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Auburn tight end Philip Lutzenkirchen speaks during the SEC Football Media Days at the Wynfrey Hotel in Hoover, Ala., on Wednesday, July 18, 2012. (The Birmingham News/Mark Almond)

AUBURN, Alabama -- Police suspect alcohol was used by each of the four occupants of a vehicle which crashed Sunday, killing former Auburn star Philip Lutzenkirchen and the driver, according to a traffic crash report released Monday to AL.com and multiple media outlets.



The driver, Joseph Ian Davis, and Lutzenkirchen died at the scene of the single-vehicle accident shortly after 3 a.m. Sunday in Troup County outside of LaGrange, Georgia.



Blood toxicology tests were performed on Davis and Lutzenkirchen. The tests will "take weeks to complete," a Georgia State Patrol spokesperson told AL.com Monday. The blood tests are part of the death investigations, a spokesperson said.



Davis failed to stop at a stop sign at a T-intersection, crossing an intersecting road and impacting a ditch at an unknown speed before traveling an additional 89 feet and striking another ditch, according to the report. The vehicle traveled further along the edge of a church driveway before hitting a fence, going airborne for 42 feet and overturning several times near Upper Big Springs and Lower Big Springs roads.



Lutzenkirchen, 23, was ejected from the back seat of the 2006 Chevrolet Tahoe and died at the scene. He was not wearing a seat belt. Davis was partially ejected and was not wearing a seat belt.

Davis was a catcher and tried out for the University of Georgia baseball team last fall.



Elizabeth Ann Seton Craig, 22, of Eatonton, Ga., was also ejected. Christian Tanner Case, 20, of Dadeville, Ala., was injured and both survivors were transported to West Georgia Health Systems in LaGrange. Alcohol tests were not conducted on the survivors at the scene, according to the report.



An officer was dispatched at 3:17 a.m. and arrived at the scene at 4:17 a.m., according to the report. A resident near the accident said the two survivors knocked on her door asking for her to call the police, according to WSBTV. She called the police and Craig and Case returned to the scene of the accident with a flashlight. When Craig and Case returned to the neighbor's door, she called the police again.

"It wasn't maybe 10 minutes until [the police] were out here," the neighbor said. "That was about 3 o'clock this morning."

The first state trooper arrived on the scene at 3:50 a.m. and the investigating trooper arrived at 4:17 a.m., a Georgia State Patrol spokesperson said Monday.



Lutzenkirchen, a Marietta, Ga., native, is known widely for his kindness and generosity off the field as much as he was celebrated on the field during his four-year career at Auburn. He caught 14 touchdowns between 2009 and 2012, setting the school record for scores by a tight end. His career ended midway through his senior season due to a hip injury.



Lutzenkirchen's go-ahead touchdown catch from Cam Newton early in the fourth quarter of the 2010 Iron Bowl capped a comeback from a 24-0 deficit and cemented his legacy, placing him alongside Auburn's greats. Auburn beat Alabama 28-27 in Tuscaloosa and advanced to win the SEC and BCS championships.



A public memorial service for Lutzenkirchen is scheduled for Wednesday at 7 p.m. CDT inside Lassiter High School's football stadium in Marietta, Georgia. A public service is slated for 9:30 a.m. CDT at inside Transfiguration Catholic Church in Marietta, Georgia. The funeral Mass will follow at 12 p.m. CDT.



Fans gathered to remember Lutzenkirchen at Toomer's Corner late Sunday afternoon.



A public memorial is being planned at Auburn and arrangements are pending.