Austin Eubanks

He was one of the most well-known survivors of the Columbine High School massacre, both in its immediate aftermath and in post-event commentary.

[7] Eubanks did not return to Columbine High School after the shooting and was instead privately tutored at home three days a week until he graduated in 2000.

[9] In 2006, Eubanks recognized that he had developed tolerance for prescription medications of Adderall, OxyContin, and Xanax.

[10] Eubanks accomplished longer-term sobriety at the age of 29[11] after experiencing rock bottom on April 2, 2011, when he woke up in jail without any memory of what took place.

Eubanks was the executive director of Quiet River Transitional Recovery Community in Denver.

[15] On May 2, 2019, sixteen days before his death, Eubanks spoke at the 2019 Connecticut Opioid and Prescription Drug Prevention Conference.

[10] On May 18, 2019, Eubanks' body was found during a welfare check at his residence in Steamboat Springs, Colorado.

In partnership with The Onsite Foundation, a nonprofit that provides counseling and emotional health education, the family launched a therapeutic program for survivors of mass violence.

Eubanks with one of his sons, August 2009