In appeal, Australian mushroom murderer alleges ‘miscarriage of justice’

In appeal, Australian mushroom murderer alleges ‘miscarriage of justice’
Erin Patterson’s bid to appeal her guilty verdicts had been lodged and accepted by the Court of Appeal. (AFP file photo)
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In appeal, Australian mushroom murderer alleges ‘miscarriage of justice’

In appeal, Australian mushroom murderer alleges ‘miscarriage of justice’
  • Erin Patterson was handed life in prison with parole this year for killing three people with toxic mushrooms

SYDNEY: Australian convicted murderer Erin Patterson has alleged a “substantial miscarriage of justice” took place when she was convicted for killing three people with toxic mushrooms, court documents made public on Wednesday showed.
Patterson, 51, was handed life in prison with parole this year for serving a beef Wellington laced with poisonous fungi to her estranged husband’s parents, aunt and uncle during a lunch at her home in 2023, killing three of them.
Local media, including national broadcaster ABC and the Sydney Morning Herald, reported Monday that Patterson’s bid to appeal her guilty verdicts had been lodged and accepted by the Court of Appeal.
The state of Victoria’s Court of Appeal said Wednesday however that while her appeal had been lodged, it had not yet been accepted.
In a document outlining the grounds for her appeal, Patterson’s lawyer alleged several counts of “substantial miscarriage of justice” took place during her trial, which sparked a global media frenzy.
They said that a “fundamental irregularity” had taken place while the jury was sequestered that “fatally undermined the integrity of the verdicts,” without giving further details.
Patterson’s lawyer also accused the prosecution of an “unfair and oppressive” cross-examination during the trial.
And her lawyer said that evidence submitted and accepted by the judge was not relevant to her case, while others were not admitted but should have been.
She also requested that she not be physically present in court should an oral hearing into her case go ahead.
Patterson was sentenced in September and a judge said she would be eligible for parole after 33 years.
The prosecution has since appealed that “manifestly inadequate” sentence.
Throughout a trial lasting more than two months, Patterson maintained the beef-and-pastry dish was accidentally poisoned with death cap mushrooms – the world’s most lethal fungus.
But a 12-person jury found Patterson guilty in July of murdering her husband Simon’s parents, Don and Gail Patterson, as well as his aunt Heather Wilkinson, at her home in Leongatha, in the state of Victoria.
She was also found guilty of attempting to murder Ian, Heather’s husband.


No deal yet on EU climate targets as COP30 looms

Updated 2 sec ago

No deal yet on EU climate targets as COP30 looms

No deal yet on EU climate targets as COP30 looms
BRUSSELS: The European Union’s member states have not yet reached an agreement on key emissions targets before the UN’s COP30 summit in Brazil, and ministers will meet again on Wednesday to thrash out a deal, according to Brussels officials.
EU countries have been haggling for months over two separate targets for slashing greenhouse-gas emissions: one for 2035 that they must bring to the UN climate talks, and the other for 2040.
Talks in Brussels ended on Tuesday without an accord and continued through the night.
“We believe we have the basis for a political deal. We expect to formally conclude a deal when we resume in a few hours,” a spokesman for Denmark, which currently holds the EU’s rotating presidency, said early on Wednesday.
EU officials have stressed the importance of the talks, which come ahead of the COP30 summit next week in Brazil.
French Environment Minister Monique Barbut had warned that turning up empty-handed to the summit would spell “disaster” for the EU.
Behind only China, the United States and India in terms of emissions, the EU has been the most committed of the major polluters to climate action and has already cut emissions by 37 percent compared to 1990 levels.
But after blazing a trail, the EU’s political landscape has shifted right, and climate concerns have taken a backseat to defense and competitiveness — with concerns in some capitals that greening Europe’s economy is harming growth.
“It’s very, very difficult,” said an EU diplomat, summing up the state of play in Brussels late Tuesday.
Denmark was understood to be working hard to win over Italy, one of the countries most skeptical of the proposed targets.
The most urgent challenge for ministers is to reach a unanimous deal on an EU emissions target for 2035, known as a Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC), which Paris Agreement signatories are supposed to bring to the COP30.
“I want our heads of state and government to go to Brazil with a very strong mandate, a clear leadership role for Europe,” German Environment Minister Carsten Schneider said.
The EU also hopes to lock in the support of a weighted majority of countries for the next big climate target set out by the European Commission on the path to carbon neutrality by 2050.
The EU executive said in July it wanted to cut emissions by 90 percent by 2040, compared to 1990 levels — a major stride toward net zero.
But member states have yet to endorse that next step, which would require sweeping changes to industry and daily life at a time of growing concern over adverse impacts on Europe’s economy.
Spain and the Nordic countries support the 2040 proposal, as does Germany, with some caveats. But Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic and Italy remain opposed, citing risks to their industrial sectors.
Heavyweight France, meanwhile, has kept observers guessing on its position — demanding guarantees that its nuclear sector would not lose out under green transition plans and wiggle room on emissions should Europe’s forests absorb less carbon than expected.

- ‘Not pretty’ -

To win over the staunchest skeptics, Tuesday’s talks covered a range of “flexibilities” for member states, including letting countries count carbon credits purchased to finance projects outside Europe.
A commission pledge for credits to account for up to three percent of a nation’s 2040 emission cuts failed to win over hard-liners, with countries pushing for a higher threshold of five percent.
Some also want the overall objective reassessed every two years.
Environmental groups have accused countries of undermining the EU’s climate ambitions with loopholes.
But a diplomat involved in the process defended the compromise shaping up in Brussels, while conceding it was “not necessarily pretty.”
“In the muddy, messy, nasty real world out there, we are trying to achieve something good,” said the diplomat, granted anonymity to discuss the sensitive deliberations.
The EU insists it remains committed to its role as global climate leader, having mobilized 31.7 billion euros ($36.4 billion) in public climate finance in 2024, making it the world’s largest donor.