JerseyGirl
Retired Forum Coordinator
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I've been trying hard to follow this trial, but I find this judge and his court room hard to stay with.
I've been trying hard to follow this trial, but I find this judge and his court room hard to stay with.
Is it just me wondering what's with the apparent party atmosphere in the courtroom whenever the judge asks attorneys to approach the bench?
And does anybody else think of South Park whenever the judge says "M'kay"?
I've been trying hard to follow this trial, but I find this judge and his court room hard to stay with.
Is it just me wondering what's with the apparent party atmosphere in the courtroom whenever the judge asks attorneys to approach the bench?
And does anybody else think of South Park whenever the judge says "M'kay"?
I've been following a great deal of this trial. I am admittedly biased (due to a personal family situation) and I'm probably one of the few who leans in favor of Dr Husel's practices. There is more "suffering" a patient can experience during the process of death than can be noted on a standard medical pain scale. jmo
I'm following closely as well. From the comments I've seen all over SM, the vast majority are in favor of Dr Husel.
I'm following closely as well. From the comments I've seen all over SM, the vast majority are in favor of Dr Husel.
Anyone see the nurse that testified today?…she described a bromance between Dr Husel and some of the other male nurses. Also, said Dr Husel liked ordering doses in even numbers. It was really strange testimony IMO. This is a really strange trial.
I've been following a great deal of this trial. I am admittedly biased (due to a personal family situation) and I'm probably one of the few who leans in favor of Dr Husel's practices. There is more "suffering" a patient can experience during the process of death than can be noted on a standard medical pain scale. jmo
Man, I've been looking everywhere for a discussion on this trial because I'm getting obsessed with it. I'm surprised the thread for this trial isn't bigger!
I feel the same way fred&edna, probably for similar reasons.
I see he's a graduate of Capital University Law School which is a smallish law school located in an office building in downtown Columbus. It doesn't rank very high among US law schools. There are a number of attorneys and elected officials who have their degree from that school. It's not affiliated with any college or university. It reminds me of a night school or something, though it does have full time students.
Capital University - 2020 Law School Profile
Ranks near the bottom of law schools in Ohio
https://www.usnews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-law-schools/law-rankings/ohio
Ballotpedia
Some of his sentencing seems weird - making people convicted of rather middling, non-violent crimes spend every Christmas in jail for several years.
Michael Holbrook