News
More than 160 years before Erin Patterson's mushroom murder trial, four SA children died after eating poisonous mushrooms.
A complex murder trial creates the perfect screen onto which the audience can project their fantasies: to be entertained by ...
The recent conviction of Erin Patterson in Australia has sent shockwaves far beyond the quiet Victorian town of Morwell where her crime unfolded.
Over 11 weeks, documentary crews and journalists from around the globe flooded the Latrobe Valley Law Courts, where only six ...
For years, from behind a computer screen, Erin Patterson built up a reputation in an online true crime community as a "super sleuth". Today, she herself has become a true crime obsession.
Erin Patterson looks much like you’d expect any middle-aged Australian woman to – brown hair, glasses, unremarkable clothes. As University of Sydney criminologist Dr Helen Easton pointed out, “she ...
The triple-murder by death cap mushroom captured the nation's attention. But with no cameras allowed in, it's the job of courtroom artists to capture what's happening. Anita Lester's depiction of Erin ...
Anita Lester is not your regular portrait artist — she is one of a handful of professional courtroom artists working in ...
In the aftermath of Erin Patterson’s triple murder trial, experts see a familiar pattern – meticulous planning before the ...
Further true crime content focusing on the case of Australian 'mushroom killer' Erin Patterson is being released after she ...
The $1.2m dollar “forever” home Patterson leaves behind in Leongatha, where she murdered three members of her family and ...
Australia and the rest of the world has been gripped by the infamous “mushroom massacre” –which has seen Victoria native Erin Patterson found guilty of murdering three of her husband’s relatives and ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results