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Erin Patterson Mushroom Murder Trial Live Updates: Expert says that Patterson’s phone has been detected near the Doodkapites

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Follow Daily Mail Australia’s live coverage of accused mushroom chef There in PattersonThe murder process on the Latrobe Valley Magistrates’ Court in Morwell, Victoria.

Patterson’s telephone records indicate that they visited the area where the Death Chapters grew

Telecommunication -Expert Dr. Matthew Sorell (photo) yesterday gave evidence to support the crown case that Patterterson visited an area in South Gippland where mushrooms from Death Cap grew.

Public Prosecutors have told that the telephone records of the Patterson court proposed that they visited Outtrim on May 22 and Loch on 28 April in 2023.

Fungi Expert Tom May previously told the court that observations of the deadly chapels chairs were registered in the outtrim and loch areas in May and April 2023 respectively.

The jury heard Dr. May post an online post about the mushrooms at Outtrim on May 21.

Dr. Sorell said that Patterterson’s telephone records were consistent before May 22, 2023 with Patterson who rode from Leongatha where she lived to surpass that morning.

Another witness, Christine McKenzie, said earlier on Monday that she had seen the deadly chapters in the Loch environment in April.

Witness Dr. Matthew Sorrell arrives at the Supreme Court that is in the Latrobe Valley Courts in Morwell, Victoria, Monday 19 May 2025. (AAP Image/James Ross) No archiving

Patterterson brought 57 ‘Possible visits’ to the death cap Cap Hotspot, the jury told

Patterson, who today is wearing a wise cotton blend sweater, then listened Dr. Sorell said that he identified 57 possible visits that the accused murderer made to Loch and ‘his surroundings’.

“Not necessarily the municipality itself,” Dr. Sorell the jury.

Dr. Sorell said that he analyzed data from three target base stations for the Loch area and had detected 57 events with Patterterson’s telephone between March 9, 2022 and before May 2023.

Dr. Sorell said he noticed these events as ‘possible visits’ on the Loch area.

Patterson trial overview

Erin Patterterson, 50, is accused of killing her in -laws, Don and Gail Patterson, and Gail’s sister, Heather Wilkinson, after serving a deadly meal loaded with Death Cap Champignons.

Patterson is also accused of trying to kill Heather’s husband, pastor Ian Wilkinson, who survived lunch after having spent a few weeks in an intensive care department.

The court heard that the alienated husband of Patterson, Simon, was also invited but was not present.

Witnesses told that the jury Patterterson ate its ate a smaller and different colored plate than that of its guests, those of four gray plates.

Patterson told the authorities that they bought dried mushrooms from an unnamed Asian store in the Melbourne Monash environment, but health inspectors could not find any proof of this.

The health department stated that the killer poisoning was ‘isolated’ for Patterson’s deadly lunch.

Multiple witnesses, including Simon Patterterson, Ian Wilkinson and other family members, have given emotion-loaded evidence to the jury.

Medical staff told the jury about the painful symptoms that the dying lunch guests and Ian Wilkinson have suffered.

A witness to experts said that the Hofdoodkaddoels were detected in rubble taken from a dehydrater who had dumped Patterterson at a local point.

A telecommunication expert also said that the jury Patterson’s phone was detected in the vicinity of areas in Outtrim and Loch, where the Death Chapters were spotted.

Patterson’s movements in the hospital and its abrupt departure were also broadcast in court as the trial continues this morning.

Receiving a hand-out sketch from the Supreme Court of Victoria On April 29, 2025, it shows Patterson, an Australian woman who is accused of killing three people with a poisonous beef vesicles, while confronted with a test in a case that has attracted worldwide attention. Patterterson, 50, which will be tried in the Latrobe Valley Law Courts in Morwell, south of Melbourne, is accused of three murders-under both in-laws and one attempted murder. She has not guilty of all points. (Photo by Paul Tyquin / Supreme Court of Victoria / AFP) / Limited to editorial use - Mandatory credit "AFP Photo / Paul Tyquin / Supreme Court of Victoria" - No marketing No advertising campaigns - Distributed as a service to customers (photo by Paul Tyquin/Supreme Court from Victoria/AFP via Getty Images)

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