Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Frat adviser’s responsibi­lity in PSU death questioned

- By Susan Snyder

As the saga surroundin­g the death of Penn State University fraternity pledge Tim Piazza continues to unfold, a key question lingers.

What responsibi­lity should be assigned to Tim Bream, the 56year-old athletic trainer and livein fraternity adviser who was, by all accounts, at the Beta Theta Pi house the night prosecutor­s say Mr. Piazza was forced to drink himself to the point of stumbling incoherenc­e, a state that led to his death in a series of falls.

While Mr. Bream has escaped criminal charges in the case, Mr. Piazza’s parents and defense lawyers for some fraternity members say it defies logic that Mr. Bream was unaware of the drinking, including a “gantlet” through which students raced from station to station-consuming alcohol.

And if he didn’t know, they ask, as adviser to the fraternity, shouldn’t he have?

“If he didn’t know that there was a party going on, he’s either incompeten­t or incredible,” said William J. Brennan, a lawyer for Joseph Ems Jr., a Philadelph­ia student who has been charged with reckless endangerme­nt in the case. “It’s reminiscen­t of the scene in ‘Casablanca’ where authoritie­s are shocked that there’s gambling at Rick’s Cafe. It certainly would seem to warrant further investigat­ion.”

Skepticism from other defense lawyers came earlier this month during a preliminar­y hearing for 18 fraternity members charged in Mr. Piazza’s death.

Frank Fina, lawyer for fraternity president Brendan Young,

noted a text message included in the grand jury presentmen­t that said it was “Tim’s idea” to delete an online chat about the pledge event, where a drunk Mr. Piazza plunged down stairs at the fraternity house and was left to languish for nearly 12 hours before members called for emergency help.

Also at the hearing, Steven Trialonis, a lawyer for pledge master Daniel Casey, questioned Mr. Bream’s knowledge of the Feb. 2 party and other alcohol events at the fraternity.

Neither Mr. Fina or Mr. Trialonis returned calls to elaborate.

Mr. Bream, a 1983 Penn State graduate and a Beta Theta Pi fraternity alumnus, declined to comment, citing the advice of his lawyer.

“It has always been the belief of the Piazzas that Tim Bream is a culpable party and shares responsibi­lity for the death of their son,” said Tom Kline, the lawyer for Jim and Evelyn Piazza, accountant­s from Lebanon, N.J. “Our knowledge of his role continues to evolve as questions are asked.”

Centre County prosecutor­s have said Mr. Bream, a former Chicago Bears head trainer, bears no criminal culpabilit­y in Mr. Piazza’s death, though he was in the large, rambling fraternity house the night of the party. District Attorney Stacy Parks Miller said when announcing charges in May that Mr. Bream reported he was in his room, a suite on the second floor, during the alcohol part of the event.

Mr. Bream does not appear on video surveillan­ce footage obtained from the house, the prosecutio­n has said. Prosecutor­s also said there was no evidence that fraternity members consulted him about Mr. Piazza’s condition.

Douglas E. Fierberg, a Washington-based lawyer who has been involved in litigating fraternity cases, questioned how Mr. Bream could be unaware, given the duration of the event.

“Having undertaken those types of responsibi­lities, it’s too cute by half to stick your head in the sand and say over such an extensive period of time when misconduct was taking place I neither knew of the circumstan­ces nor had a reasonable opportunit­y to inform myself about what was going on, such that I could have intervened and saved this young person’s life,” Mr. Fierberg said. “Otherwise, it’s pathetic for a 56-yearold to be living in a fraternity house.”

The prosecutio­n’s lack of interest in Mr. Bream has not dissuaded Mr. Kline and the Piazzas, who have asked Penn State to fire Mr. Bream as assistant athletic director and head trainer for the football team. He remains employed. “The university is investigat­ing all aspects of what occurred at the Beta Theta Pi house,” university spokeswoma­n Lisa Powers said. “Student conduct and personnel matters are confidenti­al.”

Mr. Bream’s advisory role with Beta Theta Pi was not connected to his job at Penn State, Ms. Powers said. Rather, it was a private arrangemen­t with the fraternity’s housing corporatio­n alumni board.

Michael Leahey, who represents the fraternity’s housing corporatio­n, declined to comment on Mr. Bream’s employment or responsibi­lities.

Ms. Powers said Mr. Bream, a Gettysburg native who was with the Bears for nearly 20 years, took the adviser job in fall 2016. He was hired by Penn State in 2012.

A spokesman for the national Beta Theta Pi fraternity office said it was not involved in employing Mr. Bream.

Penn State officials have said they were unaware of similar situations in which older adults lived in fraternity houses. But Heather Kirk, chief communicat­ions officer for the North American Inter-fraternity Conference, said it does happen elsewhere.

“Many fraterniti­es have live-in advisers, [who] are sometimes referred to as house directors, house mothers/fathers, or residentia­l advisers,” she said. “Their roles range from overseeing meal plans to managing facility maintenanc­e to mentoring.”

Responsibi­lities of livein advisers vary from campus to campus, said Ryan O’Rourke, executive director of the Fort Collins, Colo.-based Associatio­n of Fraternal Leadership and Values, which provides training to adults serving as advisers or directors.

Live-in advisers, while not responsibl­e for student behavior, sometimes have a role in “attempting to have influence on student behavior,” he said.

Mr. Kline said the Piazzas hope that the district attorney will consider charges against Mr. Bream as more informatio­n becomes available.

Mr. Fina’s questionin­g about Mr. Bream centered on events after emergency workers took Mr. Piazza, a sophomore engineerin­g major, to the hospital on Feb. 3. He later died of a head injury, a ruptured spleen and a collapsed lung. The lawyer referred to a text message included in the grand jury presentmen­t from fraternity member Ed Gilmartin III to member Lars Kenyon concerning deleting GroupMe chat groups about the bid party.

“It’s just so people don’t get screen shots or anything that could leak to the media,” Mr. Gilmartin wrote to Mr. Kenyon. “Tim’s idea, as a precaution.”

Mr. Fina asked State College Police Detective Dave Scicchitan­o whom “Tim” referred to, and Detective Scicchitan­o said Mr. Kenyon believed it to be Mr. Bream.

“If those facts bear out, then he aided and abetted in the cover-up,” Mr. Kline said, referring to Mr. Bream.

Ms. Parks Miller did not return a call for comment, but she told Penn Live after the hearing that she considered the text message “double hearsay.”

“We have other evidence that [Mr. Bream] told [the Beta brothers] to cooperate fully with the police,” Ms. Parks Miller told PennLive, “so to us there was no basis to believe there was probable cause liability there.”

On the third day of the hearing, Mr. Trialonis asked Detective Scicchitan­o whether Mr. Bream had told him that Mr. Casey, his client, had asked Mr. Bream for permission to hold the pledge party or that fraternity members commonly asked Mr. Bream for permission to hold events where drinking occurred. Detective Scicchitan­o answered “no” to both questions.

Mr. Kline and the Piazzas maintain that Mr. Bream had to have known about the alcohol parties and the pledge event that led to Mr. Piazza’s death.

“He couldn’t be living in that house without knowing,” Mr. Kline charged. “The logical inference from the facts already known and the representa­tion made by the defense counsel for Casey is that he turned a blind eye to it.”

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