Categories
Hazing News

Hats off to these four young life savers. Bravo!!! Bravo (Knight report)

When Kappa Sigma brother Nick Pena traveled to New Orleans for a fraternity conference last weekend, he and his brothers probably had hardly anything on their minds but saving their fraternity’s chapter at UCF.

And they did.

But before he and his brothers finished their drive back to Orlando, they ended up saving something more than a fraternity chapter — they saved a man’s life.

“It was raining really bad,” Pena told the Daytona Beach News-Journal, after he noticed a vehicle crashed in a ditch through some trees on I-75, just south of I-10. “I stopped the car and ran over to the (crashed) car.”

When he arrived in those woods he found a horrific scene. A 2008 Ford Edge had smashed into a tree. An entire family inside was screaming, including a little baby girl.

“The first thing I did was I grabbed the baby and I told the mother to follow me as I took them to our car,” Peña told the paper.

But the worst injury appeared to be to the girl’s grandfather, Melvin Ascott. His teeth were knocked out, his face was covered in blood and his arm was severed above his bicep.

“He kept saying, ‘I need an ambulance. I am hurt,’ Pena told the News-Journal.

That’s when Pena grabbed his brother, Chris Dowda’s, belt and tried tying it around the man’s arm to stop the bleeding.

It didn’t work.
Like us to get news like this on your facebook feed, & possibly win an iPad! At that point, another Kappa Sig brother, Joshua Frost, 21, grabbed a t-shirt and another man grabbed a screwdriver. Pena used the tools to make a tourniquet around the man’s arm to slow the bleeding.

“We had a blanket over him because he was going into shock and I used part of the blanket to put pressure where the arm was severed,” Peña told the paper. “I kept telling the gentleman that everything is going be OK. I kept talking to him until the ambulance got there 10 minutes after the 9-1-1 call and the EMTs took over.”

The four UCF students even helped paramedics find the man’s missing arm 20 feet from where that SUV smashed into the tree.

Ascott was rushed to Shands Hospital in Gainvesville. He survived.

Pena was called a hero in the Daytona Beach paper, but friends say he’s not asking for attention.

“Nicholas is very humble about it but he deserves the attention because what he did is so positive,” Frost told the paper.

As for Pena, he told the paper, “I am just glad we saw the car on the side of the road. Once we got to it, I was glad that I was able to do what I did.”

KnightNews.com is working to update this story with more information. Check back later for more details.

When Kappa Sigma brother Nick Pena traveled to New Orleans for a fraternity conference last weekend, he and his brothers probably had hardly anything on their minds but saving their fraternity’s chapter at UCF.

And they did.

But before he and his brothers finished their drive back to Orlando, they ended up saving something more than a fraternity chapter — they saved a man’s life.

“It was raining really bad,” Pena told the Daytona Beach News-Journal, after he noticed a vehicle crashed in a ditch through some trees on I-75, just south of I-10. “I stopped the car and ran over to the (crashed) car.”

When he arrived in those woods he found a horrific scene. A 2008 Ford Edge had smashed into a tree. An entire family inside was screaming, including a little baby girl.

“The first thing I did was I grabbed the baby and I told the mother to follow me as I took them to our car,” Peña told the paper.

But the worst injury appeared to be to the girl’s grandfather, Melvin Ascott. His teeth were knocked out, his face was covered in blood and his arm was severed above his bicep.

“He kept saying, ‘I need an ambulance. I am hurt,’ Pena told the News-Journal.

That’s when Pena grabbed his brother, Chris Dowda’s, belt and tried tying it around the man’s arm to stop the bleeding.

It didn’t work.
Like us to get news like this on your facebook feed, & possibly win an iPad! At that point, another Kappa Sig brother, Joshua Frost, 21, grabbed a t-shirt and another man grabbed a screwdriver. Pena used the tools to make a tourniquet around the man’s arm to slow the bleeding.

“We had a blanket over him because he was going into shock and I used part of the blanket to put pressure where the arm was severed,” Peña told the paper. “I kept telling the gentleman that everything is going be OK. I kept talking to him until the ambulance got there 10 minutes after the 9-1-1 call and the EMTs took over.”

The four UCF students even helped paramedics find the man’s missing arm 20 feet from where that SUV smashed into the tree.

Ascott was rushed to Shands Hospital in Gainvesville. He survived.

Pena was called a hero in the Daytona Beach paper, but friends say he’s not asking for attention.

“Nicholas is very humble about it but he deserves the attention because what he did is so positive,” Frost told the paper.

As for Pena, he told the paper, “I am just glad we saw the car on the side of the road. Once we got to it, I was glad that I was able to do what I did.”

KnightNews.com is working to update this story with more information. Check back later for more details.

When Kappa Sigma brother Nick Pena traveled to New Orleans for a fraternity conference last weekend, he and his brothers probably had hardly anything on their minds but saving their fraternity’s chapter at UCF.

And they did.

But before he and his brothers finished their drive back to Orlando, they ended up saving something more than a fraternity chapter — they saved a man’s life.

“It was raining really bad,” Pena told the Daytona Beach News-Journal, after he noticed a vehicle crashed in a ditch through some trees on I-75, just south of I-10. “I stopped the car and ran over to the (crashed) car.”

When he arrived in those woods he found a horrific scene. A 2008 Ford Edge had smashed into a tree. An entire family inside was screaming, including a little baby girl.

Sponsored Advertisement (Story Continues Below)

midpage2

“The first thing I did was I grabbed the baby and I told the mother to follow me as I took them to our car,” Peña told the paper.

But the worst injury appeared to be to the girl’s grandfather, Melvin Ascott. His teeth were knocked out, his face was covered in blood and his arm was severed above his bicep.

“He kept saying, ‘I need an ambulance. I am hurt,’ Pena told the News-Journal.

That’s when Pena grabbed his brother, Chris Dowda’s, belt and tried tying it around the man’s arm to stop the bleeding.

It didn’t work.
Like us to get news like this on your facebook feed, & possibly win an iPad! At that point, another Kappa Sig brother, Joshua Frost, 21, grabbed a t-shirt and another man grabbed a screwdriver. Pena used the tools to make a tourniquet around the man’s arm to slow the bleeding.

“We had a blanket over him because he was going into shock and I used part of the blanket to put pressure where the arm was severed,” Peña told the paper. “I kept telling the gentleman that everything is going be OK. I kept talking to him until the ambulance got there 10 minutes after the 9-1-1 call and the EMTs took over.”

The four UCF students even helped paramedics find the man’s missing arm 20 feet from where that SUV smashed into the tree.

Ascott was rushed to Shands Hospital in Gainvesville. He survived.

Pena was called a hero in the Daytona Beach paper, but friends say he’s not asking for attention.

“Nicholas is very humble about it but he deserves the attention because what he did is so positive,” Frost told the paper.

As for Pena, he told the paper, “I am just glad we saw the car on the side of the road. Once we got to it, I was glad that I was able to do what I did.”

KnightNews.com is working to update this story with more information. Check back later for more details.

When Kappa Sigma brother Nick Pena traveled to New Orleans for a fraternity conference last weekend, he and his brothers probably had hardly anything on their minds but saving their fraternity’s chapter at UCF.

And they did.

But before he and his brothers finished their drive back to Orlando, they ended up saving something more than a fraternity chapter — they saved a man’s life.

“It was raining really bad,” Pena told the Daytona Beach News-Journal, after he noticed a vehicle crashed in a ditch through some trees on I-75, just south of I-10. “I stopped the car and ran over to the (crashed) car.”

When he arrived in those woods he found a horrific scene. A 2008 Ford Edge had smashed into a tree. An entire family inside was screaming, including a little baby girl.

Sponsored Advertisement (Story Continues Below)

midpage2

“The first thing I did was I grabbed the baby and I told the mother to follow me as I took them to our car,” Peña told the paper.

But the worst injury appeared to be to the girl’s grandfather, Melvin Ascott. His teeth were knocked out, his face was covered in blood and his arm was severed above his bicep.

“He kept saying, ‘I need an ambulance. I am hurt,’ Pena told the News-Journal.

That’s when Pena grabbed his brother, Chris Dowda’s, belt and tried tying it around the man’s arm to stop the bleeding.

It didn’t work.
Like us to get news like this on your facebook feed, & possibly win an iPad! At that point, another Kappa Sig brother, Joshua Frost, 21, grabbed a t-shirt and another man grabbed a screwdriver. Pena used the tools to make a tourniquet around the man’s arm to slow the bleeding.

“We had a blanket over him because he was going into shock and I used part of the blanket to put pressure where the arm was severed,” Peña told the paper. “I kept telling the gentleman that everything is going be OK. I kept talking to him until the ambulance got there 10 minutes after the 9-1-1 call and the EMTs took over.”

The four UCF students even helped paramedics find the man’s missing arm 20 feet from where that SUV smashed into the tree.

Ascott was rushed to Shands Hospital in Gainvesville. He survived.

Pena was called a hero in the Daytona Beach paper, but friends say he’s not asking for attention.

“Nicholas is very humble about it but he deserves the attention because what he did is so positive,” Frost told the paper.

As for Pena, he told the paper, “I am just glad we saw the car on the side of the road. Once we got to it, I was glad that I was able to do what I did.”

KnightNews.com is working to update this story with more information. Check back later for more details.
Four young Kappas from Florida help save a man’s life in an auto accident.

Categories
Hazing News

SAE revokes memberships of Cal Poly actives

Sigma Alpha Epsilon expelled all members of the chapter in which pledge Carson Stuckey died.

Categories
Hazing News

Parents of Carson Starkey work for cultural change

story link
http://www.sanluisobispo.com/2010/07/15/1217236/starkeys-approved-of-cal-poly.html

Excerpt:

Julia Starkey was in a sorority and Scott Starkey was in a fraternity at the University of Texas.

Julia jokes “it was a long time ago” but noted they had positive, safe experiences.

Scott and Julia said they talked openly with their son about the risks of sex, drugs and drinking before he left for college.

But alcohol poisoning wasn’t something they knew much about.

They hope other parents will inform themselves and their children about its dangers.

“I just don’t know how drinking has become almost competitive for some young people,” Scott Starkey said. “Now there are drinking games and a culture of pressure that puts lives at risk. College students need to find other outlets to have fun.”

Carson Starkey was given rum, beer, a Sparks alcohol beverage and Everclear, which contains 75 percent alcohol.

He consumed the drinks in a matter of minutes, following direction from fraternity leaders — some of whom encouraged pledges to vomit and keep drinking.

Tests after Carson’s death determined that he had a blood-alcohol level of between 0.39 and 0.44 — five times the legal limit for driving.

The so-called Brown Bag night that led to Carson’s death was a tradition at the Cal Poly SAE chapter, fraternity members said.

“He could have been saved if the fraternity brothers hadn’t been scared of the consequences of taking Carson to the hospital,” Julia Starkey said.

The call

The Starkeys learned of their son’s death after Julia received a midmorning call from the 805 area code on Dec. 2, 2008. She dialed the number back and reached the coroner’s office.

“I immediately went and got Scott and we spoke with (deputy coroner) Steve Crawford,” Julia Starkey said. “I don’t think there was any good way to receive the news.”

The Starkeys have flown to San Luis Obispo nine times for matters relating to their son’s death. They say the community here has been sympathetic and supportive.

And they’ve met frequently with San Luis Obispo Police Department officials as well as prosecutor Craig Van Rooyen.

Four members of SAE were charged criminally; the last two of the cases wrapped up last week.

Zacary Ellis, Haithem Ibrahim, Adam Marszal and Russell Taylor each pleaded no contest to misdemeanor hazing resulting in death.

Ellis was sentenced to 120 days in County Jail and three years of informal probation.

Ibrahim was sentenced to 45 days in County Jail, three years’ informal probation and cooperation in Cal Poly’s anti-hazing education efforts.

Taylor and Marszal each received 30 days in County Jail, three years misdemeanor probation and 40 hours community service or two presentations on hazing and alcohol.

“The most recent plea results in all four defendants admitting their responsibility for the death of Carson Starkey,” Van Rooyen said. “Hazing is a serious problem and, unfortunately, has resulted in the untimely death of a promising young man.”

The Starkeys have sued Sigma Alpha Epsilon, a move they hope will stop the kind of behavior that led to their son’s fatality.

Categories
Hazing News

Education Training needed for bus drivers?

Looking at all the hazing assaults that have occurred on school buses made me do a little research into whether or not bus drivers have a duty to step in should their “routine” mirror inspections uncover an attack. This article makes me think a driver could face charges one day in a hazing assault.

VALPARAISO — The driver of a Portage High School bus where three juveniles allegedly terrorized and sexually assaulted other students has been charged in the incident.

Terry Burch, 68, of Portage faces felony charges of neglect of dependent, and could serve up to three years in prison if convicted.

According to court records, the parents of one of the girls, who had her head forced to one boy’s exposed genitals, confronted the bus driver at the bus stop.

Burch allegedly said he allowed such behavior because it was taking place after school and he had no authority

http://www.post-trib.com/news/1453351,p … 27.article

Categories
Hazing News

Great piece on hazing for ACU (college union Bulletin)

Great piece on hazing for ACU  (college union Bulletin)

Authors Elizabeth Allan and Mary Madden2010MayCover

May 2010

Order now by calling 812.245.2284

Title:

by Elizabeth J. Allan & Mary Madden
Link to actual story
Excerpt from story:
Hazing targeted
It might be possible to take the awareness of hazing and use it to create campus-wide positive action around the issue. In the study, majorities of students said they had experienced the following prevention and intervention strategies: group participation in community service, anti-hazing policies explained during new student orientation, explanation of how to report suspected hazing, advisor or coach communication of expectations that there would be no hazing. In most instances, students said they had limited exposure to prevention efforts beyond a “hazing is not tolerated” approach. Such practices would need to be assessed for their effectiveness in reducing hazing incidents as well as other types of initiatives introduced.

While there are no simple solutions or foolproof methods for eliminating hazing on a college campus, lessons learned in the field of public health indicate that a comprehensive approach is most effective for preventing harmful practices like binge-drinking and hazing. Campuses might begin that process by forming a broad-based coalition to enhance institutional capacity to address hazing on their particular campus. Members of the coalition should include:

  • Administrators from student affairs and athletics
  • Student activities staff
  • Residence life staff
  • Campus police
  • Greek life coordinators and fraternity and sorority leaders
  • Prevention specialist and health educator
  • Recreational sports director (intramurals & club sport)
  • Judicial affairs staff
  • Student athlete leaders
  • Alumni, parents, and community representatives

As campus community builders, student activities staff are well-positioned to lead this coalition.

Initially, the group might identify aspects of student life that seem to encourage hazing and aspects that seem to inhibit its likelihood. Once these factors have been determined, strategies can be defined and enacted at multiple levels, including: intrapersonal, interpersonal, group, institutional, and community. The following are examples of strategies at each level that a coalition might pursue:

  • Intrapersonal: Develop strategies that help students recognize hazing and the potential for harm even in activities they consider to be “low level.”
  • Interpersonal: Help student leaders develop skills needed to deal with resistance to change among group members.
  • Group: Help groups generate strategies for building group unity and sense of accomplishment that do not involve hazing.
  • Institutional: Develop mechanisms that encourage students to report hazing while protecting them from retribution by group members.
  • Community: Educate parents about signs of potential hazing and encourage them to contact staff if they suspect their son/daughter is being hazed.

Of course, results from each of these efforts will need to be evaluated to determine their success. The National Study of Student Hazing provided the first baseline and can serve as a catalyst for broader, more in-depth investigations in the future. Recently, the National Collaborative for Hazing Research and Prevention (NCHRP) grew out of the study. The NCHRP will provide a centralized infrastructure to support campus and school efforts to identify and eliminate hazing. Among its top priorities, the NCHRP is committed to assessing hazing prevention efforts to determine what approaches are most effective to help campuses and schools promote safer and healthier campus climates for all students.

In the mean time, by leading campus-wide conversations about hazing and using the data available, college union and student activities professionals can demonstrate their commitment to reducing hazing incidents now and in the future.

A full report of the initial findings of the National Study of Student Hazing can be downloaded from the NCHRP website: http://www.hazingstudy.org.