Approaching in his car from the opposite direction. Dr.
Frederic Mailliez stopped and ran to the spot. He saw at once that two
of the passengers were dead, but that two others, including a blond
woman, were perhaps still alive. Within seconds, the pursuing
photographers had caught up. At the same time, police and firemen
arrived, alerted by cars exiting the tunnel ahead of the Mercedes; very
soon, they identified the woman passenger.
By 1:15, the bodies of Henri Paul and Dodi al-Fayed had
been removed from the wreck ; later, after repeated toxicological tests,
it was determined that Paul's blood contained four times the legal
amount of alcohol permitted for drivers.
There was also, in his system, evidence of two
prescription medications for psychological and emotional stress: these
we're Fluoexetine, which is the generic name for the American drug
Prosaic, and tiapride, a European compound often used to calm aggressive
patients being treated for alcoholism.
Diana and Rees-Jones---both of them barely alive---took
longer to extricate. Jean-Pierre Chevenement, the Interior Minister, was
contacted by senior police officials and sped to the Hospital de la
Pitie-Salpetriere, where Diana and Rees-Jones were taken. They arrived
at 2:00 that morning.
A team of surgeons and nurses set to work on
Rees-Jones, who underwent the first of many operations to reset and
restructure his shattered jaw and broken arm. Subsequently, he was in a
coma for weeks and had little memory of anything after the car left the
hotel. Diana's condition was terminal, and fading fast.
A surgical team labored over her for almost two hours.
She had sustained massive chest injuries and had bled profusely, and now
a vein was severed and her blood pressure dropped to a dangerous level.
At first it seemed that her age and fitness might grant some hope even
on light of these traumas. But then it became clear that, despite the
successful repair of the torn vein, all her internal organs were gravely
damaged. She suffered cardiac arrest, and her heart failed to respond to
open massage. Electric shocks were unavailing.
At 4:00 that morning, August 31, 1997, Diana - Princess
of Wales, was pronounced dead.