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Police try to retrace Diane Schuler’s route




New York State Police Thursday tried to trace
Diane Schuler's route from the Tappan Zee Bridge to the scene of the fiery
Taconic State Parkway crash that killed eight Sunday, but acknowledged they may
never know her exact path in those last 30 minutes.

-Click here to see the latest photos of Taconic crash tragedy

The exercise yielded no new clues to the mysterious wrong-way collision, said
investigators who called the route "speculative.” But they said the 11-mile
drive solidified their belief that Schuler stopped in a pull-off area on the New
York State Thruway after crossing the Tappan Zee Bridge into Westchester County
and called her brother Warren Hance at about 1 p.m. to say she was sick.

The route -- two miles east on the Thruway to Interstate 287, then north for
eight miles on the Saw Mill River Parkway before exiting onto Pleasantville Road
and going a mile-and-a-half north to a Taconic exit ramp -- took about 25
minutes Thursday, said State Police Lt. Dominick Chiumento.

That makes it plausible for Schuler to have reached the Taconic by 1:35 p.m.
after calling her brother, Chiumento said.
The Ford minivan she was driving then entered the Taconic via the exit ramp and
went 1.7 miles south into northbound traffic, causing a head-on collision with
an SUV.

Schuler, of West Babylon, was killed, along with her daughter, her brother
Warren Hance's three daughters, who lived in Floral Park, and three men from
Yonkers in the SUV. The Long Island families were buried yesterday after a
funeral Mass.

Schuler's son, Bryan, 5, was the only survivor. He was recovering yesterday at
Westchester Medical Center in Valhalla, N.Y., said a hospital spokesman who has
declined to release the boy's condition at the family's request.

More than a dozen witnesses who watched Schuler driving the wrong way have
stepped forward, but none who saw her before getting on the Taconic. Police
asked anyone who saw the red minivan on the Saw Mill or Thruway to call the
Hawthorne, N.Y., barracks at 914-769-2600.

Police don't know why Schuler -- driving her children and nieces back to Long
Island from an upstate camping trip -- turned north after calling her brother,
instead of going south toward home. Her brother had asked her to pull over and
wait for him.

One investigator, Robert C. Bennett, said police have discussed the possibility
that Schuler went north to turn around and return to the pull-off where she left
her cell phone behind on a concrete barrier.

"It's speculation,” Chiumento said. "We won't ever know.”

There are security cameras located at the pull-off where Schuler called her
brother. Police said Thursday there was no footage of Schuler but declined to
say why.

Chiumento said police do not know if Schuler had a global positioning system
device in the car, in part because investigators have waited to interview her
family until after Thursday's funeral.

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