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Hazing News

Philippines president admits he had been hospitalized after a hazing

From GMA News

Duterte admits being hospitalized due to hazing

President Rodrigo Duterte had admitted that he was brought to the hospital after being subjected to hazing.

“Kaya ako, three days ako umuwi kaagad ako. Pa-ospital. Massive hematoma,” Duterte said during a dinner with members of the media in Davao City on Friday night.

Duterte, however, did not say if the hazing was part of initiation rites for new recruits of his San Beda College fraternity Lex Talionis.

He said during his speech that fraternity members are more cruel to recruits who are children of high-profile personalities.

He said that when he was recruited, he was asked if he was the son of the late Davao governor Vicente Gonzales Duterte.

Duterte related his hazing experience amid the outcry against the hazing death of Horacio Tomas “Atio” Castillo III, a 22-year-old freshman law student at the University of Santo Tomas.

The Manila Police District has detained frat member John Paul Solano, who brought Castillo to the Chinese General Hospital where the freshman law student was pronounced dead last Sunday.

Solano had denied that he took part in the hazing of Castillo and claimed that he tried to resuscitate Castillo.

He said that fellow members of Aegis Juris fraternity called him up to help them provide first aid to Castillo.

Solano said Castillo was “half dead” when he arrived and tried to revive the student.

The Department of Justice has issued a lookout bulletin order against other members of the fraternity. Marlly Rome Bondoc/ALG, GMA News

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Hazing News

On the need for tougher state laws: By Kerry Lester, Daily Herald

Here is the link  

Excerpt

 

A suburban lawmaker who sponsored anti-hazing legislation four years ago says allegations by a former Wheaton College football player show the law needs to be strengthened.

“We’ll have to make stronger laws with heavier punishments,” state Rep. Marty Moylan, a Des Plaines Democrat, said in an interview.

Moylan and some who work with young athletes say they’re dismayed by the number and scope of hazing cases even after a strong emphasis on prevention in recent years.

At Wheaton College, five football players face felony charges after being accused of abducting a freshman on the team, restraining him with duct tape, putting a pillow case over his head, suggesting he would be sexually violated and leaving him in a baseball field in March 2016.

While it’s the latest suburban hazing scandal, it’s far from the only one in recent years. Lake Zurich Unit District 95 faces a federal lawsuit in which it is accused of allowing hazing and bullying to occur in the high school football team locker room last year. In the past decade, hazing scandals have rocked Northern Illinois University, where a student died, as well as high schools in Crystal Lake and Des Plaines.

Despite new state laws and school-based anti-hazing initiatives during that time, Olen McGhee, a Mundelein-based trainer for high school and college athletes, said he believes hazing is worse than it was in the past.

“Core values aren’t the same anymore,” he said, and social media can make hazing or bullying seem more appealing to teens.

Moylan called it “ridiculous” that the March 2016 hazing at Wheaton only became public in recent days. Though it was reported to the college and to police at the time, the players remained on the team until last week.

Moylan’s bill, signed into law by former Gov. Pat Quinn in August 2013, created a new criminal offense for school officials who fail to report hazing that “he or she personally observes.” A separate law makes hazing a misdemeanor in Illinois, or a felony if it causes death or serious harm.

Hank Nuwer, a professor at Franklin College in Franklin, Indiana, and a hazing expert, echoed Moylan’s argument that Illinois’s anti-hazing law isn’t strong enough. Nuwer wants Congress to pass the Report and Educate About Campus Hazing Act “calling for greater transparency and mandatory education” about hazing.

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Hazing News

Profound admissions by a former hazer

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Hazing News

New book shames fraternities, SAE especially

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Reforms are essential, writes the book’s author.

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Hazing News

Hamilton High School: The apples have moved far from the tree

From KVOA

 

Chandler Unified School District has announced that Hamilton High School Principal Ken James, Athletic Director Shawn Rustad and former head football coach Steve Belles will be reassigned within the district away from the Hamilton High School campus.

This comes after the Chandler Police Department recommended charges for the three employees in connection with the allegations of hazing within the Hamilton High School football program in July.

Victims claim they were subjected to various forms of assault inside the school’s football locker room, and some of the incidents were captured on cellphone video and shared on social media.

CUSD told 12 News in April that Belles had been reassigned to home after three football players were charged for assault related to the hazing. The district said that Belles would not be on campus during the indefinite reassignment.

However, in July, the day after police said they were recommending charges for James, Belles and Rustad, the district notified parents via email that Belles would continue in his teaching duties and that James would continue as principal. The email said Coach Dick Baniszewski was appointed to lead the football program.

To Hamilton parents and guardians,

As you may know, the Chandler Police Department has recommended charges against Principal Ken James and Mr. Steve Belles for the alleged violation of mandatory reporting laws relative to the hazing events involving the Hamilton High football team.  We are not privy to all of the details of the investigation, but it’s important to understand that no staff member has been charged and that all are presumed innocent under our system of justice.

While the Maricopa County Attorney’s office reviews the investigation to determine if charges will be filed, Mr. James will continue in his duties as the principal, and Mr. Belles will continue in his teaching duties.

As you may also be aware, the district has made changes to address the issues relative to the football program, including appointing Coach Dick Baniszewski to lead the football program.  Significant remedial measures also have been taken to address the safety of student-athletes.  These measures include addressing supervision in locker rooms, increasing dialogue relative to anti-hazing policies and behavioral expectations with coaches, student-athletes and parents, and the creation of training tools such as the hazing prevention video for use district-wide.

Student and staff safety will remain a top priority.   The Hamilton High staff stands ready to provide your student(s) an opportunity to have a successful school year.   Thank you for choosing CUSD and your continued support of HHS.

Warmest Regards,

Camille Casteel Ed.D

James, Rustad and Belles have not been formally charged in the hazing incident, but the school district said it could be some time before the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office decides how it will proceed with the case.

The district said it moved the employees to “avoid any distraction caused by this uncertainty.”

The move is effective Monday, Sept. 25 until further notice.

Chris Farabee, who has been assistant principal at Hamilton High School for the last 14 years, will serve as acting principal. Sharon Vanis, a former athletic director at the school, will serve as acting athletic director.