Wednesday September 10 5:51 AM EDT Prosecutor: Diana Driver Took Two Drugs PARIS (Reuter) - Paris prosecutors said Wednesday that Henri Paul, the driver in Princess Diana's fatal Paris car crash, had traces of two drugs along with a high alcohol level in his blood that could have upset his driving. The main one was fluoxetine, the active ingredient in the popular Eli Lilly and Co. antidepressant drug Prozac. The test also revealed lesser levels of tiapride, marketed by the French firm Synthelabo under the name Tiapridal, which the company says is commonly prescribed as a treatment for agitation and aggression. "A search for toxic chemicals in the blood revealed therapeutic levels of a medication whose active ingredient is fluoxetine, and sub-therapeutic levels of a second drug whose active ingredient is tiapride," the prosecutor's office said in a statement. "Drivers are urged to exercise prudence in the utilization of both medications," the statement said. The statement confirmed that a new analysis of Paul's blood found that it contained around 1.75 grams of alcohol per liter - the equivalent of drinking two aperitifs and a bottle of wine and more than three times the legal drinks limit in France. A backup test, performed on fluid taken from inside his eyeball, found a level of 1.73 grams per liter, it added. Paul's family had requested a new round of analyses after an initial report, released last week, found virtually identical levels. An expert representing the family of Dodi Al Fayed, who perished in the crash along with the Princess and Paul, said the tests may have been flawed and said an analysis of the eyeball fluid would be more reliable. A lawyer for one of nine photographers probed for possible manslaughter charges in Diana's death said the tests proved a paparazzi chase that preceded the crash did not cause it. Diana died early on Aug. 31 along with Paul and Fayed when their luxury Mercedes Benz crashed into a concrete pillar in a road tunnel while being pursued by paparazzi photographers on motorcycles. Lawyers for Mohamed Fayed, Dodi's father and owner of the Paris Ritz Hotel where Paul worked, have argued that a reckless chase was the real cause of the crash. Lawyers for the photographers, however, have said that their clients were merely witnesses to the accident and blamed the crash on the driver. Also Wednesday, the French daily Le Parisien reported Princess Diana's final words as she lay fatally injured were "Leave me alone, leave me alone." The newspaper, quoting an unidentified doctor at the accident scene, said the Princess uttered the words as an emergency medical crew set up strong lights around her and began treating her injuries after the car in which she was driving crashed into a concrete pillar early on Aug. 31. Moments earlier, as doctors and other rescue workers first approached her, she moaned repeatedly "Oh my God" as paparazzi snapped pictures a few inches from her face, the unnamed doctor said. "She was very agitated, half unconscious," the doctor told the newspaper. Just after Diana asked to be left alone, the team of doctors lowered an oxygen mask onto her face and began their emergency treatment, he said. Diana was pronounced dead at about 4 a.m. on that Sunday morning, three and a half hours after the car crashed at high speed in a road tunnel under the Place de l'Alma in the French capital's eighth district. The first medical workers arriving on the scene found Al Fayed sprawled on the ground some 20 yards from the car, his heart already stopped, the newspaper said. Efforts to revive him failed. After giving Diana blood transfusions and other emergency care on the spot, she was transferred to an ambulance. But the emergency workers ordered the ambulance to go so slowly, to avoid bumps, that the six-mile trip to the Pitie-Salpetriere Hospital in eastern Paris took an hour, the newspaper said. A further delay occurred when, less than a mile from the hospital, which specializes in emergency medicine, the ambulance crew ordered the vehicle to stop so they could inject a massive dose of adrenaline into her heart, which had just stopped beating, according to the newspaper. Earlier, the head of the Pitie-Salpetriere medical team had told a news briefing that Diana's heart had stopped after her arrival at the hospital. The trip took so long that French Interior Minister Jean-Pierre Chevenement and Paris police chief Philippe Massoni feared the ambulance had gotten lost en route, Le Parisien said.