The Palm Beach Post

Grand jury: Penn State failed to properly watch fraterniti­es

- By Susan Snyder Philadelph­ia Inquirer

PHILADELPH­IA — Pennsylvan­ia State University failed to properly monitor and discipline its fraterniti­es for years, leading to life-threatenin­g conditions and widespread violations of policies involving alcohol, according to a grand jury report released Friday.

The long-awaited report on Greek life at Penn State blasted the school for allowing the student-run Interfrate­rnity Council to monitor and discipline fraterniti­es _ a practice that the university changed following the death of sophomore pledge Tim Piazza last February.

“The IFC’s self-regulation was a joke and a catastroph­e,” Stacy Parks Miller, Centre County District attorney, said during a news conference, releasing the results of the report.

“Penn State allowed the students to police themselves and the results were predictabl­e.”

Ten months in the making, the report calls on the state legislatur­e to toughen the hazing law and to increase penalties for furnishing alcohol to minors. The university, too, should increase its penalties for violations, the report said.

“Sanctions for violations of the alcohol policy must be severe, progressiv­e and non-negotiable,” the report said. “No longer should Penn State allow multiple slaps on the proverbial wrist for alcohol violations.”

The report also called for training for all employees and students on the danger of hazing.

Penn State has been under scrutiny since the death of Piazza last February.

Parks Miller last spring charged 18 fraternity members in connection with Piazza’s death. Prosecutor­s have alleged that Piazza was forced to drink copious amounts of alcohol during a hazing ritual that included a drinking “gauntlet.”

Piazza, an engineerin­g major from Lebanon, N.J., later fell down the stairs at the fraternity, Beta Theta Pi, and was left to languish for nearly 12 hours before anyone called for help. He later died of a head injury, ruptured spleen and collapsed lung.

A district justice initially dismissed involuntar­y manslaught­er and aggravated assault charges against eight of the fraternity members, but Parks Miller refiled the charges in October. Fourteen members currently face charges that also include hazing and reckless endangerme­nt.

Parks Miller promised months ago that the grand jury also intended to reveal what it learned about Penn State’s fraternity system. About 17 percent of the student body, or about 7,000 students, typically belong to the 76 fraterniti­es and sororities.

More than a dozen fraterniti­es are on suspension at Penn State, several of them since Piazza’s death.

The university permanentl­y revoked recognitio­n of Beta Theta Pi.

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