Cadet Avery Koonce: A Bright Flight Interrupted
When 19-year-old Air Force Academy cadet Avery Koonce was found unresponsive in her dorm room in early September 2024, the news rippled through the Academy with disbelief. First responders attempted to revive her, but despite every effort, Avery’s life could not be restored.
Lt. Gen. Tony Bauernfeind, the Academy’s superintendent, spoke with visible grief, describing how deeply Avery had already touched those around her — her squadron, her track and field teammates, and her fellow cadets. “Our focus now,” he said, “is on surrounding her family and our community with care.”
The El Paso County Coroner’s Office later reported that Avery’s death was caused by Paeniclostridium sordellii sepsis, a rare but aggressive bacterial infection that had complicated a respiratory illness. A forensic pathologist explained that the infection had advanced swiftly, overwhelming her system. It was found in both her lungs and bloodstream, intensifying an existing respiratory condition.
Those close to her recalled that Avery had been fighting a severe cough in the days before she passed — but few could have imagined the hidden danger unfolding inside her body. This particular infection, though uncommon, can turn rapidly fatal, leading to acute inflammation and organ failure. In Avery’s case, the combination proved too powerful for even her young, athletic body to overcome.
Yet those who knew her refuse to let her story end with medical details.
A proud graduate of Thrall High School in Texas and a member of the Air Force Academy’s Class of 2028, Avery had a clear, radiant sense of purpose. She ran with intensity on the women’s track and field team, carried herself with quiet discipline, and dreamed of becoming a pilot. She had planned to major in biology and minor in kinesiology — a balance of science and motion that seemed to reflect her own life’s rhythm.
Congressman Pete Sessions, who nominated her to the Academy, called her “a remarkable young woman with a promising future.” Her mentors remembered her leadership, her laughter, and the steadiness with which she lifted others up — even in the demanding world of military training.
In the days following her passing, candles were lit, flags lowered, and stories shared. Friends described how she had a way of brightening rooms not by noise, but by presence. Her track coach said she ran “as if she had wind beneath her feet.”
For those who loved her, Avery’s story is not one of loss alone, but of a light that burned with purpose — a reminder of how a single, sincere life can leave a mark far deeper than its years.
And perhaps, somewhere beyond the reach of uniforms and ranks, the skies she longed to fly are finally hers.