
Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu condemns ‘reprehensible' antisemitic Melbourne synagogue attack
A 34-year-old man from New South Wales has been charged after allegedly entering the grounds of the East Melbourne Hebrew congregation on Albert Street at about 8pm on Friday and pouring a flammable liquid on the front door of the building, setting it on fire.
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Two other potentially linked incidents, including an arrest after an incident between protesters and police at an Israeli restaurant in Melbourne's CBD, also took place overnight on Friday.
'I view with utmost gravity the antisemitic attacks that occurred last night in Melbourne, which included attempted arson of a synagogue in the city and a violent assault against an Israeli restaurant by pro-Palestinian rioters,' Netanyahu said via series of posts on X on Sunday morning.
'The reprehensible antisemitic attacks, with calls of 'Death to the IDF' and an attempt to attack a place of worship, are severe hate crimes that must be uprooted.
'The State of Israel will continue to stand alongside the Australian Jewish community, and we demand that the Australian government take all action to deal with the rioters to the fullest extent of the law and prevent similar attacks in the future.'
Netanyahu was joined on social media by Israeli president Isaac Herzog, who overnight said via X that he 'condemn[ed] outright the vile arson attack targeting Jews in Melbourne's historic and oldest synagogue on the Sabbath' and that the attack must be Australia's 'last'.
'It is intolerable that in 2025, we are still faced with the chilling image of an attempt to burn Jews alive as they pray, and attacks on Jewish businesses,' he said, urging the government to confront the 'stain' of antisemitism with 'urgency and resolve'.
Foreign minister for Israel, Gideon Sa'ar, said on Saturday via X that Israel 'stands firmly with the Jewish community in Australia' and that the Australian government 'must do more to fight this poisonous disease'.
On Sunday, Tony Burke said the synagogue incident was an 'attack on Australia'.
'[This] is not simply an arson attack, what matters here is there is an attack on Australia, an attack on Australian values. And we are here today in solidarity to stand together with the community,' the home affairs minister told reporters in Melbourne.
He said the Israeli ambassador to Australia had called to thank him for heading to Melbourne in the attack's aftermath, where he met with community leaders and the synagogue's Rabbi Dovid Gutnick.
Burke said authorities hadn't yet drawn links between the three incidents, but that the attacks were linked to 'bigotry'.
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He was joined outside the synagogue by former attorney general and Jewish MP, Mark Dreyfus, and said he had twice been briefed by the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (Asio) and the Australian federal police, and had spoken with the Victorian police commissioner and home affairs boss.
The prime minister previously said the people responsible for the 'shocking acts must face the full force of the law'.
Sarah Schwartz, executive officer of the Jewish Council of Australia, condemned the arson attack and said attacks on synagogues were 'attacks on the entire Jewish community', adding that the council stood in solidarity with those impacted.
'All people are entitled to practice their religion in safety, she told Guardian Australia on Sunday. She said the act of antisemitism had been 'used for political gain, to smear the Palestine solidarity movement'.
'These responses fuel division. We urge politicians not to engage in knee-jerk responses, and to instead support grassroots efforts between communities to combat racism.'
The Executive Council of Australian Jewry co-chief executive, Alex Ryvchin, said the events were a 'severe escalation' and that the antisemitism crisis was 'getting worse'.
'Those who chant for death are not peace activists. Those who would burn houses of prayer with families inside do not seek an end to war. There is a violent ideology at work in our country that operates on the fringes of politics and social movements, that taps into anger and prejudice,' he said in a statement.
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Mushroom trial: Erin Patterson found guilty
Read more: Erin Patterson found guilty of murdering relatives with lunch laced with death cap mushrooms


The Independent
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The 'mushroom murder trial', as it has popularly become known, has gripped Australia over the past 11 weeks. More than that, it's prompted worldwide headlines, multiple daily podcasts, and even YouTube videos of self-proclaimed 'body language experts' assessing defendant Erin Patterson 's every move. There's an ABC drama series in the works. Acclaimed Australian author Helen Garner has been in the courtroom. But why did this tragedy, in which three people died and a fourth was lucky to survive, grip the public consciousness in way no other contemporary Australian case has? A not-so-wholesome family lunch On 29 July 2023, in a sleepy town called Leongatha in the foothills of the Strzelecki Ranges in Victoria, a very normal woman called Erin Patterson made an ostensibly very normal lunch of beef wellington. She was cooking for her in-laws, Gail and Don Patterson, Gail's sister Heather Wilkinson, and Heather's husband Ian. Erin's estranged husband, Simon Patterson, was also invited, but chose not to attend. Simon and Erin had two children, a boy and a girl, who did not attend the lunch either. Shortly after the lunch, all four guests were admitted to hospital with suspected gastroenteritis. Erin Patterson also presented to hospital, but refused to be admitted. Within a few days, Gail, Don, and Heather all died as a result of what was later confirmed as poisoning with Amanita phalloides, better known as death cap mushrooms. Ian survived, but he was lucky. He spent seven weeks in hospital and needed a liver transplant. The questions became, how did the mushrooms get into the beef wellington? Was this an awful accident or something more sinister? Public obsession These questions became the focus of very significant public and media attention. Erin Patterson spoke to the media in the days after the incident. She presented as your typical, average woman of 50. That is, in my opinion, where the obsession with this case began. This case had the feel of a Shakespearean drama: multiple deaths within one family, death by poison, and a female protagonist. The juxtaposition between the normality of a family lunch (and the sheer vanilla-ness of the accused) and the seriousness of the situation sent the media into overdrive. Then there were the lies. Patterson lied about foraging for mushrooms, and about having cancer to encourage the guests to attend. The location also played a huge part. Leongatha is known for its staggering natural beauty and thriving food and wine scene. It's hardly a place where the world expected a mass murderer to live. However, the perception that rural areas are utopias of safety and social cohesion, and cities are dark and dangerous places, is a myth. One study by the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare paints a different picture. For serious assault cases that resulted in hospitalisation, for major cities the rates were 65 per 100,000 people. In rural areas, this rose to 1,244 people per 100,000. And for murder, in very remote areas the rate was five per 100,000 population, but fewer than one per 100,000 in urban areas. Then there was Erin Patterson's unusual behaviour. She disposed of the desiccator in which the mushrooms she had foraged were dehydrated. She used multiple phones, one of which underwent multiple factory resets on in the days following the lunch. One of these resets was done remotely after police seized her phone. There are also the much-discussed plates. The court heard she prepared her meal on a different-coloured plate to those of her other guests so they were easily identifiable. The public latched onto these details, each providing a new talking point around water coolers or spurring new Reddit threads dedicated to unpacking their significance. The courtroom as a stage Ultimately, after three months, Erin Patterson was charged with three counts of murder and one count of attempted murder. She pleaded not guilty. The trial lasted 40 days. The prosecution alleged Patterson intentionally poisoned her guests, whereas the defence suggested it was all an awful, tragic accident. The jury took six-and-a-half days to deliberate. During that time, various media outlets did everything they could to keep the story on the front page. Bizarre pieces began appearing online from credible sources such as the ABC, profiling people who had attended court. They included stories of people turning down work to attend the court daily, cases of friendships blossoming during the trial between regular attendees, and the outfit choices of locals turning up every day to watch the drama unfold. There were also articles profiling local cafe owners and how they felt about being at the centre of the legal theatrics. 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It will join Snowtown in South Australia (home of the 'bodies in the barrel' murder case), Kendall in New South Wales (where William Tyrrell disappeared), and Claremont in Western Australia (the murder or disappearance of three women) as places forever linked to tragic crimes. While the trial is over, there's much more content still to come, the public's appetite yet to be satiated. But the final word should be saved for the Patterson and Wilkinson families. This is an awful tragedy, and there are no winners. Ian and Simon have lost loved ones. The Patterson children have lost grandparents and now have to come to terms with the fact their mother caused those deaths intentionally. Amid the spectacle, it's easy to lose sight of the humanity at the centre. As the media spotlight dims, may the families get the privacy and respect they deserve. Xanthe Mallett is a Criminologist at CQUniversity Australia More about Erin Patterson Mushrooms Australian Reddit


Daily Mail
25 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
First photos of Erin Patterson's murderous meal emerge as court releases trove of evidence revealing moment the mushroom killer clashed with hospital staff and table that hosted the deadly lunch
Images of the toxic beef Wellington and the table where Erin Patterson served her deadly lunch have been released by the Supreme Court of Victoria. The pictures were released alongside a treasure trove of video and photo exhibits that were tendered to the court throughout Patterson's epic 10-week trial. The evidence dump included CCTV footage of the moment Patterson discharged herself from hospital, against medical advice, after claiming to have eaten the poisonous meal she served her lunch guests. The court also released photos of the dehydrator that Patterson used to dry out the deadly mushrooms before she used them to kill her in-laws. Patterson, 50, had pleaded not guilty to the murders of Don and Gail Patterson, and Gail's sister, Heather Wilkinson. They died after consuming death cap mushrooms served in beef Wellingtons during lunch at her Leongatha home on July 29, 2023. Only Pastor Ian Wilkinson survived the lunch, with Patterson convicted of his attempted murder. The images shown to the jury had been withheld from the media until a verdict was reached. One video shows Patterson calmly walk into a BP service station where she was seen entering the toilet for just nine seconds. Patterson had driven her son to his flying lesson in Tyabb the day after the meal, stopping at the BP petrol station in Caldermeade along the way. Dressed in white pants, while claiming to be suffering from 'explosive diarrhoea', Patterson was seen wandering about the service station, stopping to buy treats, a ham, cheese and tomato sandwich, and a sweet chilli chicken wrap. Other footage showed Patterson leaving the Leongatha hospital on July 31, 2023 after complaining of nausea and diarrhoea. She discharged herself against medical advice about five minutes after arriving at hospital at 8.05am. So concerned was a doctor about her welfare that he was forced to phone the police to try and get her to return. Police arrived at her home shortly after Patterson returned to the hospital about 10am. Told by Patterson where to find the leftovers, the officers drove the deadly meal back to the hospital, where it was inspected by Dr Veronica Foote, before being transferred for further examination by Monash Health emergency registrar Laura Muldoon. The court was also shown CCTV vision of Patterson at the tip, where she was seen driving a red 4WD and dumping a large black device into an e-waste bin. That device was later found to be the dehydrator she had used to dry the death caps she had harvested earlier. The jury was also shown images of sliced mushrooms laying on a metal tray taken from the dehydrator. The images were taken by Patterson and extracted from her devices. Royal Botanic Gardens of Victoria mycologist Tom May told the jury he could not 'exclude the possibility these are death cap mushrooms'. On August 5, 2023, police executed a search warrant on Patterson's Leongatha home, seizing various electronic devices and photographing the scene of the crime. Patterson's defence had tried to suggest police had missed her phone during that search, which they claimed could be seen in one image in a black case. However, an image taken from Patterson's visit to hospital showed she kept the phone in a pink case. The phone was never located by police and likely dumped by Patterson in the days after the raid. The jury was also shown the cook book Patterson claimed to have based her vile beef Wellingtons on. She had lifted the recipe from a Recipetin Eats Dinner cookbook, but drastically changed the way the Wellingtons were made in order to execute her wicked plan. Instead of serving one complete log of Wellington, Patterson changed the recipe to make individual pasties, serving her 'safe' Wellington on a different coloured plate to insure she wasn't accidentally poisoned too. Much was made of that plate during the trial, with Patterson's defence suggested Ian Wilkinson had made a mistake about the size and colour of his host's plate. But it was an observation made by her other lunch guests, who lived long enough to tell the tale before they died slow and agonising deaths. Patterson herself had also taken to the witness box in a last ditch effort to save her skin. But her lies brought her undone time and time again. Ultimately, the jury decided it could not believe a word Patterson said and going off the evidence at hand had no doubt at all she had killed her guests in the coldest of ways. She will face a preliminary plea hearing at a date to be fixed before sentence where she is expected to receive a life sentence.