Erin Patterson mushroom murder trial LIVE updates: Rolling updates as Erin Patterson tells murder trial her side of the story following fatal beef Wellington lunch

Follow Daily Mail Australia’s live coverage of accused mushroom chef Erin  Patterson‘s murder trial at Latrobe Valley Magistrates’ Court in Morwell, Victoria.

Erin Patterson to enter witness box for fourth straight day – as countless members of the public queue up to watch on

Erin Patterson (pictured) will resume giving evidence in her murder trial shortly after today’s proceedings kick off at 10.30am.

Lead defence barrister Colin Mandy SC is expected to finish questioning his client before the prosecution lead by Dr Nanette Rogers SC (pictured) will have an opportunity to cross-examine the accused killer.

Patterson in the witness box has been a big-ticket item as far as members of the public are concerned.

Since Tuesday morning huge lines to get into Morwell Court – a small regional courthouse about two hours east of Melbourne – have formed with people eager to see Patterson give evidence in her own trial.

The increased interest has meant many people hoping to get in have to arrive early and queue up for a chance of getting into the cramped courtroom 4 where the murder trial has been taking place for more than six weeks.

Attention Editors: Picture kill for RC23YDAVYQXO. The picture was sent in error. Regions Affected: WORLDWIDE  Please remove it from your systems as follows:  If this image has already been used online, please remove it from your properties and pages.  If this image is intended for a publication that has NOT yet gone to print, please cancel publication of this image.  If this image is archived in any of your systems, please permanently delete it.  We are sorry for any inconvenience caused. Reuters  Erin Patterson, an Australian woman accused of murdering three elderly people who died after they allegedly consumed a lunch she prepared which contained poisonous mushrooms, looks on in Melbourne, Australia, April 15, 2025. AAP/via REUTERS    ATTENTION EDITORS - THIS IMAGE WAS PROVIDED BY A THIRD PARTY. NO RESALES. NO ARCHIVE. AUSTRALIA OUT. NEW ZEALAND OUT. NO COMMERCIAL OR EDITORIAL SALES IN NEW ZEALAND. NO COMMERCIAL OR EDITORIAL SALES IN AUSTRALIA.
The murder trial of Erin Patterson continues in the Latrobe Valley Law Courts in MorwellNanette RogersStephen EppingstallEXCLUSIVE4 June 2025©MEDIA-MODE.COM
The murder trial of Erin Patterson continues in the Latrobe Valley Law Courts in MorwellNanette RogersStephen EppingstallEXCLUSIVE4 June 2025©MEDIA-MODE.COM
The murder trial of Erin Patterson continues in the Latrobe Valley Law Courts in MorwellNanette RogersStephen EppingstallEXCLUSIVE4 June 2025©MEDIA-MODE.COM
The murder trial of Erin Patterson continues in the Latrobe Valley Law Courts in MorwellNanette RogersStephen EppingstallEXCLUSIVE4 June 2025©MEDIA-MODE.COM

Patterson accepted death cap mushrooms were in fatal lunch

Patterson told the jury late on Tuesday that she accepted death cap mushrooms were in the meal.

The jury heard she used mushrooms from an Asian grocer and Woolworths.

Patterson admitted purchasing the dehydrator so she could preserve mushrooms.

‘I really like wild mushrooms, but it couldn’t just be for mushrooms, I could use it for other stuff,’ she said.

Patterson said she also foraged for mushrooms at her three-acre Korumburra home and on a rail trail to Leongatha.

Patterson admitted she dehydrated wild mushrooms she had foraged in April 2023 and store-bought mushrooms.

Patterson also said she picked mushrooms near oak trees which the jury heard are symbiotic for death caps.

Will tech evidence be key?

Telecommunications expert Dr Matthew Sorell also told the jury Patterson’s phone was detected near areas at Outtrim and Loch, in the Gippsland region, where death cap mushrooms had been spotted.

On Wednesday, Patterson denied foraging for death cap mushrooms at Outtrim or Loch.

Victoria Police Cybercrime Squad senior digital forensics officer Shamen Fox-Henry (pictured) said he found evidence of a death cap mushroom search on data from a computer seized from Patterson’s Leongatha home on August 5, 2023.

Homicide Squad detective Stephen Eppingstall told the court officers searched for a Samsung Galaxy A23 – known as ‘Phone A’ – but it was never found.

Sen-Constable Eppingstall also said another Samsung Galaxy A23 – known as ‘Phone B’ – was factory reset multiple times including while police searched Patterson’s Leongatha home.

He said Phone B was later remotely wiped while it was kept in a secure locker at the Homicide Squad headquarters in Melbourne.

Messages from several devices including phones owned by Patterson, Gail and Simon have been aired in court.

The murder trial of Erin Patterson continues in the Latrobe Valley Law Courts in MorwellComputer forensic expert Shamen Fox-HenryEXCLUSIVE26 May 2025©MEDIA-MODE.COM

What the jury has been told so far

Patterson told authorities she bought dried mushrooms from an unnamed Asian store in the Monash area of Melbourne, but health inspectors could find no evidence of this.

Victoria’s health department said the death cap mushroom poisoning was ‘isolated’ to Patterson’s deadly lunch.

Multiple witnesses, including Patterson’s estranged husband, Heather’s husband and other family members, have given emotionally-charged evidence to the jury.

Medical staff have told the jury of the painful symptoms the dying lunch guests and survivor Pastor Ian Wilkinson (pictured) suffered.

DAYRATE Erin Patterson trial week 6Ian WilkinsonColin Mandy, Bill Doogue, Sophie Stafford, Ophelia HollwayEXCLUSIVE2 June 2025©MEDIA-MODE.COM

Patterson admitted lying to family about cancer

Patterson on Wednesday told the jury she spoke about her health with her lunch guests ‘right at the end of the meal’.

‘I mentioned I had an issue a year or two earlier where I feared I had ovarian cancer,’ she said.

‘I’m not proud of this but I led them to believe that I might need some treatment for that over the next weeks and months, I did (mislead them).

‘They all showed a lot of compassion about that and then we saw Simon’s car driving into the driveway, so Ian said why don’t we pray for Erin and that’s what we did.’

Patterson said she was embarrassed and ashamed that she didn’t have control over her body or what she ate.

‘I lied, I was ashamed, I was embarrassed, I shouldn’t have lied to them,’ she said tearfully.

Why ‘frantic’ Patterson dumped the dehydrator

Patterson said the conversation with Simon made her think about all the times she had used the dehydrator and dried foraged mushrooms with it weeks earlier.

‘What if they got in the container with the Chinese mushrooms,’ she said.

‘Maybe that had happened, I was thinking maybe that’s how this all…’

Patterson said after she dumped the dehydrator at the tip she felt ‘scared and responsible’.

‘I just felt really scared,’ she said.

‘I was frantic, people had got sick.’

Patterson said she got the dehydrator and then drove to the Koonwarra Transfer Station tip (pictured).

The jury heard the dehydrator was located and seized by police.

Debris found within the appliance tested postive for death cap mushrooms.

The local tip where police recovered a food dehydrator belonging to Erin Patterson. Police are having the item forensically tested to see if it was used to prepare the meal that killed three people and left another fighting for their life in hospital.EXCLUSIVE8 August 2023©MEDIA-MODE.COM - 12388541

Patterson’s conversation with estranged husband

On Wednesday, Patterson told the jury she spoke to estranged husband Simon Patterson (pictured) on August 2.

She said she had a conversation with the kids about why they were at the hospital, and why everyone else was unwell.

Patterson said there was concerns her lunch had made people unwell.

Patterson explained how she had previously used a dehydrator to dry mushrooms.

‘(Simon) said to me “is that how you poisoned my parents using that dehydrator?”‘ Patterson said while sobbing in court.

‘I said “of course not”.’

epa12074213 Simon Patterson, Erin Patterson's estranged husband, arrives at the Morwell Supreme Court in Morwell, Victoria, Australia, 05 May 2025. Australian woman Erin Patterson has been charged with the murder of three relatives and the attempted murder of another after hosting a July 2023 lunch that police allege was laced with poisonous mushrooms. Her parents-in-law, Don and Gail Patterson, and Heather Wilkinson, the wife of a local pastor, died in the days following the meal. The local pastor, Ian Wilkinson, survived after weeks of hospital treatment.  EPA/DIEGO FEDELE AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND OUT

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