Crime Junkie - INFAMOUS: The Mushroom Cap Murders

Episode Date: August 4, 2025

In 2023, 48-year-old Erin Patterson invited a group of her husband’s family members over, and things took a turn for the worst, and by the worst, we mean murder. Patterson has been convicted of murd...ering three people and one attempted murder after poisoning them with mushrooms served over a nice dinner. But some questions still remain: How did she go from loving mother to mass murderer, and WHY?Source materials for this episode cannot be listed here due to character limitations. For a full list of sources, please visit crimejunkiepodcast.com/infamous-the-mushroom-cap-murders/.Did you know you can listen to this episode ad-free? Join the Fan Club! Visit crimejunkie.app/library/ to view the current membership options and policies.Don’t miss out on all things Crime Junkie!Instagram: @crimejunkiepodcast | @audiochuckTwitter: @CrimeJunkiePod | @audiochuckTikTok: @crimejunkiepodcastFacebook: /CrimeJunkiePodcast | /audiochuckllcCrime Junkie is hosted by Ashley Flowers and Brit Prawat. Instagram: @ashleyflowers | @britprawatTwitter: @Ash_Flowers | @britprawatTikTok: @ashleyflowerscrimejunkieFacebook: /AshleyFlowers.AF Text Ashley at 317-733-7485 to talk all things true crime, get behind the scenes updates, and more!

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hi, Crime Junkies. I'm your host, Ashley Flowers. And I'm Britt. And today, I want to dive into a recent case that was so big it crossed oceans and gripped crime junkies worldwide. Because we rarely see a loving mother who is giving with good family connections and friendships transform into a mass murderer in the blink of an eye,
Starting point is 00:00:24 taking the lives of the very family members she says she loves. So was it premeditated murder with a loose motive? Was it a complete accident? Or was it something in between? A jury has decided. The headlines sure made up their mind. But now it is your turn to take the facts and decide what you think
Starting point is 00:00:46 of Aaron Patterson pulled her in-laws aside one Sunday after church. Her and her husband, Simon, had been separated for some time, but they still maintained a halfway decent relationship for their two kids. And Erin made it a point to keep close with Simon's parents, and she was friendly, kind of on like an acquaintance level with his aunt and uncle too. I mean, they're literally going to the same church still, so they're gonna bump into each other, but she seems to genuinely care about them.
Starting point is 00:01:49 So anyways, on this Sunday, she pulls everyone aside after church and is like, hey, I would like to have you guys over in a couple of weeks for lunch to discuss something important. And she seemed to imply that it was maybe something related to like some health issues. So being supportive, they all agree, either like then or over the next few weeks, to imply that it was maybe something related to like some health issues. So
Starting point is 00:02:05 being supportive, they all agree either like then or over the next few weeks and they agree on a date July 29th 2023. It would be Erin, her estranged husband Simon, Simon's parents Gail and Dawn, and then Simon's aunt and uncle Heather and Ian. And the aunt and uncle are on mom's side or dad's side? His mom. So actually, Gail and Heather are sisters. Okay. So this group is all set for lunch. But the night before this lunch is set to happen, Simon actually texts Aaron and bails.
Starting point is 00:02:35 He says it's just too uncomfortable for him to come because tensions had kind of been high recently over things like child support, finances, and he's like, basically he just didn't have it in him to pretend like a nice family lunch wouldn't be awkward for him. Even though like everyone else coming is from his side of the family. Yeah, he just didn't want to do it. But he said, you know what, I'll be happy to talk about your health issues or whatever the implications of that another time if you want to do it over the phone. Now that blow off over text was clearly frustrating to Erin because she replied in the text thread and I actually have her exact reply.
Starting point is 00:03:11 I'll have you read it. She said, That's really disappointing. I've spent many hours this week preparing for lunch tomorrow, which has been exhausting in light of the issues I'm facing and spent a small fortune on beef-eye fillet to make beef wellingtons because I wanted it to be a special meal as I may not be able to host a lunch like this again for some time. It's important to me that you're all there tomorrow and that I can have the conversations that I need to have. I hope you'll change your mind. Your parents and Heather and Ian are
Starting point is 00:03:39 coming at 1230. I hope to see you there. Status? Red. Okay. But Simon does not come to the lunch. She really had spent a long time making individual beef Wellington dish. I've done. Have you really?
Starting point is 00:03:54 Yeah, and it is incredibly like time and work sensitive. Like, it's a lot of work. She put in a lot of work. And so she's got these individual ones dished out with sides on mismatched plates, all of which is prayed over before they dig in. And after they finished eating, Erin got to the reason why they're all there.
Starting point is 00:04:13 She said that she had cancer, and really she wanted their advice on how to tell their kids, who were just like elementary and middle school ages at this time. She's got two of them. And I don't know how everyone reacted in that moment, but I imagine they were surprised
Starting point is 00:04:29 because this would have been a first time diagnosis for Erin. And as she's like telling them about this cancer diagnosis, her son was arriving home. And so like not wanting him to hear what they were all discussing, everyone kind of gathers together and they encourage
Starting point is 00:04:45 her, listen, you should just be upfront with the kids, tell them the truth. And then Ian, having been and who still was a pastor at the church, he suggests that they all pray together, pray for Erin, pray for the kids. But their prayers to protect and save her were misdirected because little did everyone at the table know they should have been praying to God to save them. It didn't happen all at once. Gail, Dawn, Heather and Ian go to their respective homes.
Starting point is 00:05:20 But sometime over the next 12 hours or so, it hits them all the same. In the middle of the night, they are each struck with what feels like the effects of food poisoning. I mean, we're talking diarrhea, vomiting, and it is bad. I think people start calling one another. Like, obviously you see your partner
Starting point is 00:05:36 is having the same symptoms you are. You wanna call the other people there, like, are you sick too? And Simon eventually gets called because his parents are going to the hospital by ambulance. And so he ends up driving his aunt and uncle to a nearby hospital himself. By the 24-hour mark, all four guests who've attended the lunch were admitted to the hospital and not doing well. Doctors were scrambling to figure out what was going on, but clearly there was a connection, right?
Starting point is 00:06:03 And it didn't take Dick Van Dyke to triangulate that the lunch they were all at together is kind of the nexus of their illness. Which, did you like how I put a diagnosis murder reference in there? Like, where are my geriatric crime show fans? Well, and I'm sure they realize, like, one person is suspiciously absent from the hospital now. The chef herself, yes.
Starting point is 00:06:23 But no one is jumping to sinister conclusions, at least not yet. I think they're more concerned that she hasn't come in. Now Simon's there at the hospital with his family and he's spoken to Erin on the phone and over text and she's saying that she's sick too, but she doesn't wanna come to the hospital because she says she's having regular bouts of diarrhea
Starting point is 00:06:42 and she didn't think she'd be able to like like, do the full ride without, like, having an accident, basically. But she does eventually go to the hospital to get checked out. Now, she walks in on her own on day two. She is clearly doing way better than the others. But they still want to admit her, run some tests, because they're pretty sure they've narrowed it down to the mushrooms from the beef wellington being the problem. Everyone's symptoms or whatever tests they've done
Starting point is 00:07:09 have them pretty convinced that they've all eaten a specific type of mushroom called a death cap mushroom, which, as the name suggests, is not something to take lightly. Yeah. And so they start grilling her about where she got the mushrooms. Because my god, if these were sold at a store, like a lot of people are about to be in trouble really quick. Yeah. And they have to get ahead of this.
Starting point is 00:07:31 According to the guardian, she told the hospital staff, quote, half were fresh from Woolworths. And the other half were dried mushrooms bought from an Asian grocer in the Melbourne suburb of Oakley or Glen Waverley, End quote. Oh, that's like the worst case scenario. Exactly. And for some reason, this woman doesn't seem nearly as concerned as the hospital staff do, because when the doctor goes away for a bit to not being there long, it is so concerning to him that he calls the triple zero emergency line for police.
Starting point is 00:08:14 Hello, what address do you need the police? So this is Dr. Chris Webster calling from Lee and Gaffer Hospital and I have a concern regarding a patient that presented here earlier but has left the building and 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. What's her name? So the last name is Patterson, T-A-T-T-E-R-S-O-N. First name? Erin E-R-I-M.
Starting point is 00:08:53 When did she present at hospital? At 8.05. Today? Yep. Mushroom poisoning you said? Yeah, so there were five people that ate a meal on Saturday and two of them are in intensive care at Dandenong Hospital. Two have just been transferred from Leongath Hospital to Dandenong Hospital and Erin
Starting point is 00:09:18 presented this morning with symptoms of poisoning. And what happened when she presented she's got up and left? No, there was time for the nurse to begin observations and I was managing the other critically unwell patients so I had a brief chat to her about where the mushrooms were obtained and after that while I was attending the other patients the nurse informed me that she had discharged herself against medical advice. So she left at 10. She was only here for five minutes.
Starting point is 00:09:53 And just to clarify, you said there were four other people who ate the same meal, is that correct? Yeah. So the meal was consumed by five people and four of those people are now hospitalized. Is he just worried about her health or is he calling the police like on her? Like he thinks she's to blame and she's like on the run. So he's really careful with his wording at the time. Like it was very much just like these are the facts you need to find this woman. But dude was super clear in the aftermath of things.
Starting point is 00:10:27 I mean, he was very suspicious of Erin, because along with her reluctance to stay at the hospital and get checked out, he's like, she didn't even look sick. I mean, he is watching these other four people who are literally on death's doorstep, and this woman waltzes in looking perfectly fine. Now, luckily, police didn't have to go to her house and like drag her back to the hospital.
Starting point is 00:10:48 She returned voluntarily. But when she came back, she told the doctor something really concerning. It wasn't just five people who had eaten the beef Wellington. She had fed the leftovers to her kids too. Now this only sends the medical professionals into more of a panic.
Starting point is 00:11:05 They're like, well, you need to go home and get those kids here like now. But she doesn't want to. She's like, oh no, no, no, they're fine. They're not sick at all. I like scraped out the mushrooms before I gave them the food. Like, and she's like, I feel like if I,
Starting point is 00:11:19 because they weren't at home, they were at school. I feel like if I go scoop them up out of school and bring them to the hospital, they're gonna be really scared. Okay, so scare them? Like, how are we even having this conversation? It is literally what the doctor says. Actually, I think the doctor is more brash.
Starting point is 00:11:33 He is like, they can be scared and alive or dead. Like, what are we doing here? Yeah. Long story short, the kids do come to the hospital. They get checked out. she gets checked out, and they're all completely fine. Like, fine like there's nothing in their system? Blood tests show no metabolic acidosis,
Starting point is 00:11:56 and that is what they were looking for in the others who are sick, like Gail, Dawn, Heather, and Ian, who all, by the way, are in progressively worse shape. So what's Erin's story at this point? Like, is she trying to say it wasn't the Wellingtons, or what? No, it was fully the Wellingtons, all right.
Starting point is 00:12:15 Like, they actually go and get the leftovers from her trash, test the mushrooms, and they are now 100% sure those were death cap mushrooms. But your question is a pointed one. What is her story? Yeah. Because over the coming week, Gail and Don and Heather each pass away
Starting point is 00:12:33 from altered liver function and multiple organ failure. Only Ian survives after weeks in the ICU and some very close calls. But the thing is, try as they might for the life of them, they can't seem to find that Asian food store in Melbourne where she said she bought dried mushrooms from. And so much of her story just isn't making sense to them. So was this murder or was this a tragic accident?
Starting point is 00:13:04 And in the wake of this tragedy, it depends on who you ask. Aaron, you ask Aaron. And they do. Even before Dawn had passed away, they were pulling her in to talk to police. And it was actually in an interview with them that she learned of Gail and Heather's passing. And she told police she had no idea what was going on,
Starting point is 00:13:25 but she has been trying to be as helpful as possible, providing staff with as much information as possible to get to the bottom of this. You mean like maybe the name of the Asian grocery store that no one can find? Ideally, that would be nice, but no, she doesn't remember. So police are like, listen, let's just start at the beginning. Why did you invite them all over for this lunch that ended up killing them?
Starting point is 00:13:48 And let me just tell you what she said, like verbatim. She said, quote, I loved them a lot. They've always been really good to me. And they always said to me they'd support me with love and emotional support, even though Simon and I were separated. And I really appreciated that because both my parents are gone." End quote. And to tell them about her cancer.
Starting point is 00:14:10 What cancer? She doesn't have cancer. I'm sorry, what? Yeah, now I don't know if they even knew about the ruse that she used to get everyone over there in that moment, because it's a little unclear to me if Gail, Heather, or Dawn, or even Ian were in a position to tell police about that before they got like seriously ill.
Starting point is 00:14:30 But Ian definitely told them about it after he recovered. And nope, no record of cancer. So let's call that question one, lie one. Question two, do you own a dehydrator and have you ever foraged for mushrooms in the past? Because no way were these death cap mushrooms bought from a store. And she says, nope. But you know, you might find a manual for a dehydrator at my house somewhere. You might, I don't know. Eryn.
Starting point is 00:14:59 Lied too. But she's trying to get ahead of them, I think, because they had or eventually will search her home, and she knew that they were going to be looking at her. Okay, so like, why does she have a dehydrator? Had. Oh. Because police end up learning later that while everyone was in the hospital,
Starting point is 00:15:17 she went and disposed of the dehydrator. Mmm. And she did something else really damning to cover her tracks. Let me just back up and break down for you the case that the prosecution ends up making against Erin. Because what she did, how she tried to lie about it and then cover her own tracks, the way she was caught lying on the stand, it is bonkers. And I think it's easier if I just kind of fast forward and tell you everything they find
Starting point is 00:15:48 over the course of their investigation. So like I said, no cancer, not then, not ever. They realized that the hell throos had started even before she invited everyone to lunch. So for a while, she had been telling people about a lump in her elbow and that she was maybe gonna be going to the hospital, having a biopsy or some tests or whatever.
Starting point is 00:16:09 This was shortly before even the lunch invite. So there was kind of a long game there. She was like planting the seeds. Yeah, except there was no lump in her elbow. There was no biopsy. There were no scans, nada. All a ruse to get people to her house for lunch. I told you she got rid of the dehydrator. Now it's not like she could say, scans nada, all a ruse to get people to her house for lunch.
Starting point is 00:16:25 I told you she got rid of the dehydrator. Now it's not like she could say, oh, you know, it was so old, I tossed it whenever I go, totally unrelated to this. That thing was purchased on April 28th, 2023. Oh, so brand new. Yeah, and they find CCTV footage of her going to a dump to get rid of this thing on August 2nd, 2023.
Starting point is 00:16:47 Oh, so like when she's in hot water. Yes. And when it's tested, they find traces of death cap mushrooms, so we are now 100% sure that she didn't buy dried mushrooms from anyone. She dried them. Which also means then she picked them. Correct. Line number three. She absolutely did forge for mushrooms.
Starting point is 00:17:12 And we know this because of digital data that they collected from her devices. Like tracking? Yes. So they did a search of Erin's home pretty early on, and they collected phones, computers, tablets, everything. According to an article by the Australian Broadcast Company, it looks like starting in May 2022, so the year before all this, all of a sudden Erin started taking a keen interest in mushroom foraging based on her search history.
Starting point is 00:17:40 So it's not like they have proved then that she's like out there picking shrooms, but she started visiting a site called iNaturalist, where, quote, users share observations from nature to a community map, end quote. Like, ooh, saw this here. Oh, yeah. Saw this rare or weird thing over here. And by the way, death cap mushrooms aren't something that is just around everywhere, like in this area of Australia. They're actually like pretty rare, like in this area of Australia. They're actually like pretty rare,
Starting point is 00:18:05 specifically in this area. Now I haven't seen anyone report like that she was on the site logging anything. She seems from what I can tell just to be an observer, starting at least in May, 2022. Now fast forward nearly a year later, on April 18th, 2023, a retired pharmacist logs the location
Starting point is 00:18:25 of death cap mushrooms in a town called Locke. And then on May 21st, 2023, in a different town called Outrem, someone else logs a location where they saw death cap mushrooms. Now literally within like the first day of when one of those like pops up, Erin had gone to the site and she spent about an hour on it.
Starting point is 00:18:45 So it is very likely that she saw it. And then according to the BBC, quote, her mobile phone location data appeared to show her traveling to both areas and purchasing the infamous food dehydrator on her way home from one of those trips, end quote. But here is the clincher. And the thing that I was saying I think is so damning. They don't even have all of her mobile phone data to work with. What do you mean?
Starting point is 00:19:13 So they end up finding out that this woman had three different phones. Two Samsung phones and a Nokia. Now they only really talk in detail about the two Samsung phones, which they end up referring to as like phone A and phone B. Phone A is the one that they know she used for years before all of this, right? It's like her phone. Right. This is the phone that they can also see in the CCTV footage when she goes to the hospital
Starting point is 00:19:37 initially. So they know she's still using it around the time of all of this. But when they end up searching her home, when they end up collecting her devices, she gives them phone B. What happened to phone A? Who the heck knows? But they can see that some shady stuff happened with the phones while detectives were in her house
Starting point is 00:19:59 doing the search on August 5th. Phone B had been factory reset and the SIM card in phone A was removed and then put into a Nokia phone. Is she not in the house during the search? Oh no, she is. This is what's so wild. She is there with them.
Starting point is 00:20:17 And normally if they're like searching your property, right? Like they're obviously suspicious of her by this point. They like make you stay by them. Well, she told one of the detectives that she needed some privacy to call her lawyer. So they let her go into a room by herself for a moment. And this they believe, according to the data logs, is when some of this stuff starts happening. I mean, how do you even explain that away? I like everything they've got against her. I think it's going to be hard. Yeah. And one
Starting point is 00:20:42 of the other things that they have against her are some chat logs with a group that she has on Facebook, like this small group of friends. Because before she killed her family, guess what this woman was a part of online? I truly cannot even begin to wonder. A true crime Facebook community? Oh my gosh, please don't be crime junkie, please don't be crime junkie.
Starting point is 00:21:02 It's not, it's not, I mean, again, don't give us a bad name, Erin, but like it's, they don't ever name it, as as far as I can tell but I actually had our team check not crime Junkie as far as I know Anyways, it's not like she just joined this group She was part of this group a while back and really what ended up happening is kind of like so many of our crime junkie She ends up bonding with kind of a group of people who move their chat outside of the group and it it really isn't even about True crime, right?
Starting point is 00:21:25 It's not like it's damning and they're talking about ways to kill people or anything like that. It becomes like they're on their own little community. Yeah, they're friend group. They're talking about life. They're talking about what they're making for dinner and their kids and like whatever, yeah. Loaded conversation here.
Starting point is 00:21:37 And what's so interesting is that police can see in all these communications that to this group, Erin shares a very different version of her relationship with her in-laws than the one that she'd been telling police, right? Like, oh, I love them, they're there for me. Like, they're wonderful. This is a different story.
Starting point is 00:21:56 Because you see, even though things had been amicable between Simon and Erin since they separated years before, there was a pretty drastic shift within the last year. And the prosecution alleges that it was all really set in motion when the couple each filed their taxes in 2022. Because on those forms, Simon's accountant listed him as separated, which they were, but that was never how they had filed all, like, all the years before.
Starting point is 00:22:25 And apparently filing this way had some major, like, financial implications for Erin. She was the one with the money in the relationship after getting a big inheritance from her grandmother and then her mother when they each passed away. And this check of a box had, like, like I said, big implications for her. And it turned into this big thing because while they had kind of, of like figured out how to live their life and share responsibility or whatever now Aaron was like, okay That's out the window. I'm filing for child support We're gonna figure out how to split up the kids like medical expenses school stuff everything and so things were just like Tense right and by July where before they would at least like, text, have some chatty banter, like how are you doing, whatever, like all signs of a friendship were in the past.
Starting point is 00:23:10 And even though Simon would later tell the court that from his perspective, she really did seem to love his parents, she was telling her friends in this group, in her online group, a different thing. She had apparently tried to go to them to kind of ask them to like help mediate between her and Simon. Basically like talk some sense into your son so we can figure this out, but they didn't wanna help.
Starting point is 00:23:36 They're like, we are staying out of it. You guys need to work this out between the two of you. And so the text that they start pulling in this like group message or whatever over time does not look favorable for Erin. I can even have you read some of them. Okay, so these are some of the texts. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:23:52 This family, I swear to f***ing God, nobody bloody listens to me. At least I know they're a lost cause. So anyway, I sent a group message to all of them last night saying how Simon's behavior is unconscionable. She, I think that's what she's trying to say, it's kind of spelled weird. And asking me to withdraw the child support claim is wrong and disadvantages me and his children and how dare he, etc. I'm sick of this shit, I want nothing to do with them. I thought his parents would want him to do the right thing, but it seems their concern about not wanting to feel uncomfortable and not wanting to get involved in their son's personal matters are overriding that, so f*** them. I don't need anything from any of these people.
Starting point is 00:24:30 His mom was horrified I had claimed child support. Why isn't she horrified her son is such a deadbeat and that I had no choice but to claim? Point it. Yeah, yeah. And a completely different vibe than what, like, she was telling everybody. Like, did Simon and his family, like, were they feeling any of this animosity? Or was it still like, we're all amicable, like you were saying? Again, I mean, I think things were tense with Simon,
Starting point is 00:24:54 hence why he didn't want to go to the lunch and bail last minute. Thank God. But no, I mean, he had no idea that she felt this way about his parents. That's kind of the piece that's missing for me. Like, she hates Simon over the separation and the money stuff. She hates his parents because she thinks that they should be stepping in or telling their son what to do
Starting point is 00:25:12 or just raise him right or whatever. Where did that aunt and uncle come into this? They seem completely separated from all this. I know, this is the part that makes no sense to me and the part that no one can seem to make sense of because they were like acquaintances at best per what Ian said on the stand. And there's never anything suggesting that she went to them for any kind of support or like asking them to step in.
Starting point is 00:25:35 Like they said this lunch invite felt kind of out of the blue to them. So she's just so angry she wanted to take out this entire family. Yes, I don't know. And I mean, you teed this up to be like, was this murder a question mark? But I feel like the answer is pretty obvious. And it also feels super premeditated. I mean, she was foraging and drying mushrooms. I know.
Starting point is 00:25:59 And it even feels like she was trying to lay the groundwork for a defense on some things long before it even happened because like police also found one message in like that same friend group or whatever where she basically was saying that she had been hiding powdered mushrooms in everything to like sneak them to her kids because they didn't like them. So she was like making them drying them, making them powder, mixing them up and like putting them in brownies or whatever. And according to the Guardian, this friend group also said that she sent pictures of
Starting point is 00:26:27 a dehydrator in her kitchen that was apparently exclusively used for mushrooms. And by the way, they also find that picture, so she got ahead of that one. But for as planned as this seems, with the phones and the like, oh look, I'm doing something with mushrooms that is totally not nefarious, this whole thing was also really sloppy. Because they also find pictures on a tablet of hers where there are mushrooms on a scale that an expert later identifies
Starting point is 00:26:56 as he believes they're death cap mushrooms. So from start to finish, this woman left a trail of circumstantial evidence pointing right at her, But from start to finish, this woman left a trail of circumstantial evidence pointing right at her, all the way back to the fact that she was not sick at all. Right, I was thinking about that. Did they not, like they were all at this lunch at our house together, did they not notice that she just wasn't eating?
Starting point is 00:27:18 No, she was eating lunch. She, because like you said, remember she did- They were individual ones. Yes. She made a special non-poison one for herself. Yeah, and Ian, our lone survivor, he says that looking back, he remembers that she didn't want help serving everything up.
Starting point is 00:27:35 And while everyone that was there ate off of gray plates, hers was orange. I know this is a fool's errand, but I'm trying to put myself in her shoes to understand how she would even think that there's a remote possibility that she'd get away with this. I mean, I guess I would assume she's counting on
Starting point is 00:27:53 that no one would live to tell the tale, so who cares if she faked cancer, the weird plate thing wouldn't come out. Take away those two pieces that we know because Ian survived. There's still like an overwhelming amount of circumstantial evidence that is piling up against her, including, by the way, speaking of her not being sick, I forgot to mention this, remember how she is telling everyone she has like bad diarrhea?
Starting point is 00:28:21 Yeah, she couldn't like drive because of it. Which by the way, I never thought I would say diarrhea so much in a single episode. So yeah, so she's like, this is why I'm not going to the hospital get checked out, whatever. Well, apparently that first day, her son had some kind of flying lesson that was scheduled. And she drove him like 90 minutes away for this thing. And that whole time, she made one stop at a rest stop or gas station or something. There is CCTV footage of her going inside, going to the bathroom, but for nine seconds and then leaving. Now that's not a smoking
Starting point is 00:28:51 gun of anything. It's again, circumstantial evidence, but of yet another lie. But like, everything in this is circumstantial. And the thing is, Erin says that she can explain all of it. And she tries to, because after she is charged with murder, the trial becomes one of the biggest spectacles in Australia. Like this year, while we in the US had Karen Reed round two, they were all obsessed with Erin Patterson's trial. So with the whole world watching, Erin Patterson takes the stand for eight days in her own defense. Alright, where to begin? I'm just gonna kinda go down the punch list.
Starting point is 00:29:34 Okay. So, she says that she made individual Wellingtons, not one big one, because when she went to the store, they just didn't have the big cut that she needed. Now, why not go to the butcher and get the thing that you need so you don't have to change the whole recipe? And she's like, I don't know, man, it was easier this way. Okay, fine. And she says, yes, the plates were different, but she didn't have a complete set of matching plates,
Starting point is 00:29:58 which is actually backed up by other people who testified too. Okay, but how did you not get sick? And here is where we got a brand new confession of sorts for the very first time. She said that she has had body image issues since she was very young. And for much of her life,
Starting point is 00:30:21 she would binge eat and then purge. And she said on that day, she ate her lunch. She said she didn't eat the whole Wellington, like a quarter or a half of it or whatever. But then she ate almost an entire cake that one of the guests brought. And then feeling ill from overeating, she went to the bathroom and threw up.
Starting point is 00:30:41 And that's probably why she didn't get sick. Now they asked her on the stand, like, did you barf the beef Wellington up? Like, that's probably why she didn't get sick. Now, they ask her on the stand, like, did you barf the beef Wellington up? Like, that's the thing. And she's like, yeah, probably, maybe. I don't know. There's no way to be sure. But she still does maintain that she was mildly sick. Now, when they confront her with the video showing this long drive she makes, but where she doesn't even go to the bathroom long enough
Starting point is 00:31:01 to wash her hands, much less anything else, she says that she went in there to throw away tissues because she actually couldn't hold it earlier, had to stop on the side of the road or something to relieve herself. And so she had like tissues and a dog bag or something that she cleaned herself up with and like threw it away. That's why she was in there for such a short time. But her son, who is in the car ride with her, cannot verify this. Okay, what about the whole reason for this lunch to begin with? Like,
Starting point is 00:31:30 what's the explanation for the fake cancer? You can't really explain that conversation away. She tried. So, and this like, this is where like there ends up being this huge Perry Mason gotcha moment in court. I know my life shows. Perry Mason. Diagnosis murder Perry Mason. I'm in court. I know my life shows, diagnosis of murder Perry Mason, I'm like killing it today. Where's murder she wrote? So in court, they're asking her about this and she's like, no, I didn't have cancer,
Starting point is 00:31:55 but this goes back to her body image issues. She said that she wanted to have gastric bypass surgery, but she was too embarrassed to tell people that. But she knew that she was gonna need the family's like help and support with the kids post-op. So she made up the whole cancer story because she's like basically like I'm gonna have surgery either way. I was just telling this other thing so because I didn't want to tell him what I was really having like done. So on the stand they're like, okay gastric bypass surgery. Cool. Was it booked? Yes. Okay, where?
Starting point is 00:32:22 So she tells them and she gets caught on the stand, lying because that place didn't even offer gastric bypass surgery. What? I know. I don't like, what are you thinking? Yeah. Oh my God. Okay. That doesn't explain anything. That's wild, but there's more here,
Starting point is 00:32:42 like disposing of evidence, like like the phones the dehydrator Yeah, basically she says at certain points when she realized that people were suspicious of her or like trying to blame her She panicked and just did things that are dumb and make her look guilty Like the whole dehydrator thing she says she tossed that because her husband was accusing her in the hospital of killing his parents Which he says is untrue. He's like, I never accused her of that, like, the early days. And then the phone stuff, I mean, she has like a number of weird reasons that were all kind of different in the time leading up to trial, but like all in all,
Starting point is 00:33:19 it was, it boiled down to basically her like panicking when she knew police were looking seriously at her. Now as for where the mushrooms came from, whereas before she always told police she never foraged mushrooms and she bought those dried mushrooms from an Asian grocer, now she admits that she did get into foraging during lockdown and she's always loved eating mushrooms, and she said her kids had even seen her forage mushrooms before, by the way, they deny this. And she adds that while she does forage,
Starting point is 00:33:52 she definitely didn't go foraging in that one town where the death caps were spotted after they were posted online. Even though- I would say even though she went there right after it was posted. Her phone location suggests she was in that area like Knowing what she's accused of I feel like I shouldn't be shocked that she's bringing the kids into this so much
Starting point is 00:34:12 But I still kind of am like she's really relying on them a lot for like they saw me here They can verify that we did this like dragging them into this feels like very low in a way that is even shocking for this case. I know. And like, I mean, really how lucky for them that they still have their father. But like, I can't imagine what this does to a person, especially like a minor, a kid, trying to reconcile that your mom would do something like this. And the fact that she would like toss you out there as a part of a lie, expecting you to, what, back her up
Starting point is 00:34:48 while you also know that she planned for your dad to be at that lunch? Yeah. Like, I don't know what their relationship with their mom was like before all this, but I haven't heard any wild stories. I mean, part of what I think captivated a nation and the world was you don't often see someone
Starting point is 00:35:03 who is described as a loving mother turn into a mass murderer. Like, do you then have to go back and rewrite your whole history with someone like that? I would say for me, it feels like you'd have to like question so many of your interactions in the past. What is real? Like, was it always an act or like just recently?
Starting point is 00:35:19 And like one of the things that came out in court that I actually found really interesting was around Erin's faith or lack thereof. So early on in her life, she had been an atheist and she said that she tried convincing Simon, who was a Christian, to be atheist too. But in 2005, when they were dating, he took her to, of all places, Ian's church. Ian only survivor Ian. Remember, he is a pastor, like was, still is, but he took her to a service and she said that she at this service had a spiritual experience and became a Christian herself.
Starting point is 00:35:54 Then in there, but the prosecution put forward some messages or like actually more like emojis she sent that made it appear that she mocked the family's religious beliefs to other people. And her friend grew purported that she told them she was still an atheist. And she thought Simon's religious background was difficult. But on the stand, she remains adamant that she is a Christian. Mmm. Aaron, thou shalt not lie. It's in like the top ten. Yeah. And it was clear to the jury that's what she had done over and over again.
Starting point is 00:36:27 Lie, lie, lie to police, to her family, right there to the jurors. And after nine weeks of trial and six days of deliberation, on July 7th, 2025, a jury in the Supreme Court of Victoria convicted her of three counts of murder and one count of attempted murder. So what's going to happen next is she basically is going to have 28 days from the time of sentencing to appeal her conviction, her sentence. And as of this recording, that sentencing hasn't happened yet.
Starting point is 00:36:59 But usually they say they do that within about a month. So like when this episode comes out. I don't know right now. Right now, right. So if you follow us on Instagram at crimejunkie podcast, I'll be posting an update to let you know when that happens, which will put a clock on the appeal. And I would be shocked if she didn't appeal. Same. Listen, I am.
Starting point is 00:37:17 I think I'm still totally consumed with trying to understand why, especially why for Ian and Heather. This aunt and uncle that you were barely close with. One of whom was a pastor. Your pastor. I mean, it's part of the reason why I found the whole talk of religion so interesting, even though it wasn't a core part of the trial.
Starting point is 00:37:38 Like, it's not real evidence, but I wonder if there's something there. Like, I just can't put my finger on it. And in court, by the way, she said like, oh, yes, I said these things, but I was frustrated. And you're like pulling out like the worst moments, like, right? Which happens in trial. Yeah. Like, God forbid I'm ever on trial. Like, I don't want anyone going through my text messages. But I don't know. Like, is that real? Like, is this, I think we have to point to them so much or why people do is because like without those, nothing makes sense. It like has to, you have to have them to like complete painting the picture, right?
Starting point is 00:38:13 Yeah, but I'm not sure you can make sense of someone who was willing to do what Erin did to her kids, to Simon and to her in-laws. And listen, if she was honest about her beliefs, maybe she'll have a come to Jesus. And her family, if no one else, will get whatever answers they need to, to move forward. ["Souls of the Dead"] You can find all the source material for this episode on our website, crimejunkiepodcast.com. And you can follow us on Instagram at crimejunkiepodcast. We'll be back. Crime Junkie is an AudioChuck production. I think Chuck would approve.

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