Erin Patterson mushroom murder trial LIVE updates: Detail about deadly lunch that brought survivor to brink of tears on the witness stand – as he reveals never-before-heard sequence of events

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Follow Daily Mail Australia’s live coverage of accused mushroom chef Erin Patterson‘s murder trial at Latrobe Valley Magistrates’ Court in Morwell, Victoria.
Pastor’s anguish as he recalls details of the fatal meal and the different coloured plates it was served on
The jury has been shown a photograph for the first time of where the deadly meal was served, before Ian Wilkinson told the court what happened prior to the lunch.
The survivor of the fatal mushroom meal, who told the jury what he ate the day before and morning of the lunch, said Don and Gail Patterson collected him and his wife Heather about 12pm and they arrived at Erin Patterson’s home about 12.30pm.
On arrival, Heather realised Simon Patterson’s car wasn’t at the home. Mr Wilkinson said he believed Don or Gail then told them their son Simon, who is Erin Patteron’s estranged husband, was not attending.
Erin (court sketch pictured below) met her visitors and took them inside where they entered the dining area.
‘There was general conversation, and then we started conversing about the house,’ Mr Wilkinson told the jury.
The court heard one of the attendees suggested the group go outside to look at the garden, where they walked before returning to the house.
Mr Wilkinson said he saw potatoes being mashed by Erin Patterson but steadfastly maintained he never saw any other food being prepared.
‘I saw Erin plating up the food,’ he said.
Mr Wilkinson said Erin was on the kitchen side of the bench, Gail and Heather were leaning on the bench and he and Don were standing away while Erin plated the food.
He said there were offers to help Erin plate up, but the ‘offer was rejected’.
He said Erin ‘plated all of the food’.
Mr Wilkinson recalled the meal consisted of mash potato, green beans and beef Wellington.
He said he didn’t see where the beef Wellington came from, but the items were served individually.
‘It (the beef Wellington) was very much like a pastie, it was a pastry case and inside was steak and mushrooms, there have been gravy available on the table,’ he said.
‘I could see them (the plates) between Heather and Gail, there were four large grey plates, one smaller plate – a different colour, an orangy-tan color.
‘Gail picked up two of the grey plates and took them to the table, Heather picked up two of the grey plates and took them to the table, Erin picked up the odd plate and put it at her place at the table.’
Mr Wilkinson recalled where everyone sat and marked it down for the jury.
He said Don sat opposite Erin at the end of the table, and he sat at the head of the table with Heather to his left and Gail on the right next to her husband.
He held back tears as he vividly recalled that the three deceased and himself ate from the grey plates while Erin ate from the ‘orange plate’.
Mr Wilkinson told the court the group said grace before eating.
Mr Wilkinson recalled that he ate the entire meal as did his wife Heather.
Gail ate half of her beef Wellington and all of her vegetables.
Don ate his beef Wellington and the other half of Gail’s.
Heather mentioned ‘we should’ve shared’ because she thought the meal was too large.
But Mr Wilkinson couldn’t say how much of the meal Erin ate.
‘I don’t remember any comments, like “oh you didn’t eat much”,’ he said.
He said after lunch the group shared cake and a fruit platter.
‘Not much cake was consumed, not much fruit was consumed, we were all very full from the main course,’ he said.
Pastor’s selfless act of kindness to Patterson revealed
Ian Wilkinson told the court he decided to say a prayer for Erin Patterson after she announced she had cancer.
Mr Wilkinson said Erin made it sound like her cancer was ‘very serious, life-threatening’.
He said Erin also asked her lunch guests’ advice about telling her children about the shock cancer claim.
‘In that moment, I thought that was the reason we were invited to the lunch,’ Mr Wilkinson said.
Mr Wilkinson said Don Patterson spoke first.
‘He said, “It’ll be best to be honest with the kids”. It felt like it (the cancer discussion) was very short, about 10 minutes. It was a relatively short conversation,’ he told the court
Ian suggested he say a prayer on behalf of Erin, he said.
‘I made a prayer asking God’s blessing on Erin that she’ll get the treatment that she needed, that the kids will be ok, that she had wisdom in power… and then the prayer concluded as the boys arrived in the room,’ he said.
The conversation changed when Erin’s son and his friend arrived.
Mr Wilkinson returned home and met with church staffers but told the court he could not recall what they ate that night, saying he retired ‘a little later than normal’ about 10.30pm.
‘I was feeling okay,’ he said.
However, he recalled Heather got up out of bed and went to the laundry where she vomited.
‘I felt alright when Heather initially got up but it wasn’t very long after that that I also felt the need to go and vomit,’ he said.
‘It continued right through the night, we were starting to feel pretty washed out, I was emptying out.’
The couple spent the night camped outside their toilets.
Both were vomiting and had the runs.
Around dawn, Heather spoke to Don and learnt they were also struggling.
Their son Simon attended in the morning.
Mr Wilkinson said he was ‘quite unwell’ by then.
He said Simon wanted to call an ambulance and Don and Gail had already called an ambulance to hospital, but Mr Wilkinson was initially reluctant.
‘Heather and I had case of gastro a few hours and we’ll be alright,’ he recalled.
Simon insisted and rang an ambulance but they were told if they could make their own way to hospital it would be quicker.
At Leongatha hopsital a doctor questioned them about what they ate.
Mr Wilkinson said he thought the meat was raised as a possible cause of food poisoning but mushrooms had not been mentioned at that point.
The couple were then kept at the hospital.
Another doctor had grave concerns and insisted Ian and Heather be urgently transported to Dandenong Hospital in metropolitan Melbourne.
Ian and Heather and Don and Gail were later rushed to the Austin Hospital ICU where the three died.
Mr Wilkinson survived after being in the ICU until August 21.
He then spent further time in hospital before he was discharged into a rehab ward on September 11 and eventually came home on September 21.
Sole survivor said deceased wife was ‘excited’ for lunch invitation
Mr Wilkinson told the jury he thought he and his wife Heather’s relationship with Erin Patterson was ‘going to improve’ after they were invited to what became the fatal lunch.
Mr Wilkinson said Erin invited him through Heather a week or two before the fateful meal.
He said the invite was made to Heather while at church.
‘She was fairly excited, and she said “good news”, sort of thing,’ he told the court of his wife’s reaction to the offer.
‘There was no reason given for the lunch.’
Mr Wilkinson said he was ‘very happy’ to be invited.
‘It seemed to me our relationship with Erin was going to improve,’ he said.
Wilkinson initially thought only he and Heather had been invited but later learned Don Patterson, his wife Gail, and their son Simon, who is Erin’s estranged husband, were also invited.
Heather kept the lunch appointment for 12pm on July 29, 2023, noted in her diary, which was shown to the jury.
Fatal lunch survivor chokes back tears as he tells court what he thought of Erin Patterson
Accused killer Erin Patterson showed no emotion while pastor and sole survivor of her deadly mushroom lunch, Ian Wilkinson, struggled to hold back tears as he told the jury about when he married his deceased wife Heather in 1979.
Ms Wilkinson (pictured below with Ian) was one of three people who died after consuming a meal prepared by Patterson which contained death cap mushrooms.
Mr Wilkinson told the jury he thought Patterson seemed like an ‘ordinary person’.
‘We were more like acquaintances, we didn’t see a lot of each other,’ Mr Wilkinson said.
Mr Wilkinson said there were periods when Patterson did not come to church very often, but other times she attended for ‘much more frequent periods’.
‘We spoke casually, (as) family, “how are you going?” That sort of conversation,’ he said.
‘We didn’t consider the relation was close, (she) just seemed like a normal person. When we met things were friendly, we never had arguments or disputes, she just seemed like an ordinary person.’
Mr Wilkinson also said he had only had a meal with Patterson a few times mainly at family and Christmas events.
Jury hears how employee remembered selling key evidence item to Patterson
Erin Patterson has appeared in front of the jury wearing what appears to be the same pink and white stripped shirt she wore on the first day of the murder trial.
The owner of Leongatha business Hartley Wells Betta Home Living, Darren Fox, was the first witness to give evidence.
Mr Fox said a staff member told him in November 2023 that she believed she sold a dehydrator to Patterson (pictured below).
‘We investigated to see that that was the case,’ Mr Fox said.
Mr Fox said he conducted a search of sale records and retrieved a tax invoice which showed Patterson purchased a Sunbeam Food Lab dehydrator for $229 at 12.17pm on April 28, 2023.
Mr Fox told the jury he believed the phone number linked to the invoice was Patterson’s and the dehydrator was taken at the time of purchase.
Fatal mushroom lunch survivor to enter witness box for the first time
The lone survivor of Erin Patterson’s deadly mushroom-laden beef Wellington lunch will for the first time tell the jury his perspective of the now infamous meal.
Pastor Ian Wilkinson spent months in hospital after eating the meal which killed his wife, Heather, and Erin’s in-laws, Don and Gail Patterson.
Mr Wilkinson (pictured below entering court) almost died but ultimately survived the ordeal and is now ready to tell his side of the story to the jury.
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Erin Patterson mushroom murder trial LIVE updates: Detail about deadly lunch that brought survivor to brink of tears on the witness stand – as he reveals never-before-heard sequence of events