Australia is gripped by the mysterious deaths of three people in a suspected poisoning case that reads like a fictional thriller.
Two couples were invited to lunch at a palatial country home in the state of Victoria one Saturday in late July. They included a local pastor and his wife. All four were known to locals as pillars of the tightknit rural community.
That night, they all became seriously ill with what appeared to be food poisoning. A week later, three of the four were dead. One man remains in hospital in a critical condition, awaiting a liver transplant. The host of the gathering — a woman in her 40s — and her two children were unharmed.
Police suspect the victims ate death cap, or Amanita phalloides, mushrooms, one of the deadliest known mushrooms to humans. But whether the poisonings were intentional, or if the fungus is even the culprit, is shrouded in mystery. The guests’ symptoms were consistent with mushroom poisoning, medical experts and investigators say.
Homicide detectives have searched the home of Erin Patterson, the 48-year-old woman who hosted the gathering in Leongatha, about 70 miles southeast of Melbourne. She was taken in for questioning Saturday and released without charge later that evening.
During the search, investigators seized several items they say are of interest to the case. A food dehydrator found at a local landfill is apparently also being tested to see if there is any link, Melbourne’s Age newspaper reported, citing an anonymous police source close to the investigation. Police declined to confirm whether a dehydrator is among the items being examined.
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2 of the dead people were her parents-in-law. So her ex husband’s parents.
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A real head scratcher…
To be fair, anyone in her family could’ve added poison to the food though.
Sounds like the setup to Shirley Jackson’s We Have Always Lived in the Castle.
I’m all for innocent until proven guilty, but man it would take some good explaining as to how she and her kids survived her own dinner.
My kids would be fine - they hate mushrooms (and most vegetables) right now. Me, on the other hand? I’d be dead.
Article doesn’t say anything about whether they grow locally to where the poisoning happened, or whether the person who cooked them also says that she picked them. These are the first things I’d want to know.
They do. The area she’s in issues a warning about them because they have a growing season there
I believe they grow around the world, and iirc from a news report, she declined to comment on where/if she picked them. Could be wrong, though.
My thought is she tried to put them through a trip. She’s used a dehydrator on what she thought was Psilocybin mushrooms.
I don’t understand why she would poison them on purpose like that while having kids. Makes no sense.
That’s why you post the pics to shroomery first smh