Pastor Ian Wilkinson, delivering the first of a number of victim impact statements in the Victoria State Supreme Court sentencing , said Monday of the 2023 loss of his wife through poisoning, “I only feel half alive without her.”
Speaking of his wife Heather’s absence, Wilkinson said, “The silence in our home is a daily reminder. I continue to carry a heavy burden of grief over her untimely death. It is a truly horrible thought to live with, that somebody could decide to take her life.”
Wilkinson was among four people to attend a lunch hosted by Erin Patterson at her home in rural in July 2023 and the only guest to survive — all others died after eating a poisoned Beef Wellington that Patterson had prepared and served them.
The meal was , the most toxic fungi in the world.
Australian Beef Wellington poisoning left three dead
Within days, three of the four guests — Don and Gail Patterson, the parents of the killer’s estranged husband, as well as his aunt, Heather — had died. His uncle Ian required a liver transplant and barely survived the ordeal.
The husband, Simon Patterson, had been invited to the lunch but did not attend.
During his testimony, Wilkinson spoke of his own battle for survival, saying, “I very, very nearly died.”
After receiving a liver transplant, Wilkinson says he has limited liver function, ongoing respiratory issues, and fatigue beyond experiencing a great sense of loss.
Though the Baptist preacher says he can offer forgiveness for the harm that Erin Patterson did him, he said, “I am compelled to seek justice” for those killed.
Describing his wife as joyous and full of love, Wilkinson broke down in tears as he told the court about how much she and the Pattersons, whom he described as his closest friends, had meant to him, “My life is greatly impoverished without them.”
“I’m distressed that Erin has acted with callous and calculated disregard for my life and the lives of those I love… My prayer for her is that she will use her time in jail wisely to become a better person,” he added.
Did Erin Patterson attend her sentencing trial?
Erin Patterson attended Monday’s hearing, which will determine the severity of her punishment, in person rather via video link, to hear impact statements from seven relatives of victims, including her estranged husband Simon.
“I miss my parents and aunt more than words can express,” said Simon Patterson. “I will be aware for the next 30 years that they could still be alive had Erin chosen not to murder them.”
“My children, two children, are left without grandparents as a result of these murders. They have also been robbed of hope for the kind of relationship with their mother that every child naturally yearns for. The grim reality is they live in an irreparably broken home with only a solo parent, when almost everyone else knows their mother murdered their grandparents,” he said.
Though no motive was ever determined for the murders, Erin and Simon Patterson were reported to have fought over child support contributions.
Erin Patterson maintained throughout the trial that the poisoning was accidental. She faces life in prison on three counts murder, as well as 25 years for attempted murder.
Edited by: Dmytro Hubenko
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