Brisbane, Australia
–
The Australian woman, convicted of killing three lunch guests on the world’s most toxic mushroom, was sentenced to three life sentences on Monday for a 33-year non-parole period, grabbed Australia and booked a real-life crime drama that produced multiple podcasts and documentaries.
Erin Patterson, 50, was convicted of murdering three people, including her parents, aunt and uncle of her estranged husband, Simon Patterson.
The life sentence is offered at the same time as the attempted murder of Pastor Ian Wilkinson, the only survivor who was one of the guests whose 44-year-old wife Heather died in the hospital a few days after lunch.
Simon’s parents, Don and Gale Patterson, also died after suffering from severe gastrointestinal diseases that resulted in multiple organ failure.
The hearing will be broadcast live from Melbourne’s Supreme Court and reflects intense public interest in thrusting Patterson, her family and the small town of Leongatha into the global spotlight.
The media crew fought for positions outside the courtroom as Judge Christopher Beale took his seat in front of a camera in Court 4 to hand out Patterson’s decision.

Beale said Patterson’s crime required a “substantial plan” and when she realized that the initial lies were not going well, she engaged in “elaborate cover-ups.”
“I am happy when I invited Simon, his parents, aunt and uncle to lunch without children to discuss medical issues that do not exist by July 16, 2023.
Prosecutors were sought a life sentence without parole, but Beale said she considered Patterson’s infamous name and the possibility that she would spend years in solitary confinement in order to protect her from other inmates.
Still, he discovers that Patterson’s crime corresponds to the “huge betrayal of trust” that caused his children to “immortal suffering” after losing their grandparents.
“The devastating impact of your crime is not limited to your direct victims, and your crimes hurt so many people,” Beale said.

Patterson was separated from her husband, but remained in touch with her parents, Don and Gale Patterson. She had known his aunt and uncles Ian and Heather Wilkinson for years, but for a while she saw them relatively regularly at local church services.
Patterson invited the entire family of five to lunch at her home in Leongatha on July 31, 2023. No reason was given to this opportunity.
However, Simon said the night before he was not comfortable attending, so only his parents, aunt and uncle arrived for meals on Saturday.
After the trial, Patterson believed that his wife had tried to poison him many times two years before lunch, and was wary of her intentions. Three murder attempts related to these charges were dropped prior to major trials.
At her 10-week trial, the ju judge heard that Patterson saw the location of the death cap mushrooms posted on the Civic Science website. Prosecutors said they bought a dehydrator to dry out the mushrooms and dumped them in a waste recycling centre when the guest was dead in the hospital.
Patterson told police he bought mushrooms from major supermarkets and Asian grocery stores and sent health officials on a useless mission to track their sources. She also lied about getting sick in the days after lunch, the court had heard, and gave her children leftovers of contaminated food.
Prosecutors presented the two mothers as defective individuals who repeatedly lied to the police, resisting the healthcare worker’s attempts to provide medical care to herself and her children.
They provided no real evidence of Patterson’s motivation, but suggested that she had shown “two faces” to the world. This plagued her with a good relationship with Patterson and the private stuff she revealed in a message with her Facebook friend, which was frustrated by her frustration with family behavior and beliefs.
In a Facebook message sent in December 2022, Patterson expressed his reluctance to be involved in the fall of Don and Gale’s son’s marriage.
“I’m tired of this shit. I have nothing to do with them,” she wrote. Another message was read as “This family that I swear to f*** God.”

Patterson’s trial attracted global attention in the small town of Morwell, Victoria, near the crime scene in Patterson’s Leongata Dining Room.
Patterson’s defense attorney allegedly added her mistakenly forged mushrooms to her diet, claiming she only noticed the guest after she died in the hospital.
After six days of deliberation, 12 ju apprentices ruled that they had committed Patterson’s crime despite innocent protests during their days of cross-examination in the witness stands.
In Australia, ju judges must remain anonymous even after trial and are bound by law held in the Ju judge’s office that does not reveal any discussion. Therefore, it is never clear that all 12 ju apprentices have persuaded them to reach an unanimous verdict.
Outside court on Monday, survivor Ian Wilkinson thanked officers for “professional, efficient and effective investigations.”
The longtime pastor of Korunbra Baptist Church also thanked the prosecutors, medical staff and community members who reached out to support his grieving family. He also appealed for privacy and encouraged “everyone be kind to each other.”
Wilkinson did not directly refer the woman who killed three close families, but at a pre-intervention hearing held on August 25th, he extended his offer of forgiveness.
“I’m no longer an Erin Patterson victim, she’s become a victim of my kindness,” he said.
Patterson will be required to lodge an appeal against her sentence or conviction until midnight on October 6th.