In an unprecedented murder case about end-of-life care, a physician accused of killing 14 critically ill patients with opioid overdoses in a Columbus, Ohio hospital ICU over a period of 4 years was found not guilty by a jury Wednesday.
The jury, after a 7-week trial featuring more than 50 witnesses in the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas, declared William Husel, DO, not guilty on 14 counts of murder and attempted murder.

In a news conference after the verdict was announced, lead defense attorney Jose Baez said Husel, whom he called a "great doctor," hopes to practice medicine again in the future. The verdict, he argued, offers an encouraging sign that physicians and other providers won't face prosecution for providing "comfort care" to patients suffering pain. "They don't need to be looking over their shoulders worrying about whether they'll get charged with crimes," he said.
The prosecutors in the case declined to comment, other than to say they "accept" the verdict.
Legal experts said it's highly unlikely that Ohio or any other state would restore Husel's suspended medical license. "I doubt he could ever work in medicine again," said Mark Schumacher, a Columbus medical malpractice defense attorney who retired in 2020 after practicing for 39 years and who followed the trial closely.