Who was Ashley Diaz ( EMT mom, 29, nearly killed by driver ‘high on fentanyl’ as drug sweeps NYC ) Wiki, Bio, Age, Crime, Incident details, Investigations and More Facts
Ashley Diaz Biography Ashley Diaz Wiki
Ashley Diaz Age
When a suspected fentanyl-rich driver crashed into off-duty EMT Ashley Diaz, the 29-year-old mother knew she had to act quickly or die. Blood spurted from his mutilated right leg and the first officer on the scene applied a tourniquet to stop the bleeding, but it didn't work.
Incident
"I told her it had to be big and tight because my leg was in a condition that no one should ever see," Diaz told the Post of the horrific Sept. 16 incident on Staten Island as she looked during her absence was shot . She. car parked. "They didn't really know how to pull it up my leg. So I just told them, 'Put it here and pull it on as tight as you can.' You didn't tighten it tight enough. As Diaz continued to give directions, he knew it was important to stay conscious. "If I fell asleep, I wouldn't make it," he said. Diaz lost his leg just above the knee. The collision also knocked out his front teeth, leaving him with a fractured shoulder blade, fractured femur, fractured collarbone and lacerations to his face. When doctors arrived, an ER friend who she had worked with at the FDNY "didn't know it was me because I seemed unrecognizable," Diaz said. According to a prosecutor with the Staten Island Attorney's Office, driver Nicole Marino was "severely damaged" by the powerful opioid fentanyl when she rammed Diaz. "If she was really drugged, she was driving..." Diaz said, shaking his head. Fentanyl, he says, “is everywhere. It's really bad. It's the strongest drug. " Marino, 31, who police said did not have a driver's license, now faces 25 years in prison for first-degree assault and has been charged with other crimes, including drug possession for alleged heroin. She remains locked up on Rikers Island after failing to send $100,000 in cash and $200,000, according to Staten Island prosecutors. She pleaded not guilty to all charges and the case was brought back to court on November 15. The tragic accident in Diaz appears to be just another example of how fentanyl has become a major outbreak in the city, law enforcement sources said. "As this tragic case has shown us, the impact of fentanyl on our streets extends beyond those who use it," said Staten Island Attorney Michael McMahon. "And an increased risk of injury to drivers, pedestrians, our first responders and especially our children needs to be addressed by our legislators and law enforcement agencies across the state." "It's a serious threat to the public," added Adam Wandt, a professor at John Jay College who is studying drugs with support from a US Department of Justice grant. “We need to address this as a public health issue because there is an almost limitless supply of this stuff. It's so cheap and so easy to carry. Drug dealers "now mix fentanyl with cocaine and even spray it on marijuana."
According to the CDC
According to the CDC, 2,540 New York state residents died from a synthetic opioid overdose between May 2021 and May 2022, the most recent month for which numbers are available. That's an increase of 354 of those deaths in the 12 months ended May 2015 -- a 617 percent increase in the past seven years and the largest increase in overdose deaths of any drug, including cocaine, heroin and prescription pills, according to a 'Post analysis ' data found. (The CDC is considering synthetic opioids like fentanyl and tramadol, although experts say virtually all deaths from these synthetic substances are due to fentanyl.) On the day of the incident, Diaz said he bought chocolate-covered strawberries for his mother's birthday and was near his home in Staten Island's New Dorp neighborhood. "I remember opening the car door and I saw this car coming my way. Two seconds and it changed my whole life. It was like a boomerang hitting me and pulling me. FDNY EMS EMT Ashley Diaz was off-duty when a driver allegedly high on fentanyl crashed into her. She lost her leg just above the knee and also suffered a broken scapula, broken femur and broken collar bone.https://t.co/mvl888xYxB — NYC EMS Watch (@NYCEMSwatch) November 8, 2022 Diaz said the driver "came up to me" and tried to blame her for the collision. "He said, 'Oh my God. You came out of nowhere.” I said, "No, you came out of nowhere." And then I started screaming for my mother. Diaz underwent 11 surgeries and spent two weeks in a medically induced coma before recovering Read the full article













