This undated photo provided by the Floral Park, N.Y., Police Department shows Diane and Daniel Schuler with their children Bryan, 5, and Erin, 2. Diane and Erin were among the eight people killed in a fiery crash on Sunday, July 26, 2009, when Diane Schuler plowed into an SUV while driving the wrong way on the Taconic Parkway in Westchester County.
Diane Schuler poses with her niece, Melanie Hance, in an undated family photo. Schuler, Melanie and six others died in a wrong-way crash on July 26, 2009. An autopsy revealed Schuler had a blood alcohol of .19, more than twice the legal limit, and also had marijuana in her system.
Diane, left, and Daniel Schuler are seen on a camping trip in an undated family photo. A toxicology report said Diane Schuler was drunk and high on marijuana when she drove the wrong way for almost two miles on a highway before smashing head-on into an SUV, killing herself and seven others, a prosecutor said. But Daniel Schuler said he had "never seen his wife drunk before."
Diane and Daniel Schuler pose on their wedding day. Despite a toxicology report that says Diane was drunk and high July 26, 2009, when she crashed a car that killed eight people including their daughter and three nieces, Daniel said at a press conference on Aug. 6, 2009, "She was a perfect wife, outstanding mother...I would marry her again tomorrow."
Diane and Daniel Schuler and their son, Brian, pose for an undated family photo. The 5-year-old was the only surviving child in a crash that killed eight people when Diane Schuler drove the wrong way on an expressway, hitting another car on July 26, 2009. At an Aug. 4, 2009, press conference Daniel said, "I lost my daughter. I lost my wife. All I have is my son."
People watch as one of five caskets is carried out of Our Lady of Victory Roman Catholic Church in Floral Park, N.Y., July 30, 2009. The funeral mass was for Diane and Erin Schuler, and Kate, Alyson and Emma Hance, all of whom died after the minivan they were riding in slammed head-on into a sport-utility vehicle carrying three men on New York's Tactonic Parkway.
People hug before a funeral mass outside of Our Lady of Victory Roman Catholic Church in Floral Park, N.Y., on July 30, 2009. The mass was for Diane Schuler, Erin Schuler, Kate Hance, Alyson Hance and Emma Hance, all of whom died in a minivan going in the wrong direction on a parkway and crashed July 26, 2009.
Warren Hance, the brother of Diane Schuler and father to three girls killed in a car accident, leaves the funeral mass at Our Lady of Victory Roman Catholic Church in Floral Park, N.Y., July 30, 2009. The funeral mass was for Diane Schuler, Erin Schuler, Kate Hance, Alyson Hance and Emma Hance, all of whom died in a minivan driven in the wrong direction on a parkway and crashed July 26, 2009.
Mourners look on as caskets are brought out of Our Lady of Victory Roman Catholic Church in Floral Park, N.Y., July 30, 2009, following a mass to remember five family members killed in a parkway crash four days earlier. The driver's husband, Daniel Schuler, was considering exhuming his wife's body to get more medical information on what might have caused the crash, a family attorney said.
A girl cries as she is escorted past hearses after a funeral Mass at Our Lady of Victory Roman Catholic Church in Floral Park, N.Y., July 30, 2009, to remember five family members killed in a parkway crash four days earlier.
Daniel Schuler, left, arrives at the offices of attorney Dominic Barbara, right, in Garden City, N.Y., Aug. 6, 2009. Schuler's wife Diane was drunk and high on marijuana when she smashed head-on into an SUV, killing herself and seven others, a prosecutor said. But Barbaro said that that behavior was unimaginable and theorized a stroke or other malady may have prompted her actions.
Daniel Schuler is overcome with emotion while his sister-in-law, Jay Schuler, speaks at a press conference in Garden City, N.Y., Aug. 6, 2009. Schuler's wife Diane had roughly 10 shots of alcohol in her body when she crashed her minivan into an SUV, a prosecutor said. Schuler family attorney Dominic Barbara said Diane wasn't an alcoholic but was diabetic and may have suffered a stroke before the crash.
Daniel Schuler, right, holds hands with sisters-in-law Jay Schuler, center, and Joyce Schuler, left, at a press conference in Garden City, N.Y., Aug. 6, 2009. "She loved children. Those nieces were her girls," Jay Schuler responded to questions about Diane Schuler's blood alcohol level during the crash on July 26, 2009. "There is no way she would ever jeopardize the children."
Daniel Schuler was in deep emotional pain at a press conference in Garden City, N.Y., Aug. 6, 2009 in which he challenged the idea that his wife, Diane Schuler, was recklessly drunk and high when she crashed her minivan into an SUV killing eight on July 26, 2009. "I am not angry at her," he said. The couple's 5-year-old son survived the accident.