Obviously it's been quite a big story here. The ABC (Aussie BBC) did a daily podcast on it. Called the Mushroom case daily, 20 odd minutes each with a weekly wrap up on a Friday if anyone is interested., Its on Spotify and all that.
Because it was in regional Victoria, rather than the city, the court was very small so not every journalist was able to get in daily. Hence why the podcast was popular. When news broke I thought she was guilty straight away but I listened along each day and I actually thought she would get off with it. The bits of evidence like dumping the dehydrator and searching the web for death cap locations and all that seemed like it could be just circumstantial. The charges were murder x 3 and attempted murder x1. In the judges charge at the end he made the point specifically to the jury they must find her guilty beyond all reasonable doubt. IMO the defence threw enough in there to cast some doubt. When her QC summed up he told the jury that even if they thought she did it, possibly did it or could have did it then they must find her not guilty to comply with what the judge said. Had to be unanimous too. Thats the point I thought she would get off with it.
Fair play to the prosecution for going with the murder charge and sticking it. I quite enjoyed the whole thing, never really been interested in court room stuff or had any real experience of it. Judge is away on his holidays now so sentencing wont be for a few weeks. It's an interesting and quirky story, even amusing to a certain extent. This lady is 50, likely get life I'd expect and die in prison. A man has lost his wife and both his parents, 2 kids have lost their mother and grandparents and one old fella not only lost his wife he was also in hospital for months in what I assume would be acute pain mostly. He also sat through every day in court to see her lie to a judge and jury. There are a lot of lives ruined here.