A limousine service manager was convicted of manslaughter Wednesday in a crash that killed 20 people in rural New York, one of the nation’s deadliest transportation accidents in two decades.

Nearly five years since 20 people were killed in one of the biggest transportation accidents in the United States, a limousine service manager has been convicted of manslaughter for his failure to maintain the vehicle.

On Wednesday, a jury convicted Nauman Hussain on 20 counts of second-degree manslaughter in the October 2018 crash in Schoharie, New York. The verdict was reached by jurors in Schoharie County, about 48 miles west of Albany, New York, on their second day of deliberations.

Emotions ran high in the courtroom as shouts and cries could be heard as the verdict was read. The guilty verdict brought a flood of emotions to the families of the victims, who have been waiting years for someone to be held accountable for the incident.

“It’s exhilarating,” Kevin Cushing, who lost his son Patrick Cushing in the crash, told WNYT-TV outside the courthouse. “We had relatively low expectations because this four-and-a-half years has been filled with disappointment.”

Hussain, who ran Prestige Limousine, rented out a 2001 Ford Excursion limousine that had a “catastrophic brake failure” after years of inadequate maintenance, according to an 83-page vehicle autopsy made public in 2019.

Hussain could face up to 15 years in prison when he is sentenced on May 31.

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