Although they say she would occasionally have a social drink, and sometimes smoked marijuana in the evenings to relax, they simply cannot reconcile the toxicology results with the loving mother and aunt who would never knowingly endanger the children. Assuming that Diane may have been impaired by a medical emergency that precipitated the crash, they hire a lawyer and a private investigator to pursue the possibility of an alternate explanation, however unlikely.
The need to make sense of a mysterious and shattering tragedy such as this is a natural impulse, which in many cases can never be fully fulfilled. There's Something Wrong With Aunt Diane reveals a complex and complicated case — as opposed to one solved by simple or reductive analysis — that has left all those involved still wondering what really happened to Aunt Diane. According to forensic psychiatrist Dr. Harold Bursztajn, such an event could be very traumatic for a young girl.
Piecing together that fateful day with a minute-by-minute retelling, the film seeks to understand how things could have gone so terribly wrong. Just before the accident, Diane and her husband, Daniel, had been camping in upstate New York at Hunter Lake Campground with their two children and three nieces, ages two through eight. By Katie Rife ,. Alex McLevy ,. Dowd ,. William Hughes ,. Randall Colburn ,. List slides. She bent over with her hands on her knees like she was vomiting. She was seen again doing the same thing a bit later.
It was his 8-year-old daughter, Emma, who was very worried about her aunt Diane. Diane then hopped on the line and confirmed that she was having trouble seeing. Hance told her to pull off and that he would drive and meet them. Diane had left her phone on the highway, though. It was found by another motorist sometime later.
Almost seventy years earlier to the day, a bus traveling to Sing Sing prison from Brooklyn to New York fell off a ravine. It caught fire, killing twenty people.
Moments later, more calls started pouring in, reporting a car driving down the parkway in the wrong direction. After driving 1. Diane, her daughter, and two of her nieces died immediately upon impact. Two people witnessed the accident and ran to the smoking wreckage. They tried to pull the kids out, but there was no pulse. None of them were wearing a seat belt at the time of the crash.
Bryan would be the only survivor. The crash drew national attention. How could such a normal, family-oriented woman do this?
0コメント