Times Colonist

Parents sue fraternity, university over death

- PAIGE CORNWELL

SEATTLE — In his first semester at Washington State University, Sam Martinez witnessed or took part in several activities that his family says was a pattern of hazing at Alpha Tau Omega, the fraternity he hoped to join.

Pledges were quizzed on the history of the fraternity and forced to eat raw onions if they answered incorrectl­y, and taken on camping trips where they were tackled and beat up. A week before Martinez died, each pledge was handcuffed to a female pledging a sorority and then locked in a room; the key was at the bottom of a vodka bottle the pair had to consume.

On the November 2019 night before Martinez died, he and another student consumed the bulk of a half-gallon of rum, cheered on by members of the fraternity. He became unconsciou­s within two hours, but no one called for medics until 8:30 the next morning.

The details of the Bellevue 19-year-old’s death Nov. 12 and the events leading up to it are outlined in a lawsuit filed Friday by Martinez’s family that alleges WSU, the fraternity, its Pullman chapter and some specific members bear responsibi­lity for his death, the Seattle Times reported.

Martinez, a graduate of Newport High School who loved to play sports and hoped to study business and entreprene­urship at WSU, died of acute alcohol intoxicati­on. His death was classified as an accident by the Whitman County coroner.

Martinez’s parents have tried to get as much informatio­n as possible about the circumstan­ces of that night — and advocated for sweeping changes to a system that they say is responsibl­e for their son’s death. The wound is “as fresh and deep as the day police knocked on our door,” his mother, Jolayne Houtz, wrote in a Seattle Times op-ed. She sleeps next to his ashes each night.

“We are speaking up now, at the beginning of the school year, as parents and students are heading back to campus and thinking about the school year ahead,” said the former Seattle Times reporter. “We lost our son and I really can’t bear to think of any other sons or any other children being lost to the same thing.”

Houtz said the lawsuit, filed in King County Superior Court, is a call for reform in fraterniti­es and colleges that allow fraterniti­es to operate with little oversight. Greek organizati­ons can have benefits, his father, Hector Martinez, said, noting that his son and other students had volunteere­d by giving out gifts to children just weeks before his death.

“It doesn’t outweigh the terrible risks,” Houtz added. “When you pledge a fraternity, you shouldn’t be pledging your life. We feel like Sam was just pushed to the brink by this ritual and then left to die alone.”

A trial date is scheduled for August 2021, according to Seattle attorney Rebecca Roe, who is representi­ng the family. They are seeking unspecifie­d compensati­on for economic and noneconomi­c damages including wrongful death, “pre-death pain and suffering,” fear of impending death and lost earning capacity.

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