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Hazing News

Sig Ep, Kentucky gone

Fraternity suspended due to alleged hazing

June 10, 2009 by Melissa Vessels

UK’s chapter of one of the largest national fraternities has received a two-year suspension following a hazing incident, according to the associate dean of students.

The Kentucky Alpha chapter of Sigma Phi Epsilon, located on Pennsylvania Avenue, was suspended on May 8 after alleged hazing involving personal servitude during the pledging process. The fraternity also violated a temporary suspension put in place during the investigation that began on March 5, said Associate Dean of Students Tony Blanton in an e-mail to the Kernel.

According to a letter from the Dean of Students Office to Sigma Phi Epsilon President Aaron Tutt, the organization is “excluded from university premises and all other privileges granted to registered student organizations.” The letter warns that violation of the suspension could result in disciplinary expulsion. The organization has the option to appeal the decision to the University Appeals Board.

Sigma Phi Epsilon will be eligible to apply for university registration on July 1, 2011.

Attempts to contact Tutt were unsuccessful by press time.

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Hazing News

Hazing in some historically African American Greek groups

Herald-Leader
March 25, 2008
‘Culture of denial’ in fraternity hazings
EKU CASE LATEST IN HISTORY OF BLACK GREEK ORGANIZATIONS
By Ashlee Clark
An Eastern Kentucky University student who was allegedly the victim of hazing could be just
one of many young people who endure violent and humiliating behavior to join a black Greek
organization, experts say.
EKU student Brent Whiteside was hospitalized this month after allegedly being hazed while he
pledged Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity, a historically black organization. EKU and the national
Kappa Alpha Psi organization have suspended the chapter pending an investigation.
University officials call it an isolated incident. But hazing allegations such as this one only chip
away at a problem that has festered throughout the black Greek community nationwide, experts
say.
Fraternities and sororities of all types have hazed incoming members, or pledges, for decades.
But the practice has become dangerous and sometimes deadly since hazing was officially banned
from black Greek organizations in 1990. That is when the practice went “underground,” meaning
it was performed secretly and without being regulated.
“There is this culture of secrecy, culture of denial,” said Ricky L. Jones, a professor at the
University of Louisville and author of Black Haze: Violence and Manhood in Black Greek-letter
Fraternities.
Experts say it will be a formidable task to end hazing in fraternities and sororities. Organizations
would need to confront and change a mind-set ingrained in the black Greek culture that condones
hazing.
“It’s a deadly cycle, and it’s a cycle that unfortunately goes so deep and so far that a lot of our
members are not even aware of the illogical arguments that they make in terms of hazing,” said
Lawrence Ross Jr., author of The Divine Nine: The History of African American Fraternities and
Sororities and member of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity.
“No one wants to say that their experience really didn’t have any worth,” he said. “They have to
hang on to a piece of it.”
Few details given
EKU officials and those involved in the investigation have been tight-lipped about what
happened. Whiteside and his family could not be reached for comment. The national
organization also did not return repeated phone calls seeking comment. EKU has not revealed
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details of the alleged hazing, including the extent of Whiteside’s injuries, because the
investigation is ongoing.
The case was reported March 8. Whiteside spent several days at Central Baptist Hospital in
Lexington.
An EKU police officer investigating what happened contacted Whiteside on March 11. The
student told the investigator that he “wanted to focus on his health issues at this time and stated
that he would contact this investigator when he was fully recovered,” according to the call
response run report.
No criminal charges have been filed against the Kappas, said Marc Whitt, associate vice
president for public relations and marketing at EKU.
Wardell Johnson, the campus adviser for the Kappas, said Whiteside is out of the hospital. He
declined to comment further.
Mike Reagle, the associate vice president for student affairs at EKU, stressed that this is an
isolated event.
“The one thing that I always want to say is this is an isolated circumstance for us,” Reagle said.
“Sometimes it gets blown out to the entire Greek population.”
Long history of hazing
Experts say hazing can include a wide range of activities, from running errands and performing
calisthenics to paddling and severe beatings.
The practice became prevalent at colleges and universities in the United States in the mid-1800s.
Upperclassmen would ridicule freshmen and sophomores so the younger students could prove
they were worthy of being in college, said Walter Kimbrough, author of Black Greek 101: The
Culture, Customs and Challenges of Black Fraternities and Sororities.
The hazing of underclassmen began to be outlawed around the 1920s. But the practice then
trickled into fraternities and sororities, Kimbrough said.
Around this time, black fraternities and sororities began to adopt a pledge process. The initial
purpose of the process was to create a uniform way to disseminate information about the
organization to chapters across the country, Ross said. The Kappas were the first group to
organize a pledge club in 1919, Ross said.
Ironically, the founders of black fraternities and sororities didn’t have to go through a pledging or
hazing process, Ross said. The members were initially picked based on their previous actions on
campus and high academic standards.
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Over the next few years, pledging continued within black Greek organizations. Hazing also
began to play a role in the pledge process, experts say.
The death of one student who was pledging Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity led the National Pan-
Hellenic Council, which oversees the nine historically black fraternities and sororities, to ban
hazing in 1990 and establish a membership intake program.
Difficult to stop
But the proclamation didn’t stop the hazing.
Two women pledging Alpha Kappa Alpha drowned during a hazing ritual in 2002. A student
pledging Kappa Alpha Psi at Florida A&M University was beaten with canes in 2006, and two
fraternity brothers were sent to jail.
Ross said black Greeks believe there is an intangible quality that comes out of pledging that
transforms those seeking membership into valuable members of the organization. However,
there’s no quantifiable way to measure that, he said.
Hank Nuwer, a hazing expert who has studied the topic for 30 years, said the pledge process and
hazing is comparable to the military in terms of forging a bond between members. However,
hazing becomes dangerous because students tend to think they are “superhuman” and not at risk
of getting hurt during the process, Nuwer said.
Pledges are also less inclined to quit the hazing process to avoid the stigma of not being able to
withstand the rituals.
The cycle continues when new members complete the pledge process; they will haze the next
group of new members because they were hazed themselves.
“I hate that this is going on,” said Jones, a member of Kappa Alpha Psi. “It breaks my heart.”
Short of completely disbanding the organizations, experts have made various suggestions to
confront the problem. These include establishing a moratorium so experts can figure out how to
stop hazing, enforcing penalties, and reducing the number of chapters.
All agree that a change of mind-set would be required to prevent such cases from overshadowing
the good things these groups accomplish, such as volunteer work and mentorship in the black
community.
“When the details come out, it casts a cloud over these groups, and that’s not what they’re all
about,” Nuwer said.
News researcher Linda Niemi contributed to this story. Ashlee Clark covers Madison County for
the Herald-Leader.
Page 4
© 2008 Kentucky.com and wire service sources. All Rights Reserved

Categories
Hazing News

Brockport student says he was hazed

Paralyzed SUNY Brockport student sues landlord
whec.com
05.04.09
Staff Writer

A former SUNY Brockport freshman, left paralyzed after he fell from a second-story window at an off-campus party, is suing the landlord of a rooming house called the Roxbury.

Last September, Bryan Parslow fell from a bathroom window of the frat house which is not recognized by the college.

The lawsuit filed in state Supreme Court claims the party was part of a hazing process for pledges. It accuses the property owner of not installing a window screen which might have prevented the fall.

It also accuses 23 students, along with the national and local chapter of the Sigma Alpha Fraternity of supplying alcohol to Parslow and encouraging him to drink.

In December, Brockport Police arrested seven students, also named in this current lawsuit, but they only faced alcohol-related charges.

The landlord had no comment.

For more Rochester, N.Y. news go to www.whec.com.

Categories
Hazing News

Sig Ep members skate on technicality; one copped plea: Source WCTV

Read the WCTV account

Two FSU students and a TCC student accused of hazing will have their records wiped clean after prosecutors are forced to drop the charges.

Nicholas Finazzo, Drew Johnson and Joshua Vincent were arrested on misdemeanor hazing charges back in January 2007.

They were caught in the crawl space beneath a home on Bonnie Drive after the mother of a Sigma Phi Epsilon pledge called police.

FSU Police responded to the scene and after hearing screams called Tallahassee Police for help, but a recent court ruling says FSU police did not have jurisdiction off campus and prosecutors have since dropped the charges.

“Law enforcement officers like the rest of us have to follow the rules. (In this case) they didn’t and that’s why the case was dismissed,” said Finazzo’s attorney Lisa Hurley.

Prosecutor Stephanie Webster says she has no doubt a crime was committed at the house, but with all the evidence now thrown out, obviously she cannot prove it.

Tony Bajoczky, who represents Joshua Vincent, called Judge Francis’s decision a good one and says he hopes FSU Police will pay attention to it. They don’t have carte blanche to investigate or make arrests off campus, he says.

A fourth student, Eric Fernandez, already entered a plea in this case and served a mix of jail time and probation.

Categories
Hazing News

Utah State cases move toward sentencing: The Herald Journal

Read the full story here at the Herald Journal

Brittany Packham could get six months in jail for supplying alcohol to minor
By Matthew K. Jensen
Published:
Tuesday, June 9, 2009 2:37 AM CDT
A defendant in the ongoing Michael Starks hazing case pleaded guilty to supplying alcohol to a minor in 1st District Court on Monday afternoon.

Brittany Packham, 20, is one of five Utah State University students to admit wrongdoing after the Cache County Attorney’s Office brought suit against 12 students and the Sigma Nu and Chi Omega fraternities following the death of Michael Starks.

Starks, an 18-year-old USU student from Salt Lake City, died Nov. 21, 2008, after drinking vodka at an off-campus home. He was taking part in a Sigma Nu fraternity membership initiation, during which he was provided alcohol by members of the Chi Omega Sorority, an official report states.

Prosecutor Barbara Lachmar agreed to reduce the alcohol supplying charge to a class-B misdemeanor and dismissed a hazing charge against Packham.

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Judge Thomas Willmore told Packham the maximum penalty for the crime to which she pleaded guilty is six months in jail and a fine of $1,000. He requested a pre-sentence report to be completed before he passes sentence on July 20.

Meanwhile, four of the original 12 cases are ongoing, three have been dismissed and two cases have already been resolved through sentencing.

Former Chi Omega Sorority member Whitney K. Miller was also charged with supplying alcohol to a minor. During her hearing, Miller admitted to supplying vodka to at least one minor.

In court Monday, Packham admitted to holding up an alcoholic drink to the lips of one the participants involved. An officials court document states Starks and another fraternity pledge were “captured” during a mock kidnapping that was executed by members of the Chi Omega Sorority. The document adds that Starks and another pledge were “bound with duct tape” during the ordeal.

Packham declined discussing the case with the media.

Miller will be sentenced next Monday.

Christopher A. Ammon also pleaded no contest to supplying alcohol to a minor. He’s scheduled for sentencing July 6.