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this post was submitted on 14 Aug 2023
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Is there any chance this wasn’t deliberate? Seems super sus.
No way! Just because she invited over her estranged husband and his parents and other family members AND she had an interest in wild mushrooms AND her kids are perfectly fine
Of course it wasn't deliberate!
..... /s
She said she purchased them months ago from an Asian supermarket but can’t remember where. No doubt a cash transaction. I don’t believe for a second she purchased those commercially as there would doubtless be other contaminated batches if so.
As someone who forages for wild mushrooms, I would like to point out that death caps don't resemble edible mushrooms. They are an amanita and are fairly distinctive. Obviously people do die eating these after somehow thinking they were edible, but it's an amateur mistake.
It would not be so noticeable after they've been dehydrated and chopped up, no. They should still be identifiable as an amanita if they're dehydrated and not chopped up, but it would be harder. But whoever gathered the mushroom should have been able to identify it as inedible, unless they were very inexperienced (and thus not likely to be somebody who forages and sells to stores).
It's possible. I think what made it look real bad for her, as she says herself, is to give a "no comment" initial interview. I'm not aware of people being charged with murder for previous accidents of eating death caps that they picked themselves, so the fact that she initially hid things, and even now are still saying things that are clearly lies (e.g. the desiccator) doesn't make her look good.
Personally I'm not passing judgement yet, but it's definitely seems more interesting now than just an unfortunate accident. If her claim is true, does that mean we can't trust supermarket food to be safe now? That's would be a far bigger and serious revelation than another accidental death cap incident.