Chilling ‘death wall’ found inside mushroom cook Erin Patterson’s former home daubed with eerie drawings & messages | The Sun

A CREEPY "death wall" was uncovered at the former home of the mum who cooked a poisonous mushroom meal that left three dead.

Red and blue markers were used to scrawl eerie drawings and messages over the wall – with one chilling note reading: "You don't [have] long to live".




Erin Patterson, 48, invited Gail and Don Patterson, her former in-laws, and Gail's sister Heather Wilkinson and her husband Ian to her home in Leongatha, Australia.

The mum-of-two is said to have held the deadly gathering on July 29 in a bid to try and win back her estranged ex-husband Simon Patterson.

But after eating the meal, the guests became violently ill and Gail and Don, both 70, and Heather, 66, later died.

Ian has been in hospital fighting for his life since eating the deadly beef Wellington served by Erin – but will likely survive and could hold the key to the mystery.

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Now a tradesman has revealed he found what he called a "death wall" inside Erin's former home in Korumburra.

He said he was hired to paint the inside last year so it could be flogged.

The worker, who wished to remain anonymous, told news.com.au: "I’ve looked at it and gone, holy sh*t, what the hell’s going on here."

Haunting images show red, blue and black graffiti on the kitchen wall.

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One chilling drawing shows two stick figures with the words "I am dead" and "no I am really dead".

Beside them appears to be three tombstones with the words "grandma RIP", "Hannah RIP" and "Me RIP" on them.

Other parts read "you don't [have] long to live 1 hour exactly", "your [sic] dead from my sword" and "get ready".

The painter, 46, added: "We started calling it the death wall.

"I went, this is actually really scary for kids to do this inside the kitchen-dining room. I didn’t think it was right, it looked scary.

"It just didn’t look right to me as a parent."

According to property listings, the three-bed home sold for $545,000 (£278,000) last year.

It comes as Erin – who denies any wrongdoing – has hit out, claiming she is "being painted as an evil witch".

She told the Herald Sun she had become a prisoner in her home – branding the coverage of the case "unfair".

Erin this week gave her first detailed account of what happened before and after the fatal lunch in a written statement sent to cops on Friday – and obtained by ABC.

She revealed she was hospitalised after the lunch with bad stomach pains and diarrhoea, put on a saline drip and given a "liver protective drug".

And the mum admitted lying to cops when she told them she had dumped a food dehydrator at a local tip "a long time ago" – which was later seized by cops.

Erin said she was at the hospital with her kids "discussing the food dehydrator" when her ex-husband asked: "Is that what you used to poison them?".


Worried she might lose custody of the couple's children, Erin said she then panicked and dumped the dehydrator at the tip.

Erin outlined the events of the fateful day for the first time in her statement.

She said she served the meal and allowed the guests to choose their own plates – and she also ate a portion of the beef wellington herself.

The mushrooms were a mixture of button mushrooms from a major supermarket chain, and dried mushrooms from an Asian grocery store in Melbourne months before, she added.

Erin said she was taken by ambulance from the Leongatha Hospital to the Monash Medical Centre in Melbourne on July 31.

Gippsland Southern Health Service confirmed a fifth person came to Leongatha Hospital on July 30 with suspected food poisoning.

As her guests fell ill, Erin said she was contacted by the Department of Health and asked about the deadly meal.

She said she kept some of the lunch and gave it to toxicologists for examination.

And despite reports of her children being at the meal, Erin said the kids had gone to the movies before the lunch.

Her children ate the leftovers the following night – but the kids don't like mushrooms so she scraped them off, she said.

Erin said: "I am now wanting to clear up the record because I have become extremely stressed and overwhelmed by the deaths of my loved ones.

"I am hoping this statement might help in some way.

"I believe if people understood the background more, they would not be so quick to rush to judgement.

"I am now devastated to think that these mushrooms may have contributed to the illness suffered by my loved ones.

"I really want to repeat that I had absolutely no reason to hurt these people whom I loved."

Erin said she was advised to give a "no comment" interview to police immediately after the deaths.

"I now very much regret not answering some questions following this advice given the nightmare that this process has become," she said.

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The mum also confirmed that her ex-husband, Simon, had planned to join the fatal lunch but told her "prior to the day" that he would not be coming.




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