Critics called that a "Muslim ban" as the seven countries initially listed were Muslim majority.
Ms Patterson's in-laws, Don and Gail Patterson, both 70, along with Gail's sister Heather Wilkinson, 66, all fell ill and died days after the lunch.Heather's husband, local pastor Ian Wilkinson, was also hospitalised but recovered after coming out of a weeks-long induced coma.
The high-profile trial, which started almost six weeks ago, has already heard from more than 50 prosecution witnesses. Ms Patterson became the first defence witness to take the stand on Monday afternoon.Under cross-examination from the lead prosecutor, Ms Patterson admitted she had foraged for wild mushrooms in the three months before the July lunch, despite telling police and a health official that she hadn't.The court was also shown images, taken in late April 2023 and recovered from Ms Patterson's phone, which depicted mushrooms being weighed.
Ms Patterson previously admitted she had repeatedly deleted electronic data in the days following the lunch because she feared that if officers found such pictures they would blame her for the guests' deaths.Pointing to earlier evidence from a fungi expert who said the mushrooms in the images were "highly consistent" with death caps, Dr Rogers alleged Ms Patterson had knowingly foraged them days before.
She had seen a post on iNaturalist - a website for logging plant and animal sightings - and travelled to the Loch area ten days later on 28 April to pick the toxic fungi, Dr Rogers alleged.
Ms Patterson said she couldn't recall if she went to the town that day, but denied she went there to find death cap mushrooms or that she had seen the iNaturalist post.On 15 April, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt also accused Mr Abrego Garcia of involvement in human trafficking.
She appeared to be referencing a report in The Tennessee Star, a conservative news website, which claimed Mr Abrego Garcia was detained by a Tennessee highway patrol officer on suspicion of human trafficking in December 2022.A report by the Department of Homeland Security said he was stopped for speeding and not staying in his lane.
There were eight other people in the car without luggage, the report said, which led the officer to suspect it could be a case of human trafficking.However, there was no criminal case lodged against Mr Abrego Garcia.