She walked into the storm and never came home. A beloved second-grade teacher, a frozen Kansas night, and a bar exit caught on camera at 11:37 p.m. — then nothing. No phone. No purse. No coat. Just wind chills of minus 13 and a town praying she’d be found alive. By Sunday, hope was shatt… Continues…
In the end, the search that united Emporia ended in the quiet stillness of a snow-covered grove. Just 300 yards from where cameras last saw 28-year-old Rebecca Rauber, K-9 Daisy led rescuers to the teacher her students adored, lying in the woods as Winter Storm Fern raged around her final steps. Investigators believe hypothermia claimed her within hours, while her family and community slept, unaware that time had already run out.
Now, grief hangs over Riverside Elementary, where a second-grade classroom has lost its steady, smiling guide. Emporia’s police chief voiced the ache felt by many: they had found her, but far too late. As candles are lit and prayers whispered, Rauber’s death becomes part of the storm’s deadly toll — a stark reminder of how an ordinary Friday night can turn, in a few frozen minutes, into an irreversible tragedy.