Categories
Hazing News

Parents claim daughter’s injuries inflicted by FAMU band during hazing

Here is the story link and excerpt

Madison Hunter contacted 11Alive after hearing Champion’s parents speak Tuesday. He and Kimberly Hunter said their daughter Bria, a freshman clarinet player in the Marching 100, was also a victim of hazing and was hospitalized only weeks before Champion’s death.

On November 19th, 26-year-old Champion collapsed shortly after the band performed at the Florida Classic. He was taken to a hospital where he later died. Witnesses say he was vomiting and complained he was unable to breathe before he collapsed. The Orange County sheriff believes hazing is involved.

The Hunters said they only know bits and pieces of what happened to their daughter, but they say it began with a phone call home in early November. Kimberly could tell something was wrong with her daughter, but didn’t know the extent until she saw her Bria that weekend.

“She walked towards me in the car and she was walking stiff-legged,” Hunter recalled. “Then she tried to get into the car and she couldn’t bend her legs to get in. She basically told me they had been punching her in her legs.”

A trip to the hospital proved Bria had a fractured thigh bone and damaged knee. Hunter’s parents contacted director Dr. Julian White and said he immediately took action. Of the 26 students suspended leading up to this year’s Florida Classic, Madison Hunter said nearly a dozen were connected to hazing against his daughter.

Categories
Hazing News

NPR transcript

Copyright © 2011 National Public Radio®. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.

MICHEL MARTIN, HOST:

And now, we turn to an issue also involving violence, but much closer to home. In Florida, a drum major with Florida A&M University’s marching band died recently, and police suspect hazing played a role. Funeral services for 26 year old Robert Champion are scheduled for tomorrow.

In the wake of Champion’s death, Florida A&M has called for an investigation and cancelled all upcoming band performances. The university has also fired its longtime band director, Julian White.

Now, many people are probably familiar with hazing allegations directed at fraternities and sports teams, but many were surprised to hear that hazing may play a part in other groups, like a marching band. So, we wanted to know more about this, so we reached out to someone who has studied the topic of hazing extensively.

Hank Nuwer is the author of several books on hazing. He’s also an associate professor of journalism at Franklin College in Franklin, Indiana. Thank you so much for joining us.

HANK NUWER: Thank you.

MARTIN: How did you get interested in the whole subject of hazing?

NUWER: Well, I was a graduate student at the University of Nevada, Reno, when a death occurred in 1975, in October. The death was of John Davies, and a lot of us simply walked by while that hazing was done and then a second one at a bar, and then a third one was done in the middle of nowhere and John Davies died and another pledge had brain damage.

So I contacted Human Behavior magazine to write about the group dynamics, the group think involved, and got the assignment.

MARTIN: Now, is this something that is a particular feature of life on some campuses more than others? For example, I think many incidents involving HBCUs, Historically Black Colleges and Universities, have gotten public attention. But does your reporting indicate that this is something that tends to happen on HBCUs more than others, or are all institutions or are some institutions more likely to have this than others? Is there a through line?

NUWER: Definitely, some are more likely to have it than others. If you have a culture of hazing, it usually goes back many, many years. And if you take an institution such as Florida A&M, it’s not only been a series of horrific hazing incidents that have cost a lot in terms of civil suits, but they’ve also had fraternities involved in hazing beatings. And, in fact, Florida, which has about the toughest hazing law in the nation, with making it a third degree felony, has had people sentenced for two years in a Kappa Alpha Psi beating.

MARTIN: What are we talking about? When we talk about hazing, what are we talking about? And why does it persist? You know, what’s it for? What’s it about?

NUWER: Well, hazing has a lot of different nuances, as we can see from this case here. It’s usually thought of as anything silly, demeaning or dangerous that’s used to welcome people into a group. But, over time, we have seen it morph where accepted members of a band or accepted members of a group who are seen as messing up, not measuring up, disrespecting the house, have been punished. And we’ve seen, at the high school level, serious hazing incidents, including sexual assault, that have been done to cause someone to quit the team, not to bond with the team.


Link to BOTTOM OF PAGE the whole NPR transcript

Categories
Hazing News

National Public Radio looks at hazing, “an equal opportunity disgrace.”

Hank Nuwer on the death of Robert Champion in band hazing at FAMU

Categories
Hazing News

Hazing injury to Charles Strout, Bowdoin College, 1881

Here is a photo (with story) of Charles Strout who suffered a serious eye injury when allegedly someone in a patrolling hazing party threw a chunk of coal through his window. The father sued those he believed responsible. The article in the New York Times ran 130 years ago today.

Categories
Hazing News

Update on Robert Champion death

Here is the story link.  Reporters have been pursuing reports that Champion may have been targetted by peers for dropping baton at halftime of last band performance. http://www.ajc.com/news/lawsuits-planned-in-famu-1241148.html