When Help Arrives Too Late: A Family Lost, A Nation Called to Act
The small town of Cozad, Nebraska, was preparing for a graduation celebration when tragedy struck. On the morning of May 11, authorities discovered all four members of the Koch family — Bailey, Jeremy, and their teenage sons Hudson and Asher — deceased in their home.
Those who knew them described a devoted, faith-filled family who fought tirelessly against Jeremy’s worsening mental illness. Bailey had documented their journey publicly through a Facebook page, advocating openly for mental health awareness and sharing both the setbacks and the hope. Days before the tragedy, she wrote that they finally felt heard and supported. The help, however, came too late.
Bailey’s parents, Lane and Peggy Kugler, stepped forward not to assign blame, but to demand change. Their message is urgent: America’s mental health system is failing families at scale. Long wait times, rural provider shortages, insurance barriers, and fragmented care leave millions without adequate treatment.

“Our daughter did everything right,” they wrote. “But the help didn’t come fast enough. That must change.”
Their grief has become a call to action — for expanded rural care, better insurance coverage, and a national commitment to treating mental illness as the medical emergency it truly is.

