Tuesday, June 16, 2026

YOUNG WOMAN LEFT PARALYSED AFTER BEING STRUCK BY DRUNK DRIVER, THEN RUN OVER BY TWO MORE VEHICLES

Daily Mail

 

Autistic woman, 24, worked hard to build independent life for herself... now she's PARALYZED thanks to selfishness of stranger

By ELIOT FORCE, US NEWS REPORTER

Published: 10:23 EDT, 21 April 2026 | Updated: 12:04 EDT, 21 April 2026

 

A young woman with autism who had successfully created an independent life for herself is now paralyzed from the waist down after she was struck by a suspected drunk driver.

 

Julie Steed, 24, was horrifically injured on the night of March 4 after she finished a shift and donned her helmet to ride home on her scooter in Lafayette, Louisiana.

 

While driving home, she was struck from behind by a drunk driver whose blood alcohol content was three times over the legal limit, police said.

 

As Julie lay helpless on the road, she was run over by two more vehicles. Her mother, Jamie Steed, told WBRC that doctors said the young woman had been dragged 500 feet.

 

Lafayette police arrested the alleged drunk driver, a man named Dakota Wagoner, 36. He was charged with operating while intoxicated and vehicular negligent injuring.

 

Photos of Julie in the hospital show her face and neck covered in horrific bruises. She is now paralyzed from the chest down with limited mobility in her right arm.

 

Julie's mother and sister set up a GoFundMe to help pay for medical expenses and the cost of renovating the family's home to accommodate the needs of a paralyzed person.

 

According to the fundraising page, Julie is 'autistic and has struggled with depression and anxiety her whole life.' That made her early steps into independence by finding a job and moving away from home particularly remarkable.

 

'She was living on her own. She was paying her bills. She got her a job, (taking) herself back and forth to work on her own,' Jamie told WBRC. 'I was so proud of her. I really was.'

 

The Steed family is from Tuscaloosa, Alabama, which is more than 400 miles from Lafayette.

 

That is where Jamie was when at 2am, she received the terrifying call informing her that her daughter was hit by a car and in critical condition at a hospital.

 

The mother rushed to Louisiana to be with her daughter, who has had five surgeries since she was struck by a car nearly two months ago.

 

According to the GoFundMe page, the first surgery was to repair Julie's back, and doctors had to use 'rods, screws and bolts.'

 

The second surgery was to give her a colostomy bag and repair her colon. The third surgery was to fix her broken right arm. The fourth surgery was to 'close her up' from the second surgery and remove dead tissue.

 

The fifth surgery took place about two weeks later on March 20. Doctors replaced her wound vac, which is a medical device used to drain fluids from injuries and promote healing.

 

Julie told WBRC: 'I know this isn’t the end of my life. I know that there are opportunities for me, but this isn’t something that you prepare for.'

 

'I’ve never once had the thought of, what if one day I become paralyzed?' she added.

 

The 24-year-old spent a month recovering from her severe injuries at a hospital in Louisiana before she was transferred to Nolan Hospital in Alabama to be closer to home and receive specialized care.

 

She is currently still recovering at the Alabama hospital. Once she is discharged, she will be transferred to an inpatient rehab facility and stay there for about a month.

 

According to the GoFundMe, the Steed family 'is preparing to care for her full-time, and her boyfriend is moving here to help as well.'

 

'To make our home accessible, we need to sell our current car and buy one that she can use, rip up the carpet so she can move around in her wheelchair, and remodel the bathroom so she can bathe safely and comfortably,' the family said.

 

'On top of that, we’re facing mounting medical bills and know she’ll need a hospital bed and a better wheelchair than what the hospital can provide.'

 

The family is planning to convert a building in their yard into a wheelchair-accessible home, 'so that way I can live as independently as possible with my loved ones,' Julie told WBRC.

 

The young woman also told the outlet that she hopes her story might discourage others from driving drunk in the future.

 

'Look at what you’ve done. You’re never going to undo your actions, but you can be better in the future,' she said. 

No comments: