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EXCLUSIVE
A bizarre detail on mushroom chef Erin Patterson’s hands that no one had spotted before now shows two wounds to the middle finger of her right hand.
Two healing cuts are seen on the 48-year-old’s hand in separate filmed interviews in the driveway of her home on Monday August 7, nine days after hosting the fatal Beef Wellington lunch inside the house from Leongatha in southern Gippsland to Victoria.
In the two separate interviews – dressed in a dark red hoodie and chinos, then a gray sweater and cream trousers – Ms Patterson waves her hands as she wipes away tears.
She also raises her hands in front of her face and tells reporters that she is devastated by the death of her husband’s family members and protests, “I didn’t do anything.”
“I loved them and I’m devastated that they’re gone,” Ms Patterson said in tears, shielding her face with her right hand, the cuts or abrasions of which are clearly visible.
The most serious injury is located under the knuckle of his right middle finger.
The second injury is around the nail bed region of the same finger.
The media were camped on Ms Patterson’s doorstep several days after her ex-husband Simon’s parents, Don and Gail Patterson, and Gail’s sister, Heather Wilkinson, died of suspected death mushroom poisoning. Cap.
Erin Patterson wipes away tears with her right hand, which has cuts or abrasions under her knuckle and around the nail bed of the same finger, as she stands in the driveway of the Leongatha house where she served Beef Wellington lunch nine days earlier.
Erin Patterson with an injured right hand (above left and right) in the driveway of her Leongatha home nine days after serving the fatal Beef Wellington lunch
During interviews, Erin appears to be right-handed, holding her keys and removing her glasses with the same hand.
She would therefore be more likely to injure her left hand while cooking or serving meat cut with a knife in her right hand.
Beef Wellington is made from a piece of high quality meat, often eye tenderloin, coated in button mushrooms and chopped wild mushrooms,
Daily Mail Australia is not suggesting Ms Patterson is responsible for the deaths of her former in-laws, or the poisoning of her husband’s uncle, Rev Ian Wilkinson, who remains in hospital after suffering a collapse liver and may need a transplant.
Ms Patterson initially responded ‘no comment’ to police but later released a statement which was not a formal police interview, in which she mentioned a food moisturizer she had used to prepare beef Wellington.
Close up of Erin Patterson’s hands which appear to have a cut or scrape on the middle finger below the knuckle and an associated injury near the nail bed of the same finger
Erin Paterson’s right hand appears to have two injuries, the most serious being located under the knuckle of her right middle finger. The second injury is around the nail bed area of the same finger
Police recovered a vegetable dehydrator from Koonwarra Transfer Station, a local dump 12 minutes’ drive south of Erin Patterson’s home.
In the statement, Ms Patterson said she threw the dehydrator at a local landfill in the days after her guests became ill because she was in a panic.
After three of her guests were killed, Victoria Police recovered a food hydrator from among the discarded items and debris at Koonwarra Transfer Station, a local dump 12-minute drive south of Erin’s home Patterson.
Ms Patterson, who is the mother of two school-aged children with Simon Patterson, said her experience with the police had been “terrifying and anxiety-provoking”.
On the same day the cuts on her hand were visible, Victoria Police described her as a ‘suspect’, but investigators say they are keeping an open mind when investigating the deaths.
Luncheon guests Don and Gail Patterson (left), both 70, died a day apart and Heather Patterson (left and right) also died, leaving Pastor Ian Patterson (at right) the only survivor after the Beef Wellington lunch at Erin Patterson. House Leongatha
The site of Beef Wellington Lunch, Erin Patterson’s home in Leongatha, in the South Gippsland region of Victoria
It’s been more than two weeks since Detective Inspector Dean Thomas said Erin Patterson remained a suspect in the investigation because she served the meal, but added that it could be “very innocent…we don’t just don’t know”.
Police have made no major statement since and Erin Patterson has remained out of sight.
Earlier this week, the family of Don and Gail Patterson held a private funeral for the couple, who were buried together in a still unmarked grave at Korumburra General Cemetery.
Ian Wilkinson, 68, is still critical but in stable condition at Austin Hospital in northeast Melbourne.
Mushroom poisoning in Leongatha, Victoria: The eerie detail on cook Erin Patterson’s hands