Both Lutzenkirchen & the driver were drunk when they died.

patdog

Heisman
May 28, 2007
56,954
26,404
113
Shocking, I know. Driver was 0.17 and Lutzenkirchen was a very impressive 0.377.

Link
 

57stratdawg

Heisman
Dec 1, 2004
148,416
24,195
113
I'm assuming Lutz was passed out in the back battling alcohol poisoning. I'm not a Dr, but my understanding is that is a life threatening level.
 

Curby

All-Conference
Aug 23, 2012
1,490
1,348
113
Yeah, I hate speculate about it, but I've been told by medical people that if you are that much above a 0.3 BAC, there would have to be the presence of a stimulant in the blood (i.e. cocaine) to keep a person the least bit conscious.
 

AHSDawg

Redshirt
Sep 18, 2012
1,680
0
0
Wow... Here is the info on that level of alcohol...

According to a chart on Wikipedia culled from several sources including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, that level of drunkenness could lead to severe central nervous system depression, unconsciousness and the possibility of death.
Bladder function, breathing, stability and heart rate would all be impaired.
According to a chart from Virginia Tech, a 220-pound person who had 10 drinks would register .27. The CDC chart only showed the effects of alcohol up to .15.
The chart didn't have a figure for how many drinks someone of Lutzenkirchen's weight would have had to drink. He was listed at 6-foot-5-inches, 255 pounds during his football days.


http://www.al.com/news/index.ssf/2014/08/lutzenkirchens_blood_alcohol_o.html#incart_related_stories
 

patdog

Heisman
May 28, 2007
56,954
26,404
113
Ran it through the BAC calculator. At his weight, 30 beers and/or shots in 6 hours would get him to .376. Considering the accident happened at 3AM, 6 hours of drinking seems about right.