For two years, the case of the “mushroom murders” has captivated Australia—and much of the world—with its chilling blend of family, food, and fatal deception.
It all began on 29 July 2023, when Erin Patterson hosted a homemade lunch at her home in rural Leongatha, Victoria. Five people sat at the table. Within days, three were dead. One was in a coma. And Patterson, a self-described mushroom enthusiast, stood accused of lacing the meal with deadly death cap mushrooms.
Now, following a sensational nine-week trial in the quiet town of Morwell, a jury has found Patterson guilty of murdering three of her relatives and attempting to murder a fourth. Silent and composed as the verdicts were read, Patterson now faces the prospect of life behind bars.
Throughout the trial, the prosecution laid out a disturbing narrative: that Patterson had carefully sourced the poisonous mushrooms, invited her estranged in-laws to lunch under the false pretense of a family reconciliation—and then stunned them mid-meal with the fabricated announcement that she had cancer.
The jury heard how she’d crafted individual beef Wellington parcels—expensive steak wrapped in mushroom duxelles and pastry—served on four grey plates and one orange plate for herself. A sixth serve was placed in the fridge, allegedly for her estranged husband Simon Patterson, who declined to attend due to ongoing tensions.
The victims—Gail and Don Patterson, and Heather Wilkinson—were all dead within a week. Ian Wilkinson, Heather’s husband and a respected local pastor, was the sole survivor. He later testified about the cordial tone of the gathering and Erin’s shocking cancer claim, which the defense later admitted was a lie.
Prosecutors argued that Erin attempted to cover her tracks—lying to police, discarding evidence, and crafting a façade of innocence. The defense insisted it was a tragic accident, but the jury didn’t believe her.
A quiet town, a fatal lunch, and a chilling web of lies—Australia’s mushroom murder case will be remembered as one of the most bizarre and disturbing in recent history.