Fort Campbell Soldier convicted after allegedly pointing loaded firearm at woman and child

FORT CAMPBELL, Ky. — A private first class assigned to the 101st Airborne Division has been sentenced to a bad-conduct discharge following a general court-martial stemming from a series of domestic violence allegations that prosecutors say escalated over the course of nearly a year in Clarksville, Tennessee.

PFC Kyle C. Borowski, an E-3 assigned to 6-101st Aviation Regiment, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), was convicted at a general court-martial convened at Fort Campbell. The sentence was adjudged November 13, 2025, and formally entered January 9, 2026.

The Statement of Trial Results reflects that Borowski pleaded guilty to at least one specification of domestic violence and was sentenced by a military judge sitting alone to a bad-conduct discharge. No confinement or forfeitures were imposed. Court-martial records show Borowski elected trial by military judge alone rather than by panel.

Despite the seriousness of several charged specifications — including firearm-related allegations — the adjudged sentence did not include confinement.

The underlying charge sheet outlines what prosecutors described as a pattern of escalating conduct between July 2024 and April 2025.

According to the charging document, the alleged misconduct began in the summer of 2024. Between July and August, Borowski was accused of unlawfully grabbing his dating partner and throwing her during an altercation. During that same period, prosecutors allege he damaged property by throwing a cellular phone, conduct described as intended to intimidate.

By early fall, the allegations expanded beyond physical force alone. Between September and November 2024, Borowski was charged with operating a vehicle at an unsafe speed in excess of the posted limit while stating that he did not care whether he or others would die — words prosecutors characterized as part of an escalating pattern of intimidation.

In December 2024, he was charged with striking the woman in the face with his hand. Additional specifications allege that between December 2024 and January 2025 he unlawfully pulled her body with his hands during another confrontation.

That same winter period included further allegations of property destruction, with charging documents describing objects thrown inside a residence, again characterized as conduct intended to threaten or intimidate.

The most serious allegations emerged in January 2025. The charge sheet accuses Borowski of pointing a loaded firearm at a woman and a child. In a separate specification, he was charged with recklessly handling a loaded firearm without muzzle control in proximity to multiple individuals — conduct described as likely to cause death or grievous bodily harm.

The final alleged incident occurred in April 2025, when prosecutors say Borowski pushed the woman into a wall and slammed her body onto the ground with his hands.

While several specifications were dismissed prior to findings, at least one domestic violence charge resulted in a guilty finding and the imposition of a punitive discharge.

Separate civil court records from Montgomery County General Sessions Court show that Aliayah Renae Bompers filed an Order of Protection petition against Borowski on April 17, 2025. The case remains open. Court entries reflect multiple continuances throughout 2025, with the ex parte order extended and most recently rescheduled for a January 20, 2026 hearing.

An earlier Order of Protection petition filed in May 2024 by Kenneth Dale Jones was ultimately dismissed by the court in August 2024.

A bad-conduct discharge is a punitive separation adjudged at court-martial and carries long-term consequences, including loss of most veterans’ benefits.

© 2026 The Salty Soldier. All rights reserved. Reproduction without written consent is strictly prohibited.

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