Kuwait Times

Eighteen fraternity members charged

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BELLEFONTE: Eighteen Penn State fraternity brothers have been charged with crimes ranging up to involuntar­y manslaught­er in the death of a pledge who authoritie­s say repeatedly fell down a flight of stairs after he and others were made to run a gantlet of drinking stations guzzling vodka, beer and wine. Beta Theta Pi members resisted getting help for 19-year-old Timothy Piazza, causing him to suffer for hours and possibly making his injuries worse, a prosecutor said Friday in announcing the results of a grand jury investigat­ion.

“This is a very sad day for Centre County - it’s been sad ever since we lost a child for reasons that are totally preventabl­e,” District Attorney Stacy Parks Miller said. Eight of the fraternity brothers and the chapter were charged with involuntar­y manslaught­er. Other charges include aggravated and simple assault, evidence tampering, alcohol-related violations and hazing. An attorney for the chapter didn’t immediatel­y respond to messages seeking comment. The grand jury, aided by security camera footage, said the fraternity was heavily stocked with booze for the Feb 2 ceremony at which Piazza, a sophomore engineerin­g student from Lebanon, New Jersey, and 13 others accepted pledge bids.

The pledges were pressured to chug vodka, shotgun beers and drink wine. Piazza tumbled down a flight of stairs that night and fell several other times, injuring his head, Miller said. The next morning, he fell down the stairs again and was unconsciou­s when help was finally summoned. He died Feb. 4 as a result of a traumatic brain injury. Miller said doctors estimate Piazza had a blood-alcohol content of nearly 0.40 percent; the legal limit for drivers, for comparison, is 0.08 percent.

The investigat­ion found some frat members tried to conceal what happened. It found that a text message recovered by police urged pledges to get rid of evidence of alcohol and that conversati­ons discussing deleting conversati­ons from a messaging app were discovered. Piazza’s father, Jim Piazza, blamed a “flagrant disregard” for the law and said the death “didn’t have to happen.” “Sadly,” the dad said, “we’re never going to see his smile again except in pictures.” Penn State permanentl­y banned Beta Theta Pi on March 30, accusing it of a “persistent pattern” of excessive drinking, drug use and hazing.

University President Eric Barron called the report heart-wrenching, sickening and incomprehe­nsible. “It is numbing how an atmosphere that endangers the well-being and safety of another person could occur within an organizati­on that prided itself on commitment to each other and to its community,” Barron said. Miller said video footage turned over to investigat­ors provided evidence of what occurred and contradict­ed stories some witnesses had told.

The cameras recorded Piazza drinking vodka and beer and an hour later needing help to walk from an area near the basement stairs to a couch. Piazza later is shown trying unsuccessf­ully to open the front door, then “severely staggering drunkenly toward the basement steps,” the grand jury report said. He was found at the bottom of the steps after apparently falling face-first. Four brothers carried his limp body upstairs, where some poured liquid on him and one slapped him in the face, the grand jury said. Fraternity members put a backpack containing textbooks on him so he wouldn’t suffocate on his own vomit, the grand jury wrote.

When a brother insisted Piazza needed medical help, he was confronted and shoved into a wall, the report said. When that brother insisted again that Piazza required help, he was told others were biology and kinesiolog­y majors so his opinion wasn’t as valuable as theirs, it said. Piazza tried to get up later but fell backward and hit his head on the wooden floor, the report said. He also fell onto a stone floor before being found in the basement hours later, it said. —AP

 ??  ?? BELLEFONTE: Jim and Evelyn Piazza stand by as Centre County District Attorney Stacy Parks Miller (left) announces the results of an investigat­ion into the death of their son Timothy Piazza, (seen in photo at right) during a press conference on Friday,...
BELLEFONTE: Jim and Evelyn Piazza stand by as Centre County District Attorney Stacy Parks Miller (left) announces the results of an investigat­ion into the death of their son Timothy Piazza, (seen in photo at right) during a press conference on Friday,...

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