BBC news, Sydney
Within a few minutes of erin patterson walking a small hospital in Rural Victoria, Doctor Chris Webster knew that he was a cold man who killed.
“I know,” he told the BBC.
“I think, ‘Okay, Yep, you do it, you’re a woman who’s damn. You swallow them all’.”
Dr. Webster spent the morning caring two of the four people a hirurada this week was found that Erin intentionally begged cow mushrooms in July 2023.
He was convicted of murders of his in-lawers Patterson, like Gail, Heather Wilkinson – Heather Weather, Wilkinson’s wife, Heather Weather.
But at first, when Heather and Ian presented to the longoentterit hospital like symptoms, Dr Webster and his team and his team thought that they were in a case of food poisoning.

Heather described for him a “beautiful” afternoon at Erin’s house, the doctor told the court.
“I asked Heather over a stage what was the taste of Bef Wellington to taste and he said it was delicious,” as Dr Webster.
His suspicion falls into the meat, so the doctor took some blood samples as a care and laid out for analyzing a city with better medical facilities, before repairing medical facilities.
But he soon receives a call from the doctor who treats Don and Gail at Dandenong Hospital, about 90-minute driving, and his stomach falls.
Not the meat, it is mushrooms, he told him. And his patients were on the cliff of an unchanged slide toward death.
He immediately changed treatment, starting treatment to try and salvage their liver failure, and prepare to move them to a larger hospital where they receive specialist care.

This time a person changes the bell in front of the hospital.
Through a Perspex’s security window is a woman who tells her she thinks she has a gastro.
“I want, ‘Oh, hang, what’s your name?’ And he said, ‘Erin Patterson’, “said Dr Webster.
“Penny drops … it’s the chef.”
He made Erin in the hospital and told him he was suspected and his guests all suffered from the threatening life from the poisonous mushrooms. He writes him at the source of fungi attached to his homemade cooked.
“His answer is a word: Woolworths,” he said.
“And it’s all suddenly getting my brain.”
There are two things convinced him in his guilt at that moment, explained by Dr Webster.
One, it’s a long distance answer. The identification he suffered from the wild mushrooms, as many locals in the area, would not have been located in alarming bells. They say that they are from a large grill chain with restrictive food safety standards, on the other hand, doubt.
And two, no worried reaction from the mother-of-two – despite the meters from where Ian and Heather, his relatives he said became ill.
“I don’t know if he recognizes their presence,” he said.
In a momentary eras of the nurse with nurses to undergo some major health checks, he saw Wilkinsons in the Dandenong Hospital. He recalled to watch older couples loaded with an ambulance, Heather called to thank him for his care while the car doors were closed.
“And I know,” he said, Trailing.
“It is true difficult to talk about emotional.”
“He quickly made the complete opponent and screamed … ‘Thanks for nothing’.”
That’s probably easier to accept than his sincere gratitude, he said. “You know, I don’t catch it (the dizziness) earlier.”

But he had no time to process gravity in their final interview, hurry back to the urgent care of Erin only dismissed himself against medical advice.
After desperate trying to call him his mobile phone, gobsmacked and concerned, Dr Webster decided to call the police.
“This is Dr. Chris Webster from Longatha’s hospital. I’m worried about a patient presented here before, but a deadly poison from a fatal toxin from teeth.
He introduced his name for the operator, and gave them his address.
“He just got up and left?” they asked. “He’s just in five minutes,” Dr Webster replied.
In his test, Erin said he was caught in information and returned to their home to feed his animals and wrapped a “holding” bag “before returning to the hospital.
“After being told by medical staff with the ability to be charged with a threatening life to threaten, isn’t the last thing you do?” Asked him to the court prosecution.
“It’s the last thing you do, but it’s something I do,” Erin is against standing from the witness standing.

But before police reached his house, Erin returned to the volunteer hospital. Dr. Webster immediately attempted to convince him to bring his children – which he claimed to eat the rest.
“He was worried that they were afraid,” he said in court.
“I say they can be afraid and living, or dead.”
Erin told the jury he didn’t hesitate, the doctor was more overwhelmed he believed “screaming” him. “Since I already know it in the voice,” he added.
Dr Webster Clocked soon, but the judgment heard the medical tests made by Erin and his children would not return to the hospital hospital, sent them to the hospital.
The perpetrators are making a ‘comfort’

Two years ago, when the jury’s verdict was exploded on his phone on Monday, Dr Webster began.
He is one of the main witnesses of the prosecution, and struggled with “weight of expectation”.
“If the picture has the jury definition, if a small piece of the puzzle is out of place, it can damage the whole result of the test … I don’t want to crack under scrutiny.”
It’s a “relief” playing on his side holding Erin Patterson – which he called “meant by evil” – helpless.
“It feels like (having) reward of justice.”
For him anyway, the biggest feeling of closing from seeing Ian Wilkinson – the whole patient – for the first time he sent and his painful wife to an ambulance.
“That memory of Heather kind of getting to that method, now watched by looking at Ian standing again with his feet again.”
“That brings relief.”