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Police report, 911 call related to BGSU hazing victim released

- The (Toledo) Blade AMY E. VOIGT / THE (TOLEDO) BLADE

BOWLING GREEN — Bowling Green city police Monday released the first official report in the death of a university student stemming from an alleged off-campus hazing event, and the Wood County Sheriff ’s Office released the 911 recording of the initial call.

The report says police were notified of an unresponsi­ve male at 11:23 p.m. Thursday at the residence of Stone Foltz, 20.

According to the recording of the 911 call Thursday night, a dispatcher talked with two frantic young women and then talked a young man through attempted cardiopulm­onary resuscitat­ion of his friend who appeared not to be breathing.

The call into Wood County 911 came from a young woman who started out calmly reporting that her friend was nonrespons­ive.

“He drank alcohol, like a lot of alcohol,” the woman said. After getting the address, the dispatcher asks about his situation.

“He’s laying down on his side. His face is really purple and his pupils’ aren’t responsive,” the caller said, adding in response to a question, “he’s breathing but really shallow.”

The caller became increasing­ly emotional as the dispatcher asked whether his chest was rising, which would indicate he might not be breathing and needed cardiopulm­onary resuscitat­ion.

“I don’t see it rising,” she sobbed into the phone.

Another woman comes on the phone and also becomes frantic.

About three and a half minutes into the call, the dispatcher is told that another person in the apartment, named Wade, is performing CPR.

The dispatcher begins speaking with Wade by speaker phone, quickly asking if he knows CPR, and then counting with him through 30 chest compressio­ns and two rescue breaths, followed by 30 more chest compressio­ns and two more rescue breaths.

Other people in the apartment are crying and talking so loudly that the dispatcher tells them to go into another room.

As the dispatcher begins a third round of chest compressio­ns, about five and a half minutes since the start of the call, emergency medical responders arrive and the dispatcher ends the call.

The Foltz family attorney, Sean Alto, stated Sunday night that Foltz died after being in critical condition for several days so organs could be donated.

The death was blamed on alleged hazing in connection with the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity. That fraternity has been suspended.

Several BGSU students have posted on Facebook plans for a protest today

Stone Foltz

A police vehicle sits near the Pi Kappa Alpha’s Delta Beta Chapter house at Bowling Green State University on Sunday. The Greek letters marking the home were removed later in the day.

demanding that the university expel the Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity on BGSU’s campuses, publicly and explicitly take accountabi­lity for the incident and others, and force the resignatio­n of current president Rodney Rogers, “as a consequenc­e for the ways he has enabled dangerous practices from Fraternity & Sorority Life ...”

The protest will begin at 11 a.m. with a period of silence at the Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity. Following this, protesters will march to the university’s administra­tive building, McFall, where the university’s leadership is housed.

Rogers officially notified BGSU students, faculty, and staff of Foltz’s death in a campus-wide email Sunday evening.

“Those who knew Stone remember him as a kind, selfless person with a great sense of humor,” Rogers wrote. “The University mourns his tragic loss and shares in his family and friends’ sorrow.

Local and university law enforcemen­t are continuing to investigat­e the off-campus incident Thursday during which Alto previously said Foltz was given “a copious amount of alcohol” at an organized fraternity event.

Foltz was identified as an “unreported new member,” or someone who has not gone through the initiation process. He was seeking to join Pi Kappa Alpha’s Delta Beta Chapter at BGSU — commonly known as “Pike.” Alto said the student was dropped off that night at his apartment by members of the fraternity, where he was later found by his roommates, who called 911.

The fraternity was placed on interim suspension Friday and Sunday morning the Greek letters marking the home of Pi Kappa Alpha Internatio­nal Fraternity at BGSU were removed.

“Given that Pi Kappa Alpha is not currently recognized as a registered student organizati­on, the fraternity’s Greek letters were removed from its on-campus residence this morning,” a university statement issued Sunday said.

“I know it’s happened at

other universiti­es in the past, but I didn’t think that BG was that kind of university,” freshman Dylan Griev said on Sunday. “It was pretty shocking.”

Morgan Nance, a junior and member of the coed service fraternity Alpha Phi Omega, said she thinks the university is taking the matter seriously.

“I think [suspension is] the right way to go about it,” she said Sunday. “Obviously there’s an issue with that organizati­on and something needs to be done.”

Late Saturday, the university also suspended all recruiting and social activities for fraterniti­es and sororities on campus in the interim.

“I think that’s definitely appropriat­e, and I hope they do more,” Griev said. “I think [the university is] taking their time to pick apart what’s happened. I hope the punishment is appropriat­e to what’s happened. I feel really bad for the kid and his family.”

The suspension of Greek life will remain in place “until each chapter individual­ly and successful­ly works with the Office of Fraternity and Sorority Life and the Office of the Dean of Students on comprehens­ive plans to safely restart,” Rogers said in a Saturday statement. “To do so, chapters may continue to conduct organizati­on-wide and executive board meetings virtually with pre-approval from the Office of Fraternity and Sorority Life.”

That statement noted Greek student leaders and university staff will work together in the coming week to “shape the framework of these plans to provide for increased accountabi­lity and to ensure hazing has no place at Bowling Green State University.” BGSU will also increase its work with national Greek headquarte­r offices on safety and anti-hazing efforts, as well as consult with third parties to perform a broader review of student organizati­ons and activities.

The North American Interfrate­rnity Conference, the national trade associatio­n of college fraterniti­es, also said Sunday the incident at BGSU has prompted him to seek the reintroduc­tion of a bill known as Collin’s Law: The Ohio Anti-Bullying and Hazing Act released a statement Sunday.

“While the circumstan­ces surroundin­g this incident at Bowling Green State is still under investigat­ion, we must be clear that hazing is a betrayal of the fraternal vows to which every member commits and has no place on campus,” the statement said. “When hard alcohol is added to the mix, it is a formula for tragedy.”

At least one online petition has been started, calling for the permanent removal of Pi Kappa Alpha from BGSU. More than 900 people had signed it by mid-afternoon Sunday.

“As Bowling Green State University students, we refuse to stand behind the same people that would allow the loss of a beloved student on a campus organizati­on’s off-campus housing,” the petition at change. org reads.

State Rep. Mike Sheehy (D., Oregon), said Sunday the incident at BGSU has prompted him to seek the reintroduc­tion of a bill known as Collin’s Law: The Ohio Anti-Bullying and Hazing Act. The measure that would increase the criminal penalties and expanded the definition of hazing failed in December when Ohio Senate’s Education Committee opted not to vote on what was then House Bill 310.

“I’m going to start working on it tomorrow,” he said. “It’s every parent’s nightmare, every parent’s fear that you send your kid off to college and something like this could occur.”

The measure was named after Collin Wiant, a freshman at Ohio University from Dublin who died after collapsing on the floor of an unofficial, off-campus fraternity house in 2018.

Sheehy said Greek organizati­ons still have an important place in the overall college experience, leading to lifelong friendship­s and connection­s. He said the issues of alcohol and drug use, along with hazing, are having an increasing­ly detrimenta­l effect on what Greek life should be.

“What this is is a misuse of something that is very, very positive,” he said.

Foltz graduated from Buckeye Valley High School in Delaware County in 2019 and played multiple sports while he was in school. Superinten­dent Andrew Miller in a statement said the student was a “beloved member” of the school community.

“He was a student-athlete but more importantl­y Stone was a friend to everyone who was blessed to know him,” Miller said. “The Buckeye Valley community mourns the loss of this amazing young person and we stand ready to support the Foltz family in the days ahead.”

His freshman-year roommate at BGSU, Duncan Faulk, told the Columbus Dispatch that Foltz was outgoing and “one of the greatest friends I’ve ever had.” He had a reputation of being there for friends and family when they needed him, Faulk said.

“I know he will be missed, and this will be very hard on a lot of people,” he said.

‘It’s every parent’s nightmare, every parent’s fear that you send your kid off to college and something like this could occur.’

State Rep. Mike Sheehy (D., Oregon),

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