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Mushrooms, including toxic varieties, proliferate during this time of the year. Read the full article on Monterey County Now.

Mushrooms, including toxic varieties, proliferate during this time of the year. #mushroompoisoning #deathcapmushrooms #wildmushrooms #foraging #californiadepartmentofpublichealth

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What to know about death cap mushrooms, blamed for poisonings in California Death cap mushrooms look harmless, but are responsible for the majority of the world's mushroom-related deaths. California officials say 21 people have been sickened in recent weeks, one fatally. (Image...

What to know about death cap mushrooms, blamed for poisonings in California #Science #Biology #Mycology #DeathCapMushrooms #Poisoning #CaliforniaHealth

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🇦🇺 #AUSpol #Mushrooms #DeathCapMushrooms

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Particle 101: Death Cap Mushrooms | Particle There’s not mush-room for error.

How do death cap mushrooms actually kill us?

particle.scitech.org.au/earth/partic...

#deathcapmushrooms #mushrooms

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Mushroom Trial reaches end: Patterson found guilty By STEFAN BRADLEY, LIAM DURKIN and AIDAN KNIGHT   JURORS in a Morwell courtroom delivered their verdict in the most infamous murder trial in Gippsland history, if not the entire country, finding Leongatha woman Erin Patterson guilty on all counts. Erin Patterson was found guilty of murdering her father in-law Don Patterson, her mother in-law Gail Patterson, Gail’s sister Heather Wilkinson, and guilty of the attempted murder of Heather’s husband Ian Wilkinson. The unanimous verdict was handed down on Monday (July 7) at 2.15pm following a marathon 40-day Supreme Court trial at the Latrobe Valley Law Courts. Jurors were into their seventh day of deliberations, having heard from more than 50 witnesses and spending some 30 hours sitting in court alone. The accused had pleaded not guilty to all charges relating to a fatal beef Wellington lunch, maintaining what happened was a terrible accident. As each of the four charges was read aloud, and with each confirmation of “guilty” greeting an emotionless Erin Patterson, shockwaves reverberated from the court. The case has attracted interest worldwide, and a packed media assembled outside the Morwell court, with television and camera crews swarming the court’s main entrance following the verdict. The victims of these crimes ate a beef Wellington lunch containing death cap mushrooms prepared by the accused at her Leongatha home almost two years ago, on July 29, 2023. Mr Wilkinson survived a stint in hospital, but Don, Gail and Heather all died. Packed: There was a sea of camera in Morwell on Monday, as Erin Patterson’s verdict was reached. Photographs: Aidan Knight Victoria Police in a statement acknowledged the jury’s verdict. “Our thoughts are with the respective families at this time and we acknowledge how difficult these past two years have been for them. We will continue to support them in every way possible following this decision,” the statement said. “We would also like to acknowledge the work of Homicide Squad detectives over the course of this complex investigation, as well as the significant support received from a number of other areas across Victoria Police. “The Patterson and Wilkinson families will not be supplying a statement via Victoria Police and have asked for privacy at this time.” The jury ultimately sided with the arguments presented by the prosecution, led by Dr Nanette Rogers SC. In her closing address, Dr Rogers said there were four “deceptions” created by Erin Patterson. The first was telling her lunch guests a fabricated claim she had cancer; the second was the lethal poison doses she “secreted” in the meal; the third was that she pretended to be sick after the lunch to make it seem she had poisoned herself as well; and the fourth was an attempt to “conceal the truth” after the lunch through her actions. “The prosecution submits to you that when you consider the whole of the evidence in this case, you will find that … each of these deceptions has been exposed,” Dr Rogers said. “You can safely reject any reasonable possibility that this is all a terrible accident … and you can be satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that she committed each of the crimes alleged against her.” Dr Rogers told the jury, “it is clear from the evidence that the accused used a fake medical issue as the reason for the lunch”. The prosecution referred to the beef Wellington recipe in the RecipeTinEats cookbook that Ms Patterson used to make the meal. Dr Rogers noted that the recipe was only for one beef Wellington to serve, not “multiple individual pastries” for each guest. “Why deviate so significantly from an unfamiliar recipe?” she said. Dr Rogers also questioned why Ms Patterson would use dried or foraged mushrooms, and that it didn’t make sense “she would add smelly” mushrooms to the dish. Dr Rogers said there is “no direct evidence” as to where the accused sourced the death cap mushrooms, but said Erin visited the citizen science website, iNaturalist on May 28, 2022. “However, what the evidence does demonstrate is that she was aware of a website that could be used to locate death cap mushrooms and that she had the opportunity to source those mushrooms at a time approximate, or near to the lunch.” Dr Rogers told the jury that Erin showed a “remarkable memory” and could recall dates, evidence and details easily in the witness box. “Yet, in August 2023, she could not recall the shop or even the suburb where she purchased the mushrooms from, an Asian grocer in the same April of 2023,” Dr Rogers said during the trial. The prosecution said that Ms Patterson dumped a food dehydrator at the Koonwarra Transfer and Landfill to hide the evidence, calling it incriminating conduct. “Her story about (estranged husband Simon Patterson) accusing her in the hospital of using the dehydrator and this sending her into a panic is nonsense. Simon Patterson categorically denied to you ever saying such a thing to the accused,” Dr Rogers said. “If there was nothing incriminating about the dehydrator, why hide it? And there is only one reasonable explanation: she knew it would incriminate her. She knew that she had dehydrated death cap mushrooms in that appliance and that she had deliberately done so, and she knew that keeping it was going to be far too risky.” Dr Rogers said the accused “deliberately sought out and picked” death cap mushrooms. Dr Rogers said that Erin called her in-laws, Don and Gail Patterson “a lost cause” and noted “bitter” and “angry” messages Erin made about them. Spotlight: Erin Patterson’s defence leaves court after Monday’s verdict. Patterson’s defence lawyer, Colin Mandy SC, had argued during the trial that the deaths were an accident. He said in his closing address that “not only is there no motive, there are very good reasons not to harm (the lunch guests)”. He described the lunch guests as “support” for Erin and her children. Mr Mandy had also noted that Ms Patterson had the “right to silence” and didn’t have to answer any questions during the trial, and that she was “not on trial for being a liar”. “She could have stayed in the dock and said absolutely nothing – and not give evidence in the case,” he said. The trial was overseen by Justice Christopher Beale. Erin Patterson will be sentenced at a later date. She will have 28 days from her sentence to start the process of lodging an appeal with Supreme Court Victoria.

LV Express: Mushroom Trial reaches end: Patterson found guilty #News #deathcapmushrooms #DonPatterson

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Erin Patterson Found Guilty in Australia's 'Mushroom Murders' Trial | AI News Brew LEONGATHA, Australia - In a verdict that has captivated the nation, Erin Patterson, 50, was found guilty on Monday of murdering three of her estranged husband's relatives by serving them a lunch laced

Erin Patterson Found Guilty in Australia's 'Mushroom Murders' Trial
ainewsbrew.com/article/5111

#MushroomMurders #ErinPatterson #Australia #Crime #Justice #Trial #Poisoning #DeathCapMushrooms

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🍄 Erin Patterson found guilty of murder, I followed this story when it came out & knew what she was saying didn't add up.
#TrueCrime #Murder #DeathCapMushrooms

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Jury to begin deliberations By STEFAN BRADLEY and LIAM DURKIN   THE trial of Erin Patterson has entered its 10th week, with Justice Christopher Beale completing his charge to the jury, who are now deliberating. A judge’s charge are the final directions given to the jury during a criminal trial. The judge communicates to the jury what they must consider when deliberations begin, and also summarises key evidence from the trial and outlines the main arguments of the prosecution and defence. Last week (Week 9) was the start of the judge’s charge, as the closing arguments for the prosecution and defence had already finished. The court did not sit on Monday last week. From Tuesday June 24, Justice Beale delivered the charge, and ended it last Monday (June 30). The jury has now retired for deliberation. “(I) can understand both parties wanting to squeeze every bit of juice out of the lemon,” his Honour said upon the need to “consider the whole evidence”. Three people died following a Beef Wellington lunch at the accused’s Leongatha home in July, 2023. Don and Gail Patterson and Heather Wilkinson all died from the fatal meal which contained death cap mushrooms. Ian Wilkinson fell ill, but survived the incident. The accused has pleaded not guilty to three charges of murder and one of attempted murder. At the start of his charge, Justice Beale revealed an 86-page document that included key dates to help the jury with deliberations. “Very old fashioned hard copy,” he joked. The first section of the chronology begins in 2007, when Erin and Simon Patterson got married, to the year before the fatal lunch. Sections afterwards are 2023 key dates, which includes the lunch and following days. The judge said it was up to the jury alone if Erin is guilty of the charges she has pleaded not guilty to. He noted the media attention this case has received, which he described as “unprecedented”, but reminded the jurors they were the only ones who sat in the jury box. “Don’t let anybody get in your ear over the weekend,” he told jurors in a noticeably sparser courtroom last Friday. “Have a media blackout,” Justice Beale urged. Justice Beale had noted that Erin had admitted to telling lies, but said “this is a court of law, not a court of morals”, and that the jury should not find her guilty just because she had told lies. He said that Erin had “good character evidence”, and also outlined what the prosecution has argued is Erin’s alleged incriminating conduct. The court was reminded that the accused did not need to testify during her trial, and that it was not up to her to “prove her innocence”. The court heard that the jury must come to a verdict on the evidence alone and resist any bias they may hold, which includes sympathy for the families of the victims. For a guilty verdict, the jury must assess the evidence and conclude that she committed the offences beyond reasonable doubt. Judge Beale spoke about the many witnesses who were called up, including the accused, as well as the various experts called upon by the prosecution. He addressed alleged inconsistencies with witnesses, saying that credible and truthful witnesses can sometimes make honest mistakes. “It is for you to determine which accounts, if any, to believe,” he said. It’s possible that the jury will reach a verdict by the time next week’s issue is out. But it’s also a possibility that the jury is unable to reach a unanimous verdict.  

LV Express: Jury to begin deliberations #News #beefWellington #deathcapmushrooms

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The burning question that I want answered is: how did it taste?
#beefwellington
#deathcapmushrooms
#murder
#badcooking

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Release the interrogation tapes to JCS you cowards

…after get trial…

#deathcapmushrooms

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