Host of lunch that left 3 dead from suspected mushroom poisoning is arrested in Australia
CANBERRA, Australia — Australian police Thursday arrested the host of a luncheon gathering that left three guests dead from suspected mushroom poisoning and a fourth still recovering.
Victoria state police executed a search warrant at Erin Patterson’s home at Leongatha where her former husband’s parents, Gail and Don Patterson, both 70; Gail Patterson’s sister Heather Wilkinson, 66; and her husband, Ian Wilkinson, 68, gathered July 29 for lunch.
All four guests were hospitalized the next day, and only Ian Wilkinson survived.
Homicide detectives will interview Erin Patterson after the search of her home is completed, Victoria Police Det. Inspector Dean Thomas said.
“Today’s arrest is just the next step in what has been a complex and thorough investigation by Homicide Squad detectives and one that is not yet over,†Thomas told reporters.
Detectives had previously interviewed Patterson, 49, about the fatal lunch, but no charges have been filed.
Psilocybin, the psychoactive component of “magic mushrooms,†is the most-studied psychedelic, but there’s a lot we don’t know about how it works.
She has publicly denied any wrongdoing.
Police say the symptoms the four diners had suffered were consistent with poisoning by wild “death cap†mushrooms.
Australian Broadcasting Corp. reported that Erin Patterson had written in a statement that she had cooked a beef Wellington steak dish for the lunch using mushrooms bought from a major supermarket chain and dried mushrooms from an Asian grocery store.
She wrote that she had also eaten the meal and later suffered stomach pains and diarrhea.
Growing mushrooms at home is more complicated than buying soil and seeds, but very doable with the help of premade kits. Here are expert tips on mushroom care.
Police had previously searched her home Aug. 5, the day the third diner died.
Ian Wilkinson, a Baptist pastor, was released from the hospital in late September, and police say he continues to recover.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.