William Husel Alleged Serial Killer Trial Begins

William Husel

Former Doctor William Husel trial is to begin this week in Ohio where he is facing fourteen counts of murder however many are wondering whether his intent was to kill or to help. According to police records William Husel, who was initially charged with 25 murders, gave a large dose of painkillers to dozens of patients who were near death. When a new prosecutor took over the case he decided to only charge William Husel with fourteen murders as they had received fentanyl. During the trial which could last for a while a jury will have to decided whether or not William Husel is a serial killer or he was making the final decision for his patients.

William Husel More News

In September 2018, an ambulance rushed Bonnie Austin to a nearby Columbus, Ohio, hospital after she complained to her husband of chest pains and labored breathing.

night shift doctor in the intensive care unit named William Husel was in charge: He ordered 600 micrograms of fentanyl, a powerful opioid used to blunt pain, and a large dose of a sedative known as Versed, administered through an IV, according to her medical records.

About a half-hour later, Bonnie Austin, 64, would be pronounced dead, the records show.

David Austin said it was Husel who first delivered the gut-wrenching news to him that his wife of 36 years was brain-dead. But he insisted he would have wanted the doctor to do everything within his power to try and keep her alive.

“Of course I wanted my wife to survive,” David Austin told NBC News in 2019.

The amount of painkiller Husel allegedly ordered at the moment he did will become the focus of a long-awaited trial in which the doctor, whose medical license was suspended in January 2019, faces murder charges in the deaths of 14 intensive care unit patients. Jury selection is set to begin Monday in the trial.

The case became a stunning example of alleged medical malpractice with prosecutors in Franklin County initially charging Husel in the deaths of 25 patients. They said he ordered excessive doses of opioids to dozens of near-death patients between 2015 and 2018, when he was employed with the Mount Carmel Health System, one of the largest in central Ohio.

A new prosecutor in Franklin County, G. Gary Tyack, winnowed the number of counts down to 14, centering the trial on patients who were allegedly given higher doses of fentanyl — as much as 1,000 micrograms. Medical experts have said a typical dose for nonsurgical situations might be around 50 to 100 micrograms.

The amount of fentanyl allegedly ordered is only one facet of Husel’s trial, which had been delayed during the pandemic and could last up to two months. Themes of medical treatment and ethics, and end-of-life comfort care using opioids are expected to come into play in one of the biggest cases of its kind against a health care professional in the United States.

In addition, complex medical testimony, emotional stories from the families of the deceased and the notoriety brought by Husel’s defense team will make for an intriguing set of proceedings, observers say. The team includes high-profile lawyer Jose Baez, who once counted NFL player Aaron HernandezFlorida mother Casey Anthony and Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein as his clients.

“It puts a lot of drama on the trial,” said former prosecutor Ric Simmons, who teaches criminal law at Ohio State University. “The defense can say that you think you know this story, but you don’t know the whole version yet, and you shouldn’t put a judgment on it until you do.”

Husel, 46, has not spoken publicly or given media interviews since the allegations of misconduct first arose in a series of lawsuits filed by families in early 2019. When he appeared before the state medical board that same year as it weighed whether to suspend his license, members said he asserted his “Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination to virtually all questions.”

Husel, who pleaded not guilty, has remained free on a $1 million bond.

Legal experts say his trial will offer a more nuanced view of the doctor, who began his career with a residency in critical care at the prestigious Cleveland Clinic, as the prosecutors and the defense outline their cases.

While Husel faces murder counts, prosecutors could offer evidence to jurors of another option: a lesser offense of reckless homicide for each count. While a murder conviction carries a sentence of life in prison with no chance of parole for 15 years, reckless homicide, which in some states is a type of involuntary manslaughter, has a penalty of up to five years in prison.

For each charge of murder, prosecutors must prove that Husel purposefully caused the death of the patients under his care. That will be trickier in this case, Simmons said, because the patients who died were generally already dying or close to it.

Therefore, he added, prosecutors will also need to show that each patient died because of how much fentanyl William Husel authorized, and that perhaps they could have lived longer or their lives could have even been saved.

If prosecutors steer toward a reckless homicide argument for a particular count, then jurors would have to decide whether the doctor knowingly engaged in behavior that could result in a death, and not that it was his intent to kill.

In Husel’s case, prosecutors could say “the first or second time could be accidental, but by the 14th time, he must have known or was at least aware of the risk someone was going to die,” Simmons said.

The defense has argued to the court that Husel should be immune from prosecution because Ohio law declares that physicians who say they were acting in “good faith” shouldn’t be held liable even when a “medical procedure, treatment, intervention, or other measure may appear to hasten or increase the risk” of death.

But Franklin County Judge Michael Holbrook said in a response this month that such a claim will be a central question for jurors to decide: Was Husel acting in good faith?

His lawyers have contended that the answer is yes, and the doctor was trying to provide comfort to people who were dying and in excruciating pain as they were being taken off ventilators.

“Dr. Husel practiced medicine with compassion and care,” Baez told reporters in December. “That was his intent. And under the law — Ohio law — is that even if that killed them, so long as his intention was medically-based, then it’s not murder.”

A request for further comment to Baez’s law firm was not returned, and the Franklin County Prosecutor’s Office declined to comment ahead of the trial.

Simmons said Husel’s lawyers will be careful not to suggest that the ordering of large doses of fentanyl for comfort care was meant to quicken patients’ deaths.

“We don’t allow euthanasia in Ohio, so that is not a possible defense,” he added.

Many of the patients whose deaths are part of this case were in the ICU already dying or near death and older. A few were as young as their late 30s, but many were in their 70s and 80s.

Simmons said he would expect Husel to take the stand since it will be important for the jury to hear directly from him as to his thinking.

Also up for discussion will be if there was any apparent pushback from other hospital staff, including the nurses, over the amount of fentanyl allegedly ordered.

Attorneys for some of the victims’ families have previously said that William Husel may have been persuasive enough to get his medication orders filled, and colleagues working late nights beside him may not have felt they could overrule his commands.

At least three dozen co-workers, including ICU nurses, came to Husel’s defense in a letter to Mount Carmel after he was fired. One former ICU nurse previously told NBC News that “it’s ludicrous to think you’re going to convince 38 health care workers to collude to end anyone’s life prematurely.”

The trial hasn’t been the only legal battle hanging over Husel.

About 35 families filed wrongful-death lawsuits against him, the hospital and other staff, with several of the families settling for a total of about $13.5 million. Husel’s wife, Mariah Baird, who was a nurse at Mount Carmel, was also named in at least one of the suits.

David Shroyer, a Columbus lawyer who represents families of two of the deceased who will be part of the criminal trial, including Bonnie Austin’s family, said 10 lawsuits are still outstanding.

While the allegations center on William Husel, Shroyer contends there was a larger oversight by the hospital and that a system for obtaining fentanyl and accounting for every vial of a drug was either missed or willfully ignored.

“These things were falling in a dark hole without any kind of review,” he said.

In the wake of the allegations, the Mount Carmel CEO stepped down saying the hospital made “meaningful changes throughout the system,” and it fired almost two dozen employees, including nurses, physicians and members of the pharmacy management team. The hospital declined to comment ahead of Husel’s trial.

No matter the outcome of the criminal case, Shroyer said, a larger reckoning is needed to ensure that what happened to the Austins doesn’t happen to any other family.

“It’s a whole system that failed,” he said.

https://news.yahoo.com/trial-against-doctor-accused-murdering-093025538.html

William Husel Videos

Rebecca Hogue Sentenced To 16 Months Not Life

rebecca hogue

Rebecca Hogue was just sentenced to sixteen months in a residential treatment center and not life in prison for the death of her two year old son. According to court documents Rebecca Hogue two year old son Ryder Johnson died on New Years Day in 2020 after being abused by Hogue former boyfriend Christopher Trent. Now at trial Rebecca Hogue was found guilty of not stopping the abuse of her son, which means murder in Oklahoma, and the recommended sentence was life in prison however the presiding Judge in the case thought differently. Cleveland County Judge Michael Tupper would sentence Rebecca Hogue to sixteen months in a residential treatment center as she was obviously a victim of domestic violence. Police reports would show that the abuse of Ryder Johnson escalated in the weeks before his death. When police went to arrest Christopher Trent they would find his body as he took his own life.

Rebecca Hogue More News

Cleveland County Judge Michael Tupper has sentenced Rebecca Hogue to 16 months in prison instead of the life sentence recommended in November.

Hogue was convicted of murder in the death of her 2-year-old son, Jeremiah Johnson, known as Ryder.

The defense argued that Hogue was a victim of domestic violence and recommended that she spend time at a long-term residential treatment facility.

Ryder Johnson died on New Year’s Day 2020 after being abused to the point of death by Hogue’s boyfriend, Christopher Trent.

The state proved Hogue knew or should’ve known about the abuse. She was found guilty and a life sentence was recommended. The defense pushed to forgo jail time and argued that trauma during her life and from her son’s death meant she would benefit from mental health treatment.

Even though Hogue’s boyfriend was accused of killing Ryder, authorities in Norman decided to charge her with murder after they said she enabled child abuse that led to Ryder’s death.

Police reports said Hogue woke on New Year’s Day 2020 to find her son not breathing. Ryder also had bruises and other injuries to his face and head and serious injuries on his back, according to police.

Law enforcement searched the home and found a large hole in the master bedroom with what appeared to be Ryder’s hair inside, police said.

Shortly after, police started searching for Hogue’s boyfriend, Christopher Trent. The search took police to the Wichita Wildlife Mountain Refuge, where authorities found Trent’s body.

Trent died from an apparent suicide

Hogue told police Ryder had been bruised by Trent a month before the murder.

The state said during Hogue’s trial that Hogue either knew about the abuse or should have known. Attorneys opened their closing arguments by saying, “the guilty might flee, but the ones who can’t make up a story.”

The state also argued that Ryder sustained several injuries over two weeks, with the most severe injuries happening days before his death. They claimed Hogue made up a story that Ryder fell down the stairs.

Hogue’s lawyers said Trent manipulated and gaslit her and covered up any abuse. They believed Hogue deserved the benefit of the doubt.

https://www.koco.com/article/oklahoma-rebecca-hogue-sentence/39050612

Rebecca Hogue Videos

What Happened To Christopher Trent

Christopher Trent would commit suicide before he could be arrested

Rebecca Hogue Now

Rebecca Hogue is currently incarcerated in the Oklahoma Department Of Corrections

Joel Hollendorfer Charged In Kara Nichols Murder

Joel Hollendorfer

Joel Hollendorfer has been charged in the murder of Kara Nichols who disappeared back in 2012. According to police reports Kara Nichols was an aspiring model who would disappear back in October 2012 and would be reported missing by her roommates five days. later. According to reports the aspiring model had been working as an escort to pay the bills and police found text messages connecting her to Joel Hollendorfer. Apparently Joel Hollendorfer would confess to his wife that he had hired an escort, strangled her in his car and buried her body at his parents farm. Well Colorado police would find the remains of the nineteen year old this week and would charged Joel Hollendorfer with second degree murder and tampering with evidence. According to reports police had searched the farm back in 2014 and when the cadaver dogs hit in the area that Kara Nichols remains would be found his mother told police that was where they had buried animals that had died on the farm.

Joel Hollendorfer More News

On Monday, police say they found the remains of 19-year-old aspiring model, Kara Nichols, nearly 10 years after she went missing. Police arrested 46-year-old Joel Hollendorfer in connection with Nichols’ murder. He is charged with second-degree murder and tampering with physical evidence.

“Kara was loved in 2012, just as much as she was in 2022,” said Michelle Bart with the National Women’s Coalition of Violence and Exploitation. Bart has helped the Nichols family for years since Nichols disappearance, and is serving as their spokesperson for the time being.

Nichols, who attempted to spark her modeling career at age 19, told her friends she would be traveling from Colorado Springs to Denver for a photoshoot in 2012 on Oct. 9. She wouldn’t be seen again.

However, her loved ones say she was much more than an aspiring model.

“A lot of times the pictures they would put out, post of her… They never showed her sense of humor, her joking… but there was a sparkle inside of her… There was kindness,” said Dina Wood, Nichols’ High School English Teacher.

Her body was found off of Burgess Road in Black Forest, agents from the Federal Bureau of Investigation were also on the scene.

“A witness was located and interviewed. There was critical information given in that interview which provided a significant new lead,” said Sheriff Bill Elder.

“The location of the remains and the person of interest… No. We weren’t surprised,” said Bart.

During a hearing, prosecutors told the judge that charges for Hollendorfer were likely to increase to First Degree Murder based on autopsy results.

During his advisement hearing on Wednesday, the judge increased Hollendorfer’s bond from $50,000 to $1 million. He was also ordered to surrender his passport and was deemed a flight risk due to his previous Failure to Appear Charges.

Records show Hollendorfer previously had multiple Domestic Violence charges involving his ex-wife.

“We would have liked to have seen that because if his track record since 1994, would have not given him bail at all,” said Bart.

Hollendorfer’s next court appearance is scheduled for Thursday, February 17

https://www.koaa.com/news/covering-colorado/suspect-in-kara-nichols-case-makes-first-appearance-bond-increased-to-1-million

Kara Nichols Photos

kara nichols

Joel Hollendorfer Videos

When Did Kara Nichols Disappear

Kara Nichols was reported missing in 2012

Joel Hollendorfer Now

Joel Hollendorfer is awaiting trial for the murder of Kara Nichols

Mikilo Rawls Charged In Emma Roark Murder

Mikilo Rawls

Mikilo Rawls has been charged in the brutal sexual assault and murder of Emma Roark. According to court documents twenty year old Emma Roark was found last week in a secluded area near the American River by Sacramento California. The young woman had been sexually assaulted and brutally murdered. Emma Roark had last been seen five days before her body was found. Sacramento Police have announced the arrest of Mikilo Rawls, a homeless man who has a criminal record dating back to 2005. Mikilo Rawls DNA was in the State’s database and it was used to tie him to the murder of Emma Roark. Mikilo Rawls has been charged with murder, sexual assault and an assortment of other charges. It is a shame that California’s death penalty is headed out the door for it is definitely needed in a case like this

Mikilo Rawls More News

Sacramento County Sheriff’s Chief Deputy Jim Barnes on Friday described the “gruesome” crime scene of a Rancho Cordova woman who was sexually assaulted and killed; her body was found last week in a secluded area near the American River. “You can’t unsee this. This is as bad as it gets,” Barnes said about brutal nature of the woman’s death. “Now, imagine the family has to deal with this and the ripple effect that comes with that.” Emma Roark was last seen alive Jan. 27 near Coloma Road and McGregor Drive in Rancho Cordova. Her body was found five days later near the El Manto access point along the river parkway after an extensive search.

At a news conference Friday evening, Barnes and Rancho Cordova Police Chief Brandon Luke said DNA evidence led investigators to identify Mikilo Morgan Rawls as the suspect in Roark’s death. On Friday, Rawls, a 37-year-old homeless man from Rancho Cordova, was arrested on suspicion of murder, rape by means of force, violence or fear and sodomy, according to jail records. Rawls has a criminal record in Sacramento County stretching back to at least 2005, and his DNA is in law enforcement databases as a result. Barnes declined to provide any specific details about the forensic evidence that led to a DNA match, except to say “we were able to confirm that we know that it’s Mr. Rawls.”

Barnes said the information gathered in the investigation showed that Roark left her home about noon for a walk. Six hours later, her family became concerned and called Rancho Cordova police to report her missing. He said now investigators are working to determine what circumstances led to her sexual assault and death. “Now, we know who’s responsible. We have to work backwards to fill in the gaps,” Barnes said.

He said the Rancho Cordova community was on high alert, and tips flooded in early including possible sightings that were crucial in the case. As investigators focused their investigation and determined Rawls was the suspect, there were some people who spoke to investigators and were helpful, but Barnes didn’t want to provide further details. Luke called Roark’s death “a very gruesome crime” that was investigated and resulted in an arrest with the collaboration of tips of the public, Rancho Cordova police and the Sheriff’s Office. He said the investigation also involved help from park rangers and the Sacramento County District Attorney’s Crime Lab. “This type of evil will not define the city of Rancho Cordova,” Luke told reporters. “Its citizens, the city government, its leaders and the Rancho Cordova Police Department stand committed in providing a safe environment for all our residents.”

Barnes and Luke declined to discuss whether Rawls and Roark knew each other before the encounter that led to her death. Barnes said he didn’t want to reveal more details about the crime itself, fearing it could harm the pending criminal case in court.

He said the American River Parkway is a beautiful outdoor recreation area the capital region takes pride in, and they encourage all to continue visiting. But Barnes also warned parkway is “littered with transient population, encampments.” He urged visitors to be vigilant there at all times, because “we don’t know when a crime like this is going to occur.” “This individual was transient. The Sheriff’s Office is sympathetic to the transient population, we understand people are experiencing hard times. But there is evil amongst them, and that’s what Mr. Rawls was,” Barnes said. “We have to be honest with ourselves, there’s a population down there that will victimize people when there’s an opportunity.”

Luke and Barnes said investigators remained in close contact with Roark’s family throughout the investigation, and now they are focused on providing them with emotional support. Even with an arrest, Barnes said Roark’s family still has to deal with the shocking circumstances of her death

“We want to find out who is responsible for this, because no family should have to go through this.” Barnes said. “We threw all the resources at this as we would in a crime like this.”

https://www.sacbee.com/news/local/crime/article258318883.html

Emma Roark Photos

emma roark

Mikilo Rawls Videos

Anthony Brown Teen Killer Charged With Murder

anthony browm chicago

Anthony Brown is a sixteen year old alleged teen killer from Chicago who would be charged with carjacking and murder after a judge just released him on a bond. According to court documents Anthony Brown was in front of a judge on weapons charges when the judge gave him a break and allowed him to bond out and wear an ankle bracelet. Soon after leaving the courtroom Anthony Brown would carjack a Lyft driver and soon after would get out of the vehicle and point blank murder 15 year old Michael Brown who was walking to school. Anthony Brown is back in custody yet again charged with first degree murder and vehicular hijacking. Needless to say I do not think the Judge is going to be so nice this time.

Anthony Brown More News

A 16-year-boy was on electronic monitoring when he carjacked a rideshare driver at gunpoint, and then drove the car several miles before he pulled up to 15-year-old Michael Brown and shot and killed him in the Douglas community this week, prosecutors said.

Anthony Brown also carjacked a rideshare driver right before he shot and killed Brown, prosecutors alleged.

Anthony Brown has been charged as an adult with first-degree murder in Michael Brown’s death, and also with aggravated vehicular hijacking with a firearm. Police do not think the suspect and the victim are related.

The Cook County State’s Attorney’s office said at 2:15 p.m. Tuesday, a man was driving for Lyft in the 4000 block of West Gladys Avenue in West Garfield Park. The Lyft driver picked up Anthony Brown, who was on electronic monitoring for two different pending juvenile charges, prosecutors said.

A few blocks away at 205 S. Kildare Ave., Anthony Brown pulled a gun and held it to the Lyft driver’s head. He ordered the Lyft driver to get out of the car and to leave his two cellphones and wallet behind, prosecutors said.

Anthony Brown drove off in the Lyft car, and his every move was detected by his electronic monitoring device, prosecutors said.

GPS data from the device showed Anthony Brown arrived at 3352 S. Prairie Ave. in the carjacked Lyft car at 3:13 p.m. Two minutes later, Michael Brown was walking home from school northward on the same block, and Anthony Brown – who had been driving south – turned around to catch up to him, prosecutors said.

Anthony Brown got out of the car on the front passenger side. Walked up to Michael, took out a handgun, pointed it right at Michael’s head, and shot him, prosecutors said. Michael immediately fell to the ground, but Anthony still shot him nine more times, prosecutors said.

Michael was shot twice in head, once in the shoulder, and once in the chest, prosecutors said. The Chicago Military Academy at Bronzeville student was pronounced dead at the University of Chicago’s Comer Children’s Hospital.

The shooting was captured on video from a surveillance camera across the street.

By 3:43 p.m., police were already looking for the stolen sport-utility vehicle that Anthony Brown is accused of carjacking. Officers found the SUV on 63rd Street just west of State Street and pulled it over, prosecutors said.

Anthony Brown was in the passenger seat at that point, while another boy, 15, was driving, prosecutors said. A weapon was also on the passenger side, and his sweatshirt matched up to the sweatshirt that was seen in the earlier surveillance video, prosecutors said.

Suspect Brown also had gunshot residue on his hands, and the gun that was recovered matched up to shell casings at the scene where Michael was shot and killed, prosecutors said.

Officers were able to identify 26 different POD cameras using information from Brown’s electronic monitoring bracelet, placing Brown at each scene, prosecutors said.

The other boy with Brown has also been arrested and charged as a juvenile with possession of a stolen motor vehicle.

Anthony Brown was charged on June 10 of last year with aggravated unlawful use of a weapon. He was arrested at 2710 S. State St., and police recovered a .22-caliber Glock handgun.

He was placed on electronic monitoring on June 15, and the electronic monitor was taken off in favor of a curfew on June 21.

On Dec. 8, Anthony Brown was arrested in an armed carjacking at 214 W. 22nd Pl. in Chinatown. Officers chased him and recovered a loaded Glock handgun, and Brown was charged again as a juvenile with aggravated unlawful use of a weapon.

On Jan. 6, he was placed on electronic monitoring again, and he was still on it as of Tuesday when prosecutors said he carjacked the Lyft driver and shot and killed Michael Brown.

Police Supt. David Brown, who once called for changes in the electronic monitoring program, was asked again Thursday about the program – given it likely failed in this case.

Brown said he wants changes – and Mayor Lori Lightfoot has even asked for a moratorium on the program – but he declined to address the issue further than that on Thursday. No such changes or moratorium have happened