Qaadir Lewis and Nazir Lewis
Qaadir Lewis and Nazir Lewis

Newly surfaced surveillance footage is raising more questions than answers in the case of the 19-year-old Georgia twins found dead with gunshot wounds on a mountain.

Qaadir and Naazir Lewis were reported missing earlier that day, after failing to board a scheduled flight to Boston, according to People. They had booked an Uber to the airport, but their travel plans were disrupted when the car failed to arrive on time.

That night, around 10:30 p.m., they were seen on security footage at a Shell gas station near their home in Lawrenceville, appearing calm and behaving normally.

Roughly 12 hours later, a hiker discovered both teens dead on Bell Mountain, located 90 miles from their residence. Deputies responding to the scene confirmed each had suffered gunshot wounds.

The Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI), which took over the case, initially suggested the deaths could be the result of a murder-suicide—but the official cause and manner of death remain undetermined pending further forensic testing.

The family has strongly pushed back against the murder-suicide theory. They say the twins had no ties to Bell Mountain and had future plans, including launching a clothing line.

"My nephews wouldn't do this! They came from a family of love, and twins wanted so much for their future, they had dreams of starting their very own clothing line," Yasmine Brawner, the aunt of the twins, said.

With the new surveillance video and mounting public pressure—fueled by the hashtag #JusticeForQaadirAndNaazir—relatives are urging investigators to dig deeper into what really happened.

Originally published on Lawyer Herald