Beef Wellington was served by Patterson. Credit: Nadin Sh, Pexels
Erin Patterson has been found guilty of murdering three relatives and attempting to kill a fourth by serving a poisoned Beef Wellington lunch laced with deadly mushrooms in rural Australia.
Beef Wellington lunch ends in triple murder conviction
On Monday, July 7, a Supreme Court jury in Victoria unanimously convicted 50-year-old Erin Patterson of three counts of murder and one count of attempted murder following a high-profile 10-week trial in Morwell, Australia.
The case centred on a lunch hosted by Patterson at her home in Leongatha on July 29, 2023. Her estranged husband’s parents, Don and Gail Patterson (both 70), and Gail’s sister, Heather Wilkinson (66), all died after eating the homecooked meal. Heather’s husband Ian Wilkinson (67), a local pastor, survived following nearly two months in hospital.
Within hours of eating individually wrapped Beef Wellington parcels, all four guests suffered violent vomiting and diarrhoea. They were hospitalised and placed in induced comas. Gail and Heather died on August 4, and Don died the following day. Ian Wilkinson was released in late September after intensive treatment.
The Australia Today reports that prosecutors accused Patterson of deliberately cooking with foraged death cap mushrooms – one of the world’s deadliest fungi. They alleged she picked them after viewing locations on the public iNaturalist website, then used them in the meal.
Prosecutor Nanette Rogers SC told the jury that Patterson orchestrated “four calculated deceptions”:
- Faking a cancer diagnosis to lure the family to lunch.
- Secretly adding lethal doses of poison to the Beef Wellington.
- Pretending to fall ill herself to deflect suspicion.
- Attempting a cover-up by dumping a mushroom-contaminated dehydrator and wiping her devices.
The dehydrator, purchased on April 28, 2023 – the same day Patterson’s phone data placed her near known death cap sites – was found in a local waste centre and contained her fingerprints and mushroom residue.
Facebook messages revealed Patterson’s anger towards victims
Text messages shown to the court painted a different picture of Patterson’s relationship with her in-laws. In a message from December 2022, she wrote: “I’m sick of this shit I want nothing to do with them.” In another: “This family I swear to f**ing god,” cited by CNN.
Although motive was not required to be proven under Australian law, prosecutors argued these messages demonstrated resentment and a hidden agenda.
Patterson pleaded not guilty and testified over eight days, insisting the poisonings were an accident. She said she panicked after realising she might have added foraged mushrooms and lied to police out of fear.
Justice Christopher Beale reminded the jury that their role was not to judge Patterson morally, but to decide whether the prosecution had proven guilt beyond reasonable doubt.
After six days of deliberation, all 12 jurors agreed Patterson had intended to kill her guests and lied repeatedly to hide it.
The case, which captivated audiences globally, became one of Australia’s most notorious modern murder trials. It inspired at least four podcasts dedicated to analysing daily courtroom developments.
Patterson remained emotionless as the verdicts were delivered. She now faces life imprisonment. Sentencing will be scheduled in the coming weeks.
Should foraging be more tightly regulated, especially when nature’s deadliest toxins are involved?
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