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Hazing News

Jock Jokesters: Did coaches give permission to haze at USC?

Excerpt:

In January Incident, Eight Veteran Players Cited By UCPD for On-Campus Hazing of Freshmen
Campus officials say they are investigating an incident in which eight Cal baseball players were cited by UC police for participating in hazing six freshman players in January.According to a police report, UCPD officers found the eight veteran baseball players near Evans Diamond with six freshman players who were wearing only G-string underwear and shoes just after 11 p.m. on Jan. 15. Two of the freshmen were blindfolded.

The players described the incident as an “initiation” event to the police. The six freshmen were standing outside in the 34-degree weather waiting, team members told police, to run an obstacle course set up on Evans Diamond. The officers did not find an obstacle course, the report said.

UCPD Lt. Douglas Wing said police do not suspect alcohol was involved in the incident.

The players were disciplined internally by the coaches and the athletic department, said Deputy Athletic Director Steve Holton. A report has also been filed with Student Judicial Affairs, said UC Berkeley Dean of Students Jonathan Poullard.

Holton said the students had clearance to be on the premises.

“The coaches thought it was going to be a legitimate team-building activity,” he said.

UCPD alerted the Alameda County District Attorney’s office to the incident. Assistant District Attorney Martin Brown said he did not charge the players with a crime because no one was injured, the players said they got permission to use the facilities and he did not see any indication of

criminal intent.

“(The incident) was on the lower end of the hazing spectrum,” Brown said.

Holton said he met with head coach David Esquer and pitching coach Dan Hubbs to discuss disciplinary actions the morning after the incident.

Poullard said campus officials are still investigating the incident. Student Judicial Affairs Director Neal Rajmaira said he was not aware whether a hearing on the incident has been scheduled.

None of the players were suspended from the team or lost playing time, Holton said. The eight students have all played in games this year, and a number of them are starting players.

“There were different physical activities that they were required to do,” Holton said, adding that players were required to write letters of apology to campus security.

“We handled it internally and we put down some guidelines and procedures for the people that participated in that,” Esquer said. “Steve (Holton) was comfortable with what we had done internally. We had three or four steps of things the kids had to do.”

Holton said the students had received clearance from coaches to use the locker room on the night of the incident, but Esquer said he did not clear the plans.

“I did not personally OK them to use the locker room. No one on our staff was involved in condoning any of those actions,” Esquer said. “They were actually caught entering the premises, which they weren’t supposed to be.”

The police report stated that the players questioned by the UCPD officers said Hubbs had signed off on the event, and stated that Hubbs “knows, but doesn’t know” about the event and that they “do it every year.”

Hubbs could not be reached for comment yesterday. Three players, including one listed as a suspect in the police report, declined to comment.

Ryan Gorcey covers baseball. Julie Strack is the assistant city news editor. Contact them at newsdesk@dailycal.org.

Categories
Hazing News

Georgia State orientation leader under review for alleged training exercises

Excerpt: [Friends say “Jarrett Williams…was training students in February to do new student orientations. To prep for some cheerleading, his friends say he had students to push-ups.“When he told them to do push-ups he said they were all going to do it as a team if they keep messing up and basically two female students were visibly upset. They started crying that they didn’t want to do it anymore.”
Categories
Hazing News

Family claims Fresno death in 2006 was hazing related

All: no charges were filed in this case. If the suit is successful, it would cancel my research showing no deaths in a US Greek chapter in 2006. Link

excerpt: The family of a student who died at a fraternity house after a weekend of drinking is suing Cal State Fresno and the fraternity for wrongful death. Danny Ray Daniels, 19, was found dead in his bed at the Phi Gamma Delta house in January 2006.According to a coroner’s report, he had a blood-alcohol level more than four times the legal limit at the time of his death. His parents — Cassandra and Danny Daniels — are seeking unspecified compensation in a wrongful death lawsuit filed in Fresno County Superior Court on Friday. They claim their son was induced or forced to drink what was described in the suit as “massive quantities of alcohol” as part of fraternity hazing.

Categories
Hazing News

Cluster of freshmen athlete incidents in South Carolina

Is this a bunch of bad apples or were these first-year players ordered to do these stunts?

That is the question. LinkÂ