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Campus Alert Archive
USAFA

Anonymous Threat to Fairchild Hall: USAFA Evacuates Academic Building, Working Dogs Sweep the Cadet Area in Under Three Hours

CObomb threatemergency notificationmedium confidence
UnfoundedNo evidence of an actual threat was found. The institutional response is documented because the alert communication is identical to what would occur during a real incident.

On the morning of Tuesday, February 25, 2025, the U.S. Air Force Academy responded to an anonymous threat directed at one of its academic buildings, believed to be Fairchild Hall — the Academy's central academic building housing roughly 80% of cadet classroom instruction. The building and surrounding areas were evacuated. 10th Security Forces Squadron defenders, partnered with working-dog support from Peterson Space Force Base and Colorado Springs Police Department, conducted a search. Shortly before 11 a.m. MST officials had cleared the cadet area and returned to normal operations.

Alerts
2
Response
Killed
Injured
Institution
United States Air Force Academy
Military · CO
~4,400 studentsUSAFA Alert
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

2 messages in sequence · 1 verified verbatim

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTmulti-channel
Approximate reconstruction174 chars
USAFA ALERT: Anonymous threat reported to an academic building. First responders are evacuating the facility and surrounding areas. Avoid the cadet area until further notice.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Reconstructed message — Academy did not release a verbatim copy of the initial alert; reporting consistently described the building and surrounding area as being evacuated and the cadet area as 'off-limits' during the search
Service academies are unusual in the alert ecosystem because their security force (10th SFS at USAFA) operates under DoD Force Protection Condition rules rather than civilian Clery Act timely-warning conventions
The Academy intentionally did not name the building publicly during the response — KRDO and an unidentified source identified it as Fairchild Hall after the all-clear
ALL CLEARFacebook
USAFA: The U.S. Air Force Academy responded to an anonymous threat to one of our academic buildings this morning. First responders evacuated the facility and surrounding areas. Partnering with working dog support from Peterson Space Force Base and the Colorado Springs Police Department, 10th Security Forces Squadron defenders conducted a thorough search of the affected facility. Operations have returned to normal and the cadet area has been cleared. The incident remains under investigation.
The all-clear message reads as a press-release-style statement rather than a tactical alert — characteristic of how service academies communicate, since DoD installations also serve as public-affairs sensitive sites
Naming 10th Security Forces Squadron and Peterson Space Force Base explicitly is unusual for campus alerts and reflects USAFA's joint-installation nature
Working dog support implies the investigators treated the anonymous threat as potentially explosive-device related — consistent with how the Academy treats most non-specific phone threats against academic buildings
Context

Background

The U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs sits in a unique category within American higher education: simultaneously an accredited undergraduate institution and a Department of Defense installation. When a threat arrives, the response is governed by Force Protection Condition (FPCON) rules and conducted by 10th Security Forces Squadron — not by a civilian campus police department. That distinctive posture was on display on February 25, 2025, when an anonymous threat to an academic building forced an evacuation. KRDO and an unnamed source identified the building as Fairchild Hall, the Academy's central academic building — where roughly 80 percent of cadet instruction takes place. Working-dog support arrived from neighboring Peterson Space Force Base, and Colorado Springs PD joined the sweep. Before 11 a.m. the cadet area was cleared, and the Academy issued a press-release-style all-clear. The case is significant because it shows how service academies translate FPCON procedures into campus-facing communication: a brief, locally vague initial alert, followed by a longer institutional statement once the threat is contained. The Academy never publicly confirmed Fairchild Hall as the target, in keeping with operational security practice that withholds details until investigations conclude.
Analysis

Key Findings

Service academies use DoD Force Protection Condition rules — not Clery timely-warning conventions — to guide threat response and notification
The Academy's all-clear functioned more like a press release than a tactical alert, reflecting its dual nature as a school and DoD installation
Naming 10th SFS and Peterson Space Force Base in the public statement is unusual and reflects USAFA's joint-base reality
Working-dog support indicates investigators treated the anonymous threat as potentially an improvised explosive device rather than a swatting hoax
The Academy chose not to publicly name the building (reported as Fairchild Hall) during the response, consistent with OPSEC practice
Outcome
No explosive devices, weapons, or credible threat were located. The cadet area was cleared and normal Academy operations resumed before 11 a.m. MST. The Air Force Office of Special Investigations (AFOSI) opened an investigation into the source of the threat; no public arrest had been announced as of mid-2025.
Provenance

Sources

  1. News
  2. News
  3. News
  4. News
  5. News
  6. Official
Tags
bomb-threatservice-academymilitaryair-force-academycoloradocolorado-springsfairchild-hallanonymous-threat10th-sfsfpconevacuationUnfounded
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion