And a strange
story it is. Erin invited her estranged husband, Simon, and five members of his
family to lunch. She told them she’d received a serious cancer diagnosis and
wanted their input on what to tell the two children. Everyone seemed to agree
that while there had been disagreements and unpleasantness around the
separation, on the whole Erin, Simon, and her in-laws got on reasonably well. There
was some friction between the couple over a tax filing, but nothing a good
lawyer wouldn’t have been able to cope with. Erin could afford one. She’d
inherited a considerable amount of money from her parents and grandparents. In
fact, she’d loaned some of it to three of Simon’s siblings - interest free - to buy their houses.
Simon was supposed to come to the lunch, but cancelled the day before. Erin was
very upset by the late cancellation and asked him to reconsider, but he didn’t pitch, which almost certainly saved his life.
Erin and Simon in happier times
In any case
the lunch went ahead. Shortly afterwards, the guests all became ill and started
exhibiting alarming symptoms. Erin called Simon, and the guests were taken to
hospital where four of them subsequently died. One survived after a liver
transplant and seven weeks of hospital care.
Erin said
it was all a horrible, tragic mistake. She also claimed that she had been ill as
well, but had eaten less than the others and, as a result of an eating
disorder, had thrown up the meal. The surviving guest commented that she'd eaten off a different color plate. The children (who were not at the lunch) had
leftovers for supper and were fine. (She said they didn’t like mushrooms and
she’d scraped them off.)
A variety
of strange behaviors followed the episode. Erin did attend the hospital complaining
of pain and diarrhea, but refused to be admitted. The police discovered that
she owned a mushroom dryer that she dumped after the lunch. Initially, she
claimed not to have one. She said the mushrooms for the lunch were from an
Asian grocer (but she couldn’t recall which one) and subsequently said they
must have been mixed with mushrooms she foraged for years ago. She claimed that
she became a forager of wild mushrooms during Covid and so went out on her own.
No one recalled her speaking about it, even her children had no recollection of
her doing so. She accessed websites about poisonous mushrooms, claiming she
needed to recognize them in order to avoid them when out mushroom hunting. She wiped
her cell phone, but records showed that she had visited areas where the
poisonous mushroom Amanita phalloides
had been identified.
In the
event, her variety of lies (including the cancer diagnosis), contradictions, and the circumstantial evidence was
enough to convict her. There was just too much for it all to be coincidence or
misunderstanding. Legal experts asked about the trial commented with surprise
that it took the jury nearly a week to reach a unanimous verdict. The case
seemed overwhelming to them.
However,
one thing was missing. No one has suggested any believable motive for the
murders. In fact, the prosecution opened their case saying that they did not intend to offer a motive. The
defense pushed that, but the prosecution shrugged it off. Legally, there’s no
need for the prosecution to offer a motive. All that is required is that the
prosecution shows that there was intent to commit murder.
I listened
to a psychiatrist talking about the case and motivation on a podcast. He said
that people (and the courts) are very bad at thinking about and identifying
motivation – even their own. He suggested that something dramatic happened in
Erin’s life around three months before the murders, about the time when she
purchased the mushroom drier. (No one knows what that event could be, because apparently no
one looked that closely.) He suggested that was the point when she started to formulate a
plan. It was a plan that never really came together, leaving multiple holes
that she had to try to fill after the event.
As crime
writers and readers, we always expect motives and believable ones at that. The whole point of a crime novel is to understand the characters, their
motivations, and how that leads to their actions – particularly the antagonist.
Our work in progress is all about motive. The police struggle with the case
precisely because they can’t find out what that motive is.
I think
that’s what occupied the jury during that week of deliberations. They were looking for
motivation. What could have caused this woman to commit this horrible crime?
She had money. No motive there. She had ups and downs with her in-laws, but there
seems to have been no real hatred and even affection in some cases. Simon said in court that she was
particularly fond of his father, yet he was one of the victims. It’s been
suggested that the in-laws were just camouflage for the real object, which was
to kill Simon. But again, why? She was essentially rid of him already. She
could have moved away from the small town where they lived, started a new life
somewhere else. And, in any case, why go ahead with the crime when he failed to
arrive?
Something
is missing. I don’t think the jury found it, and I don’t think the police
really cared about it. Probably we’ll never know.
The case has an
intriguing premise, but it could never make a good novel.
I've been following this, too, Michael. And, hilariously, I gave it to my students to formulate a "take" for a film. Of course, in the movies, we just make ridiculous things up! x
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