Georgia firefighters found dead in Tennessee were high school sweethearts | Police chief gives new details
Georgia firefighters found dead in Tennessee were high school sweethearts | Police chief gives new details
The two firefighters were reported missing for several days before their bodies were discovered.
HINESVILLE, Ga. — A Georgia police chief is dealing with tragedy after two members of the Hinesville Fire Department were found dead inside a car across state lines in Tennessee on Sunday.
Hinesville Police Chief Tracey Howard said he knew Chandler Kuhbander and Raegan Anderson, who were also revealed to be former high school sweethearts. The two firefighters were reported missing for several days before their bodies were discovered.
“I did,” Howard said when asked if he knew the two personally. “I had only seen Chandler… but as I was speaking to the mutual family members, I remember being around Raegan when she was a young little girl.”
Nearly 400 miles from Liberty County, Kuhbander and Anderson were found dead inside Anderson’s 2017 Ford Focus in Cosby, Tennessee.
Anderson had last been seen on June 25 at the Liberty County Fire Services Station #1 in Midway, GA. His car was found in Savannah, and Anderson’s vehicle was spotted in Richmond Hill before it was found in Tennessee.
“Certainly, when we began the investigation, I did not realize that it was her because sometimes you lose touch with people and you don’t see them for a while, and when young people are growing up, it seems like a short amount of time and then next thing you know, they’re grown,” Howard said.
Through the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation’s (TBI) initial findings, Kuhbander and Anderson were alone when they died. It’s still unclear what exactly happened in the moments leading up to their deaths.
“I don’t believe the investigation is yielding an idea that whatever happened involved anybody else other than the two that were found,” Howard said.
The Hinesville Police Department will complete its investigation when the TBI completes its own.