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Hazing News

Nursing student sues over what he says was hazing by A. J. Klhone and Dr. Demetrius Porche and Laura Bonanno of LSU

Here is the story link: The Louisiana Record

John A. Laney v. Louisiana State University School of Nursing, Health and Sciences Center and A. J. Klhone and Dr. Demetrius Porche and Laura Bonanno

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Hazing News

D.A. says hitting below the belt in hazing is not a sexual offense.

Fine–isn’t it assault and battery, though, Mr. D.A? Just asking. Moderator.

A look into the mind of a D.A.

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Hazing News

Video of DKE hazing; Writer reflects on Alberta DKE ousting

Video that led to DKE bust.

Link to Maclean’s commentary

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Hazing News

Query: does anyone know if Jefferson High School hazers were charged with a crime?

Moderator:  This story needs a follow-up, but I have not seen whether charges were placed or never placed. Thanks for any help.

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Hazing News

Navy’s Michael Toussaint keeps rank: Bahraine canine unit hazing

Excerpt from Youth Radio

By Charlie Foster

An assistant secretary of the Navy upheld the forced retirement of a senior chief accused of hazing junior sailors in a canine unit based in Bahrain.

The decision comes four years after a Navy investigation in which sailors claimed Michael Toussaint, a chief petty officer at the time, had acted as ringleader for a culture of abuse within the kennel between 2005 and 2006. Last February, Toussaint denied much of his alleged misconduct before a retirement review board that was convened months after he was censured by the Secretary of the Navy.
“Ultimately, MACS Toussaint’s conduct as the Leading Chief Petty Officer assigned to the Military Working Dog Division, Naval Security Forces, Bahrain, did not meet the standards expected of senior enlisted leadership in our Navy,” said Juan Garcia, assistant secretary of the Navy for manpower and reserve affairs.

Garcia followed the paygrade recommendation of the retirement board, which said Toussaint should receive an honorable discharge and a pension at his current rank. The board members cited insufficient evidence uncovered in the Navy’s hazing investigation and a 2009 tour of duty in Afghanistan during which he saved the life of a marine.

“[W]hen looking at his career in its entirety,” said Garcia, “I have determined that his conduct did not rise to a level sufficient to warrant retirement in a paygrade less than E-8.”