Diane Schuler - Was She An Alcoholic?
9/2/09 - The body of a woman who killed herself and seven other people by driving a minivan the wrong way on a parkway and crashing into an SUV will be exhumed for testing in an attempt to counter findings that she was drunk.
Attorney Dominic Barbara said on CNN's "Larry King Live" that Diane Schuler could have suffered a minor stroke brought on by an abscess in her mouth.
Barbara
said the just-released autopsy report found no evidence of chronic alcoholism in
Diane Schuler's liver, pancreas, stomach or esophagus.
He had previously suggested that diabetes or a lump on her leg could have caused
her crash, and he said it was possible that when her body was charred in the
crash the sugar in her blood turned to alcohol.
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8/6/09 -
She couldn't have been drunk and stoned. Her husband had never seen her
intoxicated before. And there were absolutely no marital problems that could
have sent her over the edge.
In an anguished, sometimes angry news conference, Daniel Schuler refused to
accept an autopsy report that showed his wife had the equivalent of 10 drinks
and smoked marijuana within an hour of the wrong-way highway crash that killed
her and seven other people.
The husband of a woman blamed for a deadly highway crash declared, "She was not
a drinker. She was not an alcoholic." Investigators said Diane Schuler downed
more than 10 vodkas and smoked marijuana before the July 26 accident that killed
her and seven other people. "Something medical must have happened," Daniel
Schuler said.
Diane Schuler was drunk on vodka and high on marijuana when she drove the wrong
way onto a New York highway and slammed into an SUV. Schuler, 36, and seven
other people were killed, including her 2-year-old daughter, Erin. Son Bryan, 5,
was the sole survivor. Schuler's husband, Daniel, shown in this family photo,
was not in the minivan.
"I never saw her drunk since the day I met her," Daniel Schuler told reporters
at a press conference outside his attorney's office. "She was not a drinker. She
was not an alcoholic."
He suggested anything from a stroke to gestational diabetes to even an abscessed
tooth could have caused his wife to act irrationally in the hours before her
death.
Daniel Schuler also disputed reports that problems with their marriage drove her
to the bottle, calling her "a perfect wife" and saying he "would marry her again
tomorrow" if he could.
Diane Schuler, 36, drove the wrong way for nearly two miles on the Taconic State
Parkway and struck a sport utility vehicle. The July 26 crash killed her
2-year-old daughter, three young nieces and three men in the SUV.
Family of the men in the SUV had questioned how Schuler's family could have been
oblivious to an alcohol abuse problem and suggested criminal charges were
possible. An attorney for the victims' family didn't return calls.
A preliminary autopsy of Diane Schuler ruled out a stroke, heart attack, or
aneurysm, Westchester County officials said. The medical examiner said that he
stood by his report that found her blood-alcohol level was more than twice the
state's legal limit and she had high levels of the key ingredient in marijuana
in her system.
Police said Thursday that Daniel Schuler wasn't cooperating with their
investigation. Officers that came to Long Island "for a prearranged interview"
were not allowed to question him.
Schuler's attorney, Dominic Barbara, didn't say when Schuler would be available
for an interview. Police interviewed him once last week.
Barbara said Diane Schuler was once diagnosed with gestational diabetes — which
usually goes away after childbirth — had an undiagnosed lump on her leg and was
suffering from an abscessed tooth for nearly two months. It was not clear how
any of those maladies would prompt someone to become intoxicated.
Barbara — a divorce attorney who frequently appears on Howard Stern's radio show
and who has represented Joey Buttafuoco, actress Lindsay Lohan's father Michael
and Victoria Gotti — suggested some sort of stroke may have led Diane Schuler to
act irrationally. He noted witnesses who saw Schuler on the highway reported
that she was driving erratically, moving in and out of lanes, honking her horn
and flashing her headlights.
"This is not the actions of a person who is drunk. Something happened," Barbara
said. "And I think something happened to her brain."
He said he couldn't explain the alcohol or marijuana in her system.
A substance abuse expert said that close family are sometimes the last to know
about a loved one's problem.
"Families are often in denial and can't deal with the reality that a family
member has a problem," said Marc Galanter, director of the Division of
Alcoholism and Substance Abuse at New York University.
Joy Schuler, Daniel Schuler's sister, who said she and Diane were "best
friends," said she never hesitated to leave her own child in Schuler's care.
Schuler had been a nanny before becoming an executive with Cablevision.
"She loved children, her nieces were her girls," Joy Schuler said. "There is no
way she would ever jeopardize her children."
The Schulers' 5-year-old son survived. His father said the little boy is still
hospitalized, but his condition is improving.
Daniel Schuler said the couple went through a normal routine on the Sunday
before he last saw her at a campsite in upstate New York.
"She was fine," he said. "We had a cup of coffee in the morning, we packed the
cars up like we always do and we headed out."
The family has not decided whether to seek another autopsy and is awaiting more
information from the county's autopsy report.
The attorney declined to allow Daniel Schuler to answer any questions regarding
the marijuana allegations, citing his client's job as a security officer for
Nassau County.
Daniel Schuler, 37, began to break down emotionally as the press conference
ended.
"I go to bed every night knowing my heart is clear," he said. "She did not
drink. She is not an alcoholic. Something medically had to happen."