Here’s a recap of the key moments from court today:
- Seats were empty for the first time in courtroom four at Latrobe Valley Law Courts in Morwell.
- Defence barrister Colin Mandy, SC, resumed and concluded his closing statement.
- Mandy said Patterson’s behaviour at Leongatha Hospital in 2023 was consistent with her behaviour during a 2015 occurrence of gastro symptoms. Patterson did not refuse treatment. There were “practical considerations” she needed to attend to before she was admitted.
- Mandy said the prosecution provided “a misleading impression of the evidence” regarding the toxins in the meal. He said other possibilities could not be ruled out, including that the amatoxins in the mushrooms were not absorbed into the meat at all.
- He referred to “three things that can’t be faked” in Patterson’s medical tests to support her evidence that she had diarrhoea and might have been dehydrated.
- Mandy argued health and council officials may have been “honestly mistaken” over the suburban location of the Asian grocery where Patterson claimed to have bought dried mushrooms.
- The defence said Erin Patterson asked after her in-laws’ health and was kept out of the loop.
- Mandy said there were all sorts of reasons why an innocent person might have lied or dumped the dehydrator: “She did those things because she panicked when confronted by the terrible realisation that her actions had caused the illnesses of the people that she loved.”
- He pointed out that Patterson decided to give evidence, even though she didn’t have to, thereby exposing herself to great scrutiny.
- He told the jurors that if they think Patterson’s evidence is true, they must find her not guilty. If they are not sure but think it might be true, then they have a reasonable doubt and should find her not guilty. “It’s not a question of balancing two things,” he said.
- Mandy argued the prosecution forced the evidence to fit their theories and ignored alternative explanations. He said they had worked backwards, picking and choosing, and using hindsight to reconstruct events to manufacture a picture of what happened.
- “If you think there’s a possibility this was an accident, a reasonable possibility, you must find her not guilty. And if you think there’s a reasonable possibility that her evidence was true, you must find her not guilty,” Mandy said. “The standard is proof beyond reasonable doubt.”
- The jury will return to court on Tuesday.