Only 2 of the 25 nurses got a year's suspension as far as I could find. Two pharmacists paid fines of 1000 for one and 2000 for the other. The rest as far as I could find got no sanctions.
That are publicly available. There are several settlement agreements in play during trial that explicitly state they cannot testify for the defense and must be a prosecution witness.
Really, really shady
Trial is probably just a sixth of the way done, but my overall impression reading between the lines
-virtually everyone knew for years what husel was doing
-a single (new) pharmacist asked husel about a 1,000 mcg dose. Exact details of that conversation were not talked about in court. He talked to another pharmacist about it first who told him it was a "normal dose" for husel
-the pharmacist's supervisor got involved when he escalated the issue. What private conversations they actually had, presumably about euthanasia, are not known. The emails about this situation are worded in a very careful way
-pharmacist supervisor escalated it to risk management, who referred the matter to peer review. Two separate VOICE reports are made, one by pharmacy supervisor for one case and another by risk management. A third occurs shortly after #2.
-an RCA was done for main cases involved. The conclusions of the RCA did not definitively prove the fentanyl was the cause of death
-while the RCA was being done, the VPMA wanted to appear "transparent" and send the case to the prosecutors office. I think, this is just my opinion, no one thought actual murder charges would be brought. Entire thing spins out of control.
-Mount Carmel gets to all the witnesses before the cops do. Settlements are all completed before criminal trial, many of those terms dictate who can be a witness for what side
-Now there is a murder trial!
-Prosecutors have to stick to their guns. I think hospital said there might be an issue so Ron O'brien just took Mount Carmel at their word it was murder and detectives start doing a murder investigation. The first witness was a murder detective who was clearly uncomfortable outside of the pew pew pew kind.
The families were not aware of any POSSIBLE wrongdoing until long after the fact after they were contacted when cops were involved.
Here's my hottake:
entire landmine issue could have been sidestepped by a single meeting with Husel and the VPMA, where VPMA goes, "dude, stop. Don't do that again. Just let them linger, suffer and die like everyone expects." Sweep it under the rug and move on. Issue is way too controversial. He's going to be a hero to some and a murderer to others without a clear, beyond-a-reasonable-doubt viewpoint.
But this is the hill Ohio wants to die on so they are throwing everything at it.