to a beef wellington lunch she served at her house in Leongatha, in regional Victoria, on 29 July 2023.

She is accused of murdering her parents-in-law, Don and Gail Patterson, and her estranged husband’s aunt, Heather Wilkinson. The attempted murder charge relates to Heather’s husband, Ian Wilkinson.

She has pleaded not guilty to the charges.

The prosecution alleges Patterson deliberately poisoned her lunch guests with “murderous intent”, but her lawyers say the poisoning was a tragic accident.

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