Skip to content
Campus Alert Archive
USAFA

A 19-Year-Old Track Athlete Found Unresponsive in Her Dorm: The Air Force Academy's Most Difficult Community Message of 2024

COotheradvisoryhigh confidence
Confirmed Threat

On the evening of Wednesday, September 4, 2024, Cadet 4th Class Avery Koonce, 19, of Taylor, Texas, was found unresponsive in her dorm room at the U.S. Air Force Academy. Academy first responders attempted lifesaving measures, which were unsuccessful. Superintendent Lt Gen Tony Bauernfeind issued an Academy-wide community message the next day. An October 2024 autopsy report attributed the death to Paeniclostridium sordellii sepsis complicating parainfluenza laryngotracheobronchitis — an acute bacterial-viral co-infection — not suicide or any external cause.

Alerts
1
Response
Killed
1
Injured
0
Institution
United States Air Force Academy
Military · CO
~4,400 studentsUSAFA Public Affairs / Academy-Wide Email
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

1 message in sequence · 1 verified verbatim

INITIAL ALERTEmail
Today, we mourn the loss of Cadet 4th Class Avery Koonce, 19, of Taylor, Texas. Avery was a member of the Class of 2028 and a member of the Women's Track and Field team. We lost an incredible teammate last night — while only with us for a short time, Avery positively impacted her unit, her intercollegiate team, and her class — her loss will be felt across USAFA. Our team is focused on providing support to Avery's family, Cadet Squadron 38, the Track and Field team, and the entire Academy family. The cause of death is under investigation.
This is not a Clery Act emergency notification — it is a community advisory message from the Superintendent following a non-criminal cadet death; USAFA issues these through Academy email lists and public-affairs channels rather than the alert system
Superintendent Lt Gen Tony Bauernfeind names Cadet Squadron 38, the Track and Field team, and the broader cadet wing as specific audiences requiring support — characteristic of how military academies acknowledge the small-unit social structure that civilian universities lack
The pre-autopsy phrasing 'cause of death is under investigation' is the standard DoD formula used in any unexpected death pending forensic determination; it should not be read as suggesting external cause
USAFA never publicly framed the death as anything other than a community loss — the institution's communications consistently avoided speculation, a posture that proved correct when the October autopsy attributed death to acute infection
Context

Background

The death of Cadet 4th Class Avery Koonce on September 4, 2024, fits inside a category of campus communication that the archive sometimes underrepresents: the community advisory message issued by an institution's leadership after a non-criminal death. For service academies, the structure of these messages is distinct. Unlike civilian campuses, where comparable communications often emanate from the president's office or counseling center, service academies route them through the Superintendent and name the specific small units affected. The Bauernfeind statement explicitly lists 'Cadet Squadron 38' — the 110-cadet unit Koonce belonged to — alongside 'the Track and Field team' and 'the entire Academy family.' The DoD formula 'cause of death is under investigation' is procedural; in this case the El Paso County Coroner's October 1, 2024 autopsy found Koonce died of Paeniclostridium sordellii sepsis complicating parainfluenza laryngotracheobronchitis — an acute bacterial-viral co-infection rather than any cause involving violence, mental health, or training. Koonce, from Taylor, Texas, was in her first month at the Academy with the Class of 2028. The case stands alongside other 2024 cadet deaths at military service academies and contributes to a longer institutional conversation about cadet medical surveillance — particularly given that recent USAFA cadet deaths have prompted family-led legal action in other contexts. Koonce's family did not pursue litigation.
Analysis

Key Findings

Service-academy community advisories from Superintendents differ structurally from civilian campus condolence messages — they name specific small units (here, Cadet Squadron 38) reflecting the military's tighter social structure
The DoD phrase 'cause of death is under investigation' is procedural and should not be read as implying any specific cause; the October 2024 autopsy attributed Koonce's death to acute infection
USAFA's pre-autopsy messaging avoided speculation about cause — a discipline that proved correct given the rare bacterial-viral co-infection diagnosis weeks later
Cadet 4th Class is the most junior rank at USAFA, equivalent to a college freshman — Koonce had been at the Academy for approximately one month at the time of her death
This kind of community advisory is not a Clery Act emergency notification or timely warning, but it functions as the primary institutional communication after a non-criminal cadet death and belongs in any complete archive of campus emergency messaging
Outcome
Death attributed to acute infection per El Paso County Coroner's Office autopsy released October 1, 2024. Cadet Koonce was a Class of 2028 member and athlete on the Women's Track and Field team. USAFA provided 'a full complement of support services' including chaplains and mental-health professionals to Cadet Squadron 38, the Track and Field team, and the broader cadet wing.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Official
  2. News
  3. national media
  4. national media
  5. News
  6. national media
  7. Official
Tags
cadet-deathcommunity-advisoryservice-academymilitaryair-force-academycolorado-springsinfectioncadet-squadron-38track-and-fieldnon-criminal-death
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion