Ottawa Citizen

Frat pledge treated like ‘roadkill,’ family says

- BY STEVE PEOPLES

NEW YORK • A fraternity pledge who was ordered to guzzle alcohol during a hazing ritual and twice fell down a flight of stairs before his death was treated like “roadkill,” his father said Monday, days after criminal charges were filed against 18 of his son’s Penn State fraternity brothers.

Jim Piazza, the father of 19-year-old engineerin­g student Timothy Piazza, said the Beta Theta Pi fraternity members were to blame for his son’s February death.

“They planned this night out,” Piazza said. “They had all the intent to feed these young men lethal doses of alcohol — to bring them to alcohol poisoning levels. This was premeditat­ed. They killed our son.”

The family of the college sophomore from Lebanon, N.J., said they are considerin­g a lawsuit but are focused now on the criminal case against their son’s fraternity brothers.

Eight face the most serious charge of aggravated assault, a felony that carries a sentence of 10 to 20 years in prison.

Timothy Piazza consumed what prosecutor­s said was a life-threatenin­g amount of alcohol — his blood-alcohol content reached nearly .40 per cent, doctors estimated — during a hazing ritual on Feb. 2 in State College, Penn., and he died two days later.

Piazza’s mother, Evelyn, said her grief has worsened the more she’s learned about what happened to her son.

“My mind used to go to dark places before. Now I’m imagining more horrors so it’s really hard to fall asleep.”

Jim Piazza said the fraternity brothers “tortured” their son. “They held him captive and tortured him. They treated him like roadkill,” he said. “Knowing that your son suffered the way he did over such a long period of time, and died a very slow and very painful death, frankly, it’s haunting.”

A grand jury said security camera footage captured events inside the house that night, including pledges being ordered to guzzle alcohol after the ceremony.

Piazza appeared to become inebriated and fell face-first down a flight of basement steps.

Fraternity brothers made half-hearted and even counterpro­ductive efforts to help him, and when one member strongly advocated for summoning help, he was shoved into a wall and told to leave, the report said.

Piazza apparently fell down the steps again early the next morning but was not discovered until about 10 a.m. Someone called 911 some 40 minutes later.

Piazza later died as a result of severe head injuries.

“This can’t happen to anyone else,” Jim Piazza said. “What is a life worth? Our son lost the rest of his life. He lost the ability to graduate, to get married, to have kids, to be his brother’s best man.”

Evelyn Piazza said: “He gets to sit in a mausoleum. Everybody else gets to continue living their lives. The world goes on for everybody else.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada