She served - then faced Australia’s 'trial of the century': The making of mushroom murders

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 The making of mushroom murders

It began as an ordinary family lunch, a chance, perhaps, for reconciliation over a carefully prepared meal. But by the end of that day, three people were on a path toward a gruesome death, and a small Australian town would find itself at the center of a global true-crime obsession and "trial of the century".Erin Patterson was found guilty on Monday of murdering three members of her husband’s family by serving them a seemingly sumptuous beef Wellington lunch laced with deadly death cap mushrooms.

The mushroom murders

On July 29, 2023, Erin Patterson, a 50-year-old mother of two, served up what appeared to be a sumptuous beef Wellington at her Leongatha home. The dish, tender eye fillet steak, golden flaky pastry, and a duxelles of finely minced mushrooms, hid a deadly secret: it was laced with death cap mushrooms, one of the most lethal fungi on earth. Her guests that day were her estranged husband Simon’s parents, Don and Gail Patterson, and his aunt and uncle, Heather and Ian Wilkinson, a local pastor. Hours later, the guests fell violently ill as the deadly amatoxin from the mushrooms attacked their organs. Heather died on August 4, followed by Gail later that day, and Don the next. Only Ian survived — a lone witness to a meal that would become the centerpiece of a murder investigation.

'Trial of the century'

When Patterson was charged on November 2, 2023, with three counts of murder and one count of attempted murder, a community was left reeling. And when her trial opened in April 2025, the courtroom in quiet Morwell became a magnet for journalists, podcasters, and true crime obsessives.According to AFP, the courtroom spectacle has been dubbed Australia's "trial of the century". After weeks of forensic testimony, expert analysis, and chilling details, a jury took just seven days to deliver its verdict: guilty on all counts.

The mystery of why Patterson served death in pastry remains, but its place in Australian criminal history is sealed.The exact motive behind Patterson’s act of murder was never definitively proven in court, and even the surviving victim, Ian Wilkinson, admitted he couldn’t understand what drove her to kill. However, prosecutors pointed to several factors that suggested intent.

'Sick of this sh**'

Patterson had a strained and bitter relationship with her estranged husband Simon, fueled by disputes over child support.

She was reportedly frustrated that her in-laws refused to side with her during these conflicts, at one point writing to a friend that she was “sick of this sh**” and wanted “nothing to do with them.” Patterson went to considerable lengths that indicated premeditation: she lured the victims to lunch by lying about having cancer, used a food dehydrator (later found dumped at a rubbish tip with traces of deadly mushrooms), and may have gathered the toxic fungi herself, according to phone records and local death cap sightings. While she claimed in court that she loved the victims and had no intent to harm, the jury concluded that her actions were deliberate and planned, though the deeper personal reasons behind her fatal choice remain largely a mystery.

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