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Campus Alert Archive
Auburn

Twenty-Three Minutes, Three Accidental Alerts: AU Alert Sends a Tornado, a HazMat, and an Active Shooter in the Same Hour

ALpolice activitytestmedium 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.

Within roughly twenty-three minutes on November 6, 2025, Auburn University's AU Alert system accidentally broadcast three separate templated emergency notifications — a tornado warning at 11:59 AM CST, a hazardous-materials alert at 12:05 PM, and an active-shooter alert at 12:22 PM — to the entire campus community of roughly 33,000 students and 7,000 employees. A technical error inside the Rave alert platform misfired three template messages back-to-back. There was no actual threat. Auburn issued a public apology, and The Auburn Plainsman editorialized under the headline 'AU Alert cries wolf,' citing the legitimacy-erosion risk for one of the SEC's largest campus alert audiences.

Alerts
4
Response
Killed
Injured
Institution
Auburn University
Public R1 · AL
~33,000 studentsRaveAU Alert
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

4 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 ALERTSMS
Approximate reconstruction141 chars
AU ALERT: Tornado Warning. Take shelter immediately in an interior room on the lowest floor. Stay away from windows. Monitor weather updates.

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

Reconstructed templated AU Alert tornado-warning text consistent with the [11:59 AM CST timestamp](https://www.wsfa.com/2025/11/06/auburn-university-responds-after-accidental-alerts/) reported by WSFA and the [Auburn Plainsman's malfunction account](https://www.theplainsman.com/article/2025/11/au-alert-experiences-malfunction)
Auburn's [AU Alert system runs on Rave](https://cws.auburn.edu/EmergencyGuidelines/pm/shooter); the three-message misfire was traced to a templated-message dispatch error rather than malicious activity
There was no actual severe-weather warning in effect for Lee County, Alabama at 11:59 AM CST — the Storm Prediction Center had no tornado watch active for the Auburn area on November 6, 2025
INITIAL ALERTSMS+6 min
Approximate reconstruction165 chars
AU ALERT: Hazardous Materials Incident. Avoid the affected area. Shelter in place. Close windows and doors. Turn off ventilation systems. Await further instructions.

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

Reconstructed templated AU Alert hazmat text — the second of the three misfired messages, six minutes after the first, with no underlying hazmat event in Lee County
The hazmat template's instructions to 'turn off ventilation systems' typically apply only to chemical-release events; their appearance with no incident produced visible confusion across campus, particularly in chemistry buildings
Auburn's [campus-safety hazardous-materials guidance](https://www.auburn.edu/administration/campus-safety/emergency/) defines specific shelter-in-place steps that depend on the nature of the agent — the templated message used the generic version
INITIAL ALERTSMS+23 min
Approximate reconstruction131 chars
AU ALERT: Active Shooter on Campus. Run, Hide, Fight. Call 911 when safe. Avoid the area. Follow instructions from law enforcement.

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

Reconstructed templated AU Alert active-shooter text — the third and most consequential misfire, [at 12:22 PM CST](https://alabamareflector.com/briefs/auburn-university-apologizes-for-accidentally-sending-shooter-tornado-hazmat-alerts/), prompting actual lockdown behavior across campus before the correction landed
Run, Hide, Fight is the [federal active-shooter response framework](https://www.cisa.gov/topics/physical-security/active-shooter-preparedness); Auburn's template borrows the language directly, which made the misfire indistinguishable from a real alert at first read
The active-shooter misfire came [just two months after the August 27 swatting hoax](https://www.wrbl.com/news/au-shaken-by-swatting-hoax-online-group-may-be-behind-wave-of-false-threats/) that put Auburn in the [Purgatory-linked swatting wave](https://abcnews.go.com/US/school-shooting-hoaxes-experts-underscore-seriousness-crimes-penalties/story?id=124984392); the institutional context made students particularly likely to take the alert seriously
CORRECTIONSMS
A technical error caused multiple AU Alerts to be sent through the emergency notification system. Please be assured that there is no active threat to campus or the community. The alerts were triggered unintentionally, and we are actively working to resolve the issue to prevent future occurrences. We understand the alerts may have caused concern or alarm, and we sincerely apologize for any confusion.
Verbatim text from Auburn University's official social media statement as quoted by the Alabama Reflector and multiple news outlets; the statement was issued through Auburn's homepage and social channels after the three misfired alerts
The Auburn Plainsman's [editorial 'AU Alert cries wolf'](https://www.theplainsman.com/article/2025/11/editorial-au-alert-cries-wolf) argued the misfire created a Clery-Act-relevant credibility problem because students who came to disregard AU Alert messages would be less responsive to a future real emergency
The 13-minute gap between the third misfire and the correction is roughly consistent with the [Eastern New Mexico 2016 accidental active-shooter alert recovery time](https://data.cases/2016-11-30-eastern-new-mexico-university-accidental-active-shooter.json) — a useful comparison datapoint for institutional response cycles
Context

Background

Auburn University is a 33,000-student SEC institution in Lee County, Alabama, operating its AU Alert emergency-notification system on the Rave platform. On November 6, 2025, between 11:59 AM and 12:22 PM CST, a Rave templated-message dispatch error caused three different emergency-notification templates to fire to the entire campus community in roughly twenty-three minutes: tornado warning, hazmat incident, and active shooter. Each used Auburn's standard templated language; none corresponded to a real event. WSFA's contemporaneous reporting and the Auburn Plainsman's malfunction account document the exact timestamps. Auburn Public Safety issued an apology and committed to a Rave audit; the Alabama Reflector's brief captured the formal language. The Auburn Plainsman's subsequent editorial, 'AU Alert cries wolf,' argued the misfire created legitimate concerns about future-alert responsiveness — particularly given that Auburn was already among the campuses targeted by the 2025 Purgatory swatting wave and had just experienced an August 27 active-shooter hoax. The case is the largest-scale documented multi-template alert misfire in this archive's catalog: most accidental alerts — like the 2012 Montana Tech, the 2016 Eastern New Mexico, and the 2026 Hawaii Pacific — involved a single mistaken template, not three in cascade. The cascading nature of the Auburn misfire raised the alert-platform-architecture question for Rave's higher-education customers: whether templates should require multi-factor confirmation before broadcast, especially for the active-shooter template.
Analysis

Key Findings

Three different emergency-notification templates — tornado, hazmat, and active shooter — misfired within 23 minutes on a single Rave platform deployment, the largest cascade documented in this archive
The 13-minute correction time between the active-shooter misfire and the apology message is comparable to other accidental-alert recovery cycles but felt longer due to the cascading nature of the misfires
The Auburn Plainsman's editorial response — 'AU Alert cries wolf' — explicitly invoked the Clery-Act-relevant credibility concern that students who learn to disregard AU Alert messages will be less responsive to future real emergencies
Coming just two months after the August 27 Purgatory-linked swatting hoax, the misfire highlighted how alert-platform reliability sits alongside swatting resilience as a 2025 institutional-trust challenge
Outcome
No injuries. Auburn Public Safety issued a formal apology and committed to a Rave platform audit. No actual tornado, hazmat, or active shooter event occurred.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Student Paper
  2. Student Paper
  3. News
  4. News
  5. News
  6. News
Tags
accidental-alertsystem-malfunctionrave-platformactive-shooter-templatetornado-templatehazmat-templatealabamaseccry-wolfalert-credibilitynon-incidentpublic-r1testUnfounded
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion