
Preppy Connecticut town torn apart by violent murder at private school house party
Raul Elias Valle, now 20, is accused of killing 17-year-old James McGrath at a home on Laurel Glen Drive in Shelton, a ritzy town 15 miles west of New Haven, after a fight over stolen beer.
Prosecutors say that on the night of May 14, 2022, Valle used a pocketknife to stab four teenagers, including McGrath, following a feud between groups of boys from rival schools at an earlier party.
At the time, Valle was a 16-year-old student at St Joseph High School, where tuition costs $19,000 a year, while McGrath was a standout athlete at the nearby $25,000-a-year Fairfield College Prep.
Despite being charged with murder, Valle was released on a $2 million bond posted by his parents.
He has pleaded not guilty and turned down a plea deal, opting to go to trial. He now faces up to 60 years in prison if found guilty.
His case began unfolding at Connecticut Superior Court in Milford on June 17, 2025, and so far jurors have heard testimony from a sobbing Valle, along with several students who were at the party in 2022.
During questioning, Valle admitted that he stabbed four people a collective nine times. Besides McGrath, those injured were named as Faison Teele, Ryan Heinz, and Thomas Connery.
When asked if he was responsible for the stab wounds, Valle said: 'I don't know. I guess so. Yes.' He added that he didn't remember sinking the knife into the teens.
Valle attorney has framed the stabbings as self-defense, saying his client was swarmed by teenagers during an 'attack' by other partygoers.
Speaking in court, Valle told the court that a huge group of teens attacked him and 'everything went black.'
'I started waving and just stabbing in every direction, just flailing my arm around,' he said during the tearful testimony.
Valle said his trio were confronted by 'about 30 people spread out in a line' which he described as a 'wall' of teenagers.
Another high schooler at the party, Taylor Capela, witnessed the deadly fight, and said she heard one of the alleged victims shout 'he has a knife, he has a knife'.
Moments later, Valle lunged at McGrath, Capela said.
Capela said McGrath was not fighting anyone and was simply observing the chaos when Valle plunged the blade into his chest.
She watched in horror as blood seeped through his white clothing. Capela also recalled seeing Teele and Connery covered in blood from their wounds.
Capela broke down in the courtroom as she recalled the horror, saying she now suffers with nightmares and anxiety.
Witnesses detailed how the fight which ended McGrath's life was sparked by an earlier disagreement at another house party.
Valle's friend Jack Snyder, who gave him the knife, testified under an immunity agreement shielding him from prosecution linked to the crime.
Snyder admitted going to a house party around two miles away earlier in the night and stealing beer from one of the stabbing victims, Ryan Heinz.
Snyder said this triggered a minor dispute with a group from another local school, Shelton High.
The rival groups then began insulting each other on a group chat that had originally been set up to organize basketball pick-up games.
Snyder admitted that he and Valle left the first party when tensions were high, but planned to confront the other students later.
They drove to the party on Laurel Glen Drive later that night, where Valle said the car was mobbed by the boys from the rival school.
Snyder said he gave Valle a pocket-knife he had in the car, claiming that his friend 'aggressively' asked for it. Their friend Tyler DaSilva was also in the car.
He added that he, DaSilva and Valle intended to resolve the fight peacefully because DaSilva 'knew some of their families', but he said one Shelton High student punched Valle, and the situation escalated from there.
Meanwhile, Snyder remained in the car. He said that when Valle returned he was visibly disturbed. He said Valle told him 'I think I just stabbed four people'.
Snyder said Valle tossed the knife into the woods as they left the scene - something the defendant denies.
Snyder also admitted writing 'enjoy the hospital' in the basketball pick-up group chat, but told the court he did not understand the seriousness of the situation when he sent the message.
One of the victims, Heinz, recalled the horrific moment he was stabbed. He said he did not initially realize, until a friend pointed out blood soaking through his clothes and he heard a gurgling noise coming from his collapsed lung.
Disturbing footage of the fight was shown to jurors.
Valle said it was Snyder who tossed him the knife unprompted, and that he was confused about why he handed him the weapon, but pocketed it anyway.
Synder has denied this version of events, saying that Valle asked him for the knife.
Prosecutors have charged Valle with murder and multiple counts of assault. He is being tried as an adult despite being a minor at the time of the alleged crimes.
The trial is set to continue for several more weeks at Connecticut Superior Court.

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Erin Patterson has been found guilty of murdering her three in-laws with death cap mushrooms in a beef Wellington that she served them for lunch at her home. The mother-of-two sat defiantly throughout her 10-week trial, glaring at the media, members of the public, and the family of the people she murdered. Patterson, from Australia, had pleaded not guilty to the murders of Don and Gail Patterson, and Gail's sister, Heather Wilkinson. They died after consuming death caps in the beef Wellingtons during lunch at Patterson's Leongatha home in southeast Victoria on July 29, 2023. Only Pastor Ian Wilkinson survived her plot - a blunder Patterson would live to regret. She will now serve time after also being found guilty of attempting to murder him. Seated at the back of courtroom four of the Supreme Court of Victoria, sitting at the Latrobe Valley Magistrates' Court, Patterson, dressed in a paisley shirt, appeared stunned as her fate was sealed on Monday afternoon. 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Once caged, she can expect to be kept in an isolation cell for her own protection for the foreseeable future due to her high profile and the frailty of her elderly victims. It can now be revealed Patterson's two children had continued to see their mother behind bars while she awaited trial, unwilling to accept she could murder their grandparents and aunt. Patterson could be heard asking about them during breaks in the trial, asking a woman to ensure her now 16-year-old son was given 'extra hugs'. The arrogant killer had been so cocky she would walk free that she had workers erect black plastic around her Leongatha home to shield her from the media on her expected return. Her estranged husband Simon Patterson is expected to address the media. The civil engineer had been warned mid-trial by Justice Christopher Beale to hold off engaging with reporters until the verdict had been delivered. The prosecution had dumped three attempted murder charges against his wife related to him. 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'It (the beef Wellington) was very much like a pastie, it was a pastry case and inside was steak and mushrooms, there was gravy available on the table,' Mr Wilkinson said. 'I could see them (the plates) between Heather and Gail, there were four large grey plates, one smaller plate - a different colour, an orangy-tan colour. 'Gail picked up two of the grey plates and took them to the table, Heather picked up two of the grey plates and took them to the table, Erin picked up the odd plate and put it at her place at the table.' Mr Mandy's attempts to trip Patterson's husband up during his evidence also fell flat. Patterson had blamed Simon for the atrocious lies she told her loved ones, police, health authorities and the media after her lunch guests became seriously ill. In the last days of the trial, the jury watched Patterson tell some of those lies to Homicide Squad Senior Constable Stephen Eppingstall during her record of interview. 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'I'm sure you understand too that I've never been in a situation like this before, and I've been very, very helpful with the health department through the week, because I wanted to help that side of things as much as possible, because I do want to know what happened,' she said. 'I've given them as much information as they've asked for, and offered up all the food and all the information about where the food came from the house.' In a statement conveniently leaked to select media organisations after the lunch, Patterson admitted she lied to investigators when she told them she had dumped the dehydrator used to dry the death caps at the tip 'a long time ago'. Patterson claimed then she had been at the hospital with her children 'discussing the food dehydrator' when her husband asked: 'Is that what you used to poison them?' Worried that she might lose custody of the couple's children, Patterson said she then panicked and dumped the dehydrator at the tip. Six days after the meal, the dehydrator was found by police at a local tip. Patterson had decided not to dispose of the dehydrator in the bush, but at the tip using EFTPOS in her own name to pay for it. Simon's supposed quip about the dehydrator was put to him by Mr Mandy at trial. It had been an integral element of Patterson's defence when he opened the trial more than a month ago. But Simon denied making the comment that Patterson claimed sparked her web of lies. 'I did not say that to Erin,' Simon said. The jury then heard from a swag of medical experts, who Patterson hoped would help convince the jury that she too had become sick from eating the lunch. Mr Mandy told the jury Patterson had not pretended to be sick after the lunch. 'The defence case is that she was not feigning illness, she wasn't pretending to be sick. The defence case is that she was sick too, just not as sick,' Mr Mandy said. 'And the defence case is that she was unwell because she'd eaten some of the meal.' While intensive care specialist Professor Andrew Bersten said he was convinced Patterson had indeed suffered a 'diarrhoea illness', the jury felt her overall claims didn't stack up. The jury heard Prof Bersten had come to his conclusions based on medical records alone and had never actually treated Patterson after the lunch. Nurse Cindy Munro, who was working at Leongatha hospital when Patterson turned up the Monday after the lunch, said Patterson 'didn't look unwell' compared with two of her seriously ill lunch guests. 'She didn't look unwell like Heather and Ian,' Ms Munro said. 'Ian looked so unwell he could barely lift his head. She didn't look unwell to me.' Doctor Laura Muldoon, part of the toxicology department at Monash Medical Centre, also told the jury Patterson's claims didn't stack up. 'I noted she looked clinically well, she had some chapped lips but otherwise very well. She had normal vital signs,' Dr Muldoon said. She told the jury there was no evidence Patterson had encountered death cap mushroom poisoning or consumed any other toxins. Another doctor, Varuna Ruggoo, said Patterson's liver function tests returned normal results. Even Patterson's own children could not persuade the jury she had been sick following the lunch. Patterson's then nine-year-old daughter told police her mother had a sore tummy and diarrhoea the day after the lunch. She also claimed that she had seen her go to the toilet about 10 times. Her older brother, then aged 14, also told police his mother claimed to be sick. He told police Patterson had complained of feeling 'a bit sick and had diarrhoea'. 'She was playing it down,' he said. Despite feeling unwell, the teenager said Patterson insisted on driving him about 90km to attend a flying school lesson in Tyabb. When the lesson was cancelled due to poor weather, she was forced to turn straight back around and drive all the way home. As the trial entered its final stages, Patterson's legal team worked hard to convince the jury Patterson could have accidentally picked the death cap mushrooms. Dr Tom May, a fungi specialist, gave jurors an extensive lesson on death cap mushrooms. Patterson's hopes lifted when Dr May gave evidence that although death caps were 'typically greenish or yellowish', they 'may be whitish or brownish with or without white patches'. The expert was taken by Patterson's defence through a series of photos of dodgy- looking mushrooms and asked to identify them. He hit the bullseye every time: they were all death caps, with none of the images looking remotely palatable to humans. Dr May had posted images on a citizen science website called iNaturalist of death caps he had found in Outtrim - a short drive from Patterson's home - in April that year. It was a location that just happened to be visited by Patterson leading up to the deadly lunch. Phone data later obtained by police alleged Patterson's phone was 'pinged' in areas identified on that website as having death cap mushrooms there. The jury further heard Patterson took steps to hide evidence, swapping out the SIM card on her usual phone while detectives were carrying out a search of her home. That phone has never been recovered. While left alone, she also managed to factory reset her new phone, handing the wiped device over to a detective and factory resetting it again remotely while it was in police possession. But Patterson was unable to erase the contents of her home computer, which contained what the jury concluded was damning evidence that what she did was premeditated. During the trial, Victoria Police forensic data analyst Shamen Fox-Henry revealed Patterson made a visit to the iNaturalist website on May 28, 2022. The title of one of the visited pages included the words, 'Deathcap from Melbourne VIC, Australia on May 18, 2022'. Mr Fox-Henry had also found a series of messages sent by Patterson that suggested she had very personal issues with Simon's parents. In the messages, Patterson described her in-laws as a 'lost cause' and exclaimed 'f*** them'. 'I mean clearly the fact that Simon refuses to talk about personal issues in part stems from the behavior of his parents and how they operate,' she wrote around December 6, 2022. 'According to them, they've never asked him what's going on with us, why I keep kicking him out, why his son hates him, etc. It's too awkward or uncomfortable or something. So that's his learned behavior. Just don't talk about this s***.' Patterson claimed her father-in-law's solution to her relationship problems with his son was to 'pray'. 'Don rang me last night to say that he thought there was a solution to all this. If Simon and I get together and try to talk and pray together,' she wrote. 'And then he also said, Simon had indicated there was a solution to the financial issues if I withdraw this child support claim?!' Patterson claimed she told her in-laws she wanted them to be accountable for the decisions their son made concerning their grandchildren. 'I would hope they care about their grandchildren enough to care about what Simon is doing,' she wrote. 'Don said they tried to talk to him, but he refused to talk about it, so they're staying out of it, but want us to pray together. 'I'm sick of this s***. I want nothing to do with them. I thought his parents would want him to do the right thing, but it seems their concern about not wanting to feel uncomfortable, and not wanting to get involved in their son's personal matters, are overriding that. So f*** them.' When reporters finally caught up with Patterson in the days after the lunch, she broke down in tears and proclaimed she had done nothing wrong. 'I didn't do anything,' she said, wiping away tears. 'I loved them and I'm devastated that they're gone.' Patterson said all four guests were wonderful people and had always treated her with kindness. 'Gail was like the mom I didn't have because my mom passed away four years ago and Gail had never been anything but good and kind to me,' she continued. 'Ian and Heather were some of the best people I'd ever met. They never did anything wrong to me. 'I'm so devastated about what's happened and the loss to the community and to the families and to my own children. They've lost their grandmother,' she told reporters on August 8 that year. 'What happened is devastating and I'm grieving too and you guys don't have any respect for that.' As the trial came to its conclusion, Mr Mandy was faced with the decision to risk putting his client in the witness box in a last-ditch attempt to save her skin. His decision to put her up would come back to haunt him. Finally out of the prison dock, Patterson faced off with the jury to try and explain away her lies. She sobbed and cried in scenes similar to those seen outside her house years earlier. She will be sentenced at a date to be fixed.