The Columbus Dispatch

Husel murder trial ready to move forward

Judge rejects motion to dismiss the charges

- John Futty

A jury trial is scheduled to begin Feb. 14 for William Husel after a Franklin County judge on Friday rejected a motion to dismiss 25 counts of murder against the former Mount Carmel intensive-care physician over alleged prosecutor­ial misconduct.

Common Pleas Judge Michael J. Holbrook

ruled that Husel’s defense attorneys were unable to prove their claim that former county prosecutor Ron O’brien obtained the indictment by misleading a grand jury.

“The defendant has failed to sufficiently demonstrat­e that Prosecutor O’brien’s conduct before the grand jury constitute­d prosecutor­ial misconduct,” Holbrook wrote in a six-page decision.

Husel, 46, is accused of intentiona­lly killing 25 intensive-care patients at Mount Carmel Health hospitals from February 2015 through November 2018 by prescribin­g each of them at least 500 micrograms of fentanyl, a powerful opioid.

His defense team contends that he was providing comfort care to terminally ill patients in their final hours and not attempting to shorten their lives.

With the defense motion dismissed, the court plans to summon potential jurors, in groups of 300, to appear either Feb. 2, 3 or 4, for questionin­g about their knowledge of the case and whether they would be available for what could be a two-month trial.

The trial itself is scheduled to being

Feb. 14.

The motion to dismiss alleged that O’brien told the grand jury that 500 micrograms constitute­d a fatal dosage for critically-ill patients being removed from a ventilator, but that he withheld evidence of other patients who received much higher amounts of fentanyl and did not die of overdoses.

The defense team focused specifically on the case of a female patient identified only as “T.Y.” According to the defense motion, T.Y. received a combined 2,500 micrograms of fentanyl during a 37-min

ute period on Nov. 23, 2014, after being removed from a life-support breathing tube, and survived for 10 more days. Her death was not related to the fentanyl Husel prescribed for her.

“Any failure by Prosecutor O’brien to present T.Y.’S medical records, or any other records of defendant’s patients receiving more than 500 micrograms of fentanyl, is not grounds for dismissal under the theory of prosecutor­ial misconduct,” the judge wrote.

The defense contends that O’brien knowingly withheld exculpator­y informatio­n – evidence favorable to the defendant – from the grand jury during his presentati­on in June 2019.

“A prosecutor is under no obligation to present potentiall­y exculpator­y evidence to the grand jury,” Holbrook wrote.

“Grand jury proceeding­s are, by nature, one-sided and solely for the purpose of assessing whether there is an adequate basis for bringing a criminal charge. To be sure, the court expects that this case will boil down to a battle of the experts. Who wins is for the (trial court) jury to decide, not the grand jury or the undersigne­d judge.”

O’brien, a Republican who was the longest-serving county prosecutor, was involved in Husel’s prosecutio­n until he was defeated in the November 2020 election by Democrat Gary Tyack.

The motion to dismiss the charges was filed more than a year ago by Jose Baez and Diane Menashe, lead attorneys for Husel, and was the subject of a hearing before Holbrook on Wednesday.

The judge heard testimony from two defense witnesses, including a medical expert from a hospice center in Pennsylvan­ia, in support of the defense team’s arguments about fentanyl dosages.

Dr. Timothy Ihrig, chief medical officer at Hospice and Community Care, testified that there is no medically establishe­d level at which a fentanyl dosage is considered deadly. Based on his experience, Ihrig said, 500 micrograms of fentanyl for someone who has been removed from a ventilator “isn’t universall­y lethal.”

Husel, who previously resided in the Dublin area and now lives in the Pickaway County village of Orient, has had his medical license suspended by the state medical board. He pleaded not guilty to the murder counts and has been free on a $1 million bond since shortly after his arrest.

All but one of the deaths occurred at the former Mount Carmel West hospital in Franklinto­n; one patient died at Mount Carmel St. Ann’s hospital in Westervill­e. jfutty@dispatch.com @johnfutty

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