The chef of the deadly mushroom lunch has rejected claims she is an ‘evil witch’ after a photo emerged of ‘disturbing’ scribblings on her dining room wall.
Erin Patterson, 48, hosted the now-infamous lunch at her home Leongatha, in Victoria’s southeast Gippsland region, on July 29, which left three of her in-laws dead of suspected mushroom poisoning, while a fourth man remains in a coma.
Daily Mail Australia is not suggesting Ms Patterson is responsible for the poisonings.
Now the mother-of-two has broken cover to bemoan her portrayal in the media and to protest her innocence.
‘I lost my parents-in-law, my children lost their grandparents,’ she told The Australian.
‘And I’ve been painted as an evil witch. And the media is making it impossible for me to live in this town.
Erin Patterson (pictured) has broken her cover to complain about her alleged portrayal as an ‘evil witch’
The above family tree shows the connections between the Pattersons and Wilkinsons embroiled in the unusual poisoning tragedy in Leongatha
‘I can’t have friends over. The media is at the house where my children are at. The media are at my sister’s house so I can’t go there. This is unfair.’
Her comments come after a tradesman revealed he took a picture of a so-called ‘death wall’ in the home Ms Patterson used to share with her now estranged husband, Simon.
The tradie, who asked to remain anonymous, said he was paid to remove disturbing graffiti from the interior wall in the home in Korumburra, 15km from Leongatha, that the couple eventually sold for $545,000 after they split up.
It’s believed that they had previously lived there with their two children.
The images, which Daily Mail Australia has seen, include pictures of grave stones and bizarre scribbles with themes of death and destruction drawn in black and red ink – the latter used to symbolise blood.
‘It was disturbing. We called it the death wall,’ the tradie said.
‘They were done by their (the Pattersons’) daughter. It is pretty disturbing for mum to let the kids draw on their dining room wall.’
The poster-sized drawings featured two tombstones with daggers and decapitated heads, along with scribbles and dark quotes, including the words: ‘You are dead by the sword’.
Another has the date ‘August 1, 2021’ with the words ‘you will die within a year’ written underneath.
One of the tombstones appears to say ‘grandma R.I.P.’ while the third reads ‘ME R.I.P.’
Another person who saw the images described them as ‘satanic.’
Ms Patterson, a stay-at-home mum who has previously worked editing a Korumburra newsletter, says she bought the suspected toxic fungi at a supermarket and an Asian grocery store, and was herself hospitalised after eating the lunch.
Ian Wilkinson and Heather Wilkinson (both pictured) became severely ill after they ate wild mushrooms. Mrs Wilkinson died on Friday while her husband remains in a critical condition in hospital
Gail and Don Patterson died after eating the mushrooms
But Daily Mail Australia revealed earlier on Wednesday that she was an experienced fungi forager known to pick wild mushrooms around Victoria’s Gippsland region, a source close to the family said.
A friend of the Patterson family said Erin was ‘very good at foraging’ and identifying different mushroom varieties.
‘The Patterson family (including Erin and Simon) would pick mushrooms each year when they were in season,’ the friend said.
‘It’s very common for people to go mushroom picking around that area.’
Ms Patterson had intended to use the meal as reconciliation with her estranged husband Simon, but he pulled out at the last minute.
Simon’s parents Gail and Don Patterson died after eating the meal – a beef wellington – while his aunt Heather also died.
Simon Patterson was supposed to join his parents for the lunch that killed them but pulled out at the last minute
Heather’s husband, 68-year-old church pastor Ian Wilkinson, is in a coma at Melbourne’s Austin hospital.
A source close to the police investigation into the deaths told the Herald Sun that one of the three people who died had a final conversation with a paramedic.
That paramedic felt it was necessary to relay what was said to the police, the source claims.
It is yet not known what the lunch guest said to the paramedic.
Ms Patterson, a stay-at-home mum who has previously worked editing a Korumburra newsletter, says she bought the suspected toxic fungi at a supermarket and an Asian grocery store, and was herself hospitalised after eating the lunch.
Her children did were not present at the lunch and went to the movies instead. They ate leftovers the next day, but the mushrooms were scraped off as they don’t like them.
Ms Patterson told police she became unwell after eating the meal too, and that while she was in hospital, her ex-husband Simon accused her of poisoning his parents.
She said she was ‘discussing the food hydrator’ she used to prepare the meal when her ex-husband asked: ‘Is that what you used to poison them?’
In a panic, Erin has admitted that she then dumped the dehydrator at a nearby tip.
The dehydrator has been found by police and a source close to the investigation told The Age police were conducting forensic tests on the dehydrator – which was found at a nearby tip.
In a written statement sent to Victoria Police on Friday – and obtained by the ABC – Ms Patterson expressed hurt that people ‘were so quick to rush to judgement.’
‘I am now wanting to clear up the record because I have become extremely stressed and overwhelmed by the deaths of my loved ones,’ Ms Patterson said.
‘I am hoping this statement might help in some way. I believe if people understood the background more, they would not be so quick to rush to judgement.
‘I am now devastated to think that these mushrooms may have contributed to the illness suffered by my loved ones. I really want to repeat that I had absolutely no reason to hurt these people whom I loved.’
She had earlier given a no comment interview to police at the start of their investigations, blaming her decision to stonewall cops on it being a ‘terrifying and anxiety-provoking’ experience.
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