Porterville Recorder

Parents, Frat leaders launch national anti-hazing effort

- By JOHN ROGERS The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — Tim Piazza and Marquise Braham told their parents they just wanted to make some new friends by joining fraterniti­es while away at college. Neither got much of a chance: They died before their 20th birthdays, after brutal fraternity hazing rituals.

Now their parents are launching a nationwide anti-hazing campaign, and after too many similar deaths, national leaders of fraterniti­es and sororities are joining them.

"I know it might seem strange to some people that families who lost their children to fraternity hazing are now working with fraterniti­es and sororities to eradicate hazing," Piazza's father, Jim, said by phone Sunday from New York, where he, Braham's father, and other parents were preparing for a series of Monday morning TV appearance­s to announce their campaign.

"But," added Piazza, "we will do anything that we can to save a life and to prevent another shattered family."

His 19-year-old son died an agonizing death last year after he was ordered to binge-drink 80-proof vodka until he became so intoxicate­d that he fell repeatedly, including down a flight of stairs, and was left to writhe in pain for hours before medical help was summoned.

More than two dozen members of Piazza's Beta Thea Pi fraternity at Pennsylvan­ia State University were arrested, but all felony charges, including manslaught­er, were eventually dropped. Three people have since pleaded guilty to misdemeano­rs.

"Currently the system — and that's the police, the district attorneys, the judges — they seem to view hazing as it's kind of like kids' stuff," said Rich Braham, whose 18-yearold son committed suicide in 2014 after a brutal bout of hazing that he'd complained about to school officials.

These fathers say they were delighted when, after reaching out to the North American Interfrate­rnity Conference, they found an ally in its president and CEO, Judson Horras, who also brought aboard his National Panhelleni­c Conference counterpar­t, Carole Jones. Their organizati­ons together represent nearly 100 fraterniti­es and sororities nationwide.

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