And police have more help these days. Bastardi’s car was also carrying his father Michael Bastardi, 81, and their friend Daniel Longo, 74.Schuler’s 5-year-old son, Bryan, was the sole survivor of the accident.“That’s the only thing that made it bearable, that boy,” LaGrippo said.Schuler’s minivan was in flames, the Bastardis’ SUV was decimated and bodies of dead and dying children were lying on the parkway.Panicked calls to 911 poured in immediately following the accident.Although the toxicology report stated that Schuler was heavily intoxicated, Schuler’s husband, Daniel, has consistently denied that she abused drugs or alcohol, and has made multiple media appearances to defend his wife.He called for further investigation into other possible medical causes for her erratic driving.Her husband, Daniel Schuler, left the campground at the same time in a separate vehicle.A co-owner of the campground later said that Diane appeared sober when she departed.Witnesses later reported seeing a red minivan driving aggressively on Route 17/Interstate 86 and Interstate 87, including According to a police report, Schuler was seen at approximately Police believe that the car was stopped in a pull-off area beyond the Tappan Zee Bridge tollbooths for at least part of this call. Now you may be putting it together. When she was unable to find any, she self medicated with drugs and alcohol.The pain of the abscess, combined with vodka and marijuana, could have put her in a temporary state of delirium that triggered her fatal behavior.In the documentary, Daniel and Barbara claim they gave Ruskin $30,000 to conduct an independent investigation and to re-test samples. Lets continue with the theory where she really did not consume any alcohol. "Of the 1,566 wrong-way fatal crashes in the six years covered by the 2012 report, 936 of them — 60 percent — "had indications of alcohol involvement."
Apparently, it happens.Interesting theories, but the one thing that stands out to me is that she seemed DETERMINED to keep driving. The patient’s body produces an unusually high amount of yeast in the gut. "In the past 11 months, there have been at least a half-dozen wrong-way incidents on local roadways —with no fatalities.The incidents range from a New York City woman who drove the wrong way while drunk on the Sprain in Greenburgh in April to a White Plains man with a blood-alcohol level at 0.22% — nearly three times the legal limit — arrested in Ardsley last September after driving north on the soutbound New York State Thruway.Gleason said that several factors can reduce the number of fatalities in wrong-way incidents.Most often, people are driving impaired late at night, sharing the road with fewer cars, he said. Aspergillus, although uncommon, has caused meningitis and brain abscesses.Can you guess where Actinomycetes and Aspergillus have been found?OK! Sounds like an answered prayer!I feel like her vomiting and erratic behavior was caused by DT’s.
A blood alcohol test in ABS would have the exact same results as someone drinking large amounts of alcohol.Drivers and eyewitnesses report Diane as being alert and focused as they swerved out of her way. Ok so seems pretty solid until you remember, oh yea, that ridiculously high blood alcohol content and THC. Diane Schuler left the campsite before crashing on the Taconic Parkway.Attorney Dominic A. Barbara speaks to the media in Garden City, Long Island Aug. 6, 2009. The person can become very drunk very suddenly without any consumption of alcohol.