It was just after sunrise on April 6, 2025, when everything changed for the Dougan family. A mother and her four children — full of life, laughter, and plans — were taken in an instant. The crash happened on I-95 in McIntosh County, Georgia, and by the time responders arrived, all five passengers in the SUV were gone.
Reagan Dougan, 27, had been on her way from North Carolina to meet her husband, Christian, in Florida. With their four kids in tow — a nine-year-old boy, a four-year-old boy, a two-year-old girl, and a three-month-old baby — she was making the long drive alone. According to authorities, their rental Jeep Cherokee collided with the back of a sedan, then struck a guardrail, erupting into flames. The accident occurred just after 6 a.m. Authorities believe speed may have played a role, though the investigation remains ongoing.
The entire family inside the SUV was pronounced dead at the scene.
Back in Raleigh, where the Dougan family had moved only a few months earlier, neighbors were left stunned. “I’m still in shock,” said Christopher “Jonesy” Butler-Jones, who lived nearby. “(Christian) lost his entire family. It’s just heart-wrenching.”
Jones recalled how Reagan had supported him after Hurricane Milton devastated his own family in 2024. She had sent his child clothes. He remembered that small act of kindness clearly, especially now. “There was a very warm, comforting feeling. It allowed me to see that there is a light at the end of the tunnel.”
“She was a devoted mother,” he added. “Her kids were everything to her.”
Other neighbors remembered seeing the children playing in the yard, climbing trees, filling the quiet cul-de-sac with joy. Jason Flores said they always waved hello. “She always had a smile on her face. The kids were always happy.”
Now, that house sits silent.
Christian’s stepmother, Sarah Stoltman, created a GoFundMe campaign to raise $35,000 to help bring Reagan and the children back to Florida for burial. By midweek, donations had surpassed $26,000. “While Christian works with his and Reagan’s family to begin mourning these five beautiful souls,” she wrote, “we cannot even fathom the financial burden it is going to endure moving his family from Georgia to their final resting place.”
Tributes poured in online. One sister-in-law, Kyleah Miller, wrote, “Words cannot begin to describe how devastated we are… Fly high, sweet angels. You will forever be so deeply loved.”
Photographer Katrina Cusatis remembered capturing their maternity photos just months earlier: “Their love, joy, and connection were unforgettable.”
Reagan’s friend Cecily Corinne Borquez shared a childhood photo. “You were such an amazing friend… I’ll never understand how something so tragic could happen to someone so incredible.”
Just days before the Dougan crash, another child lost his life — this time in Frankfort, Kentucky.
On April 4, nine-year-old Gabriel Andrews was walking to his school bus with his sister when he slipped into fast-moving floodwaters. The area had been hit hard by storms, and children in his apartment complex had to cross a drainage ditch to reach the bus stop. That morning, the ditch was flooded.
The emergency call came in just after 6:30 a.m. His body was found an hour later, half a mile from where he fell in.
Gabriel had just turned nine on April 1.
His teacher, Kasey Swails, described him as the “sweetest, kindest boy who was impossible not to love,” adding that he was part of a classroom that felt like a family. “Today has been the most heartbreaking day in my teaching career,” she wrote.
The local school district canceled some bus routes due to flooding that morning, but classes remained open — a decision now under scrutiny. Residents and parents alike are questioning whether enough was done to protect children like Gabriel during extreme weather.
Frankfort’s police chief, mayor, and county judge all spoke out publicly to express their sorrow. “A tragedy such as this is felt by our entire community,” said Mayor Layne Wilkerson.
In two different towns, heartbreak arrived on two different days. One crash. One storm. Two families forever changed. And across the country, communities grieve the children who are gone — and the dreams that vanished with them.
May their memories be a blessing, and may their families find light in the darkness that surrounds them now.