I have previously preached about the ills of hazing and the civil consequences of those insane, illogical acts of lunacy. So, you already know that hazing can cause you to lose all the hard earned things you achieve in life, including your home, your car, and even your wife and kids when they learn that you lost your livelihood because you wanted to beat up on somebody or make them drink too much alcohol. You know this because you have witnessed it in our province and read about it in my articles. But did you know you can also lose your freedom and, today, the courts are more willing to lock you up for acts of hazing. Three situations were reported in the latest edition of Fraternal Law (January 2004, Number 87) and demonstrate a new attitude that prosecutors and judges have toward acts that, historically, were considered harmless fraternity and sorority pranks.
Sports Illustrated recently published an article, "Special Report: Hazing, a High School Tragedy." Older players of a Long Island, New York high school football team committed certain acts against younger members of the squad during the annual preseason conditioning camp. According the article, the hazing included sodomizing the younger players with broomsticks, pinecones, and golf balls. The lead offenders ultimately pleaded guilty to multiple counts of involuntary deviate sexual intercourse and the punishment ranged from probation to incarceration in a wilderness boot camp until age 21. The New York prosecuting attorney continues to investigate whether he will bring charges against other team members.
In Texas, several members of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, on the campus Southern Methodist University, face up to 20 years in jail for forcing pledges to drink gallons of water, hot sauce, and for beating the candidates with wooden paddles. One candidate went into a coma, suffered pulmonary edema from water in the lungs, and had hyponatremia, a sodium imbalance from excess fluid consumption.
Finally, in Plattsburgh, New York, prosecutors charged members of a fraternity at the State University of New York after they forced a candidate to drink large amounts of water and he died. The members were charged with several crimes, including negligent homicide and ultimately pleaded guilty to hazing.
And, let us also not forget the unfortunate incident in California where candidates for membership in Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority died during pledge activities in the Pacific Ocean. The criminal possibilities in that case are enormous and charges in that situation could include up to involuntary manslaughter. Those convicted could spend up to 17 years in a very unpleasant institution where "brutal hazing" is not only rampant but often sanctioned by prison officials.
Undoubtedly, it is a different climate than ten or twenty years ago. Prosecutors are under tremendous pressure to eliminate hazing type activities and many political candidates base their campaigns, in part, on the promise to eradicate senseless violence on college campuses. So, "Big Brother" is watching and he has very little tolerance for the type of activities some of you consider essential to "make a brother right."
So my advice is simple. If you insist on subjecting candidates to the type of activity this Fraternity and the law in every state banned and made illegal years ago, I hope you are prepared for the all-male environment you could very well experience. But, on the plus side, they will love you there and showers will take on a whole new meaning, especially when you pick up the soap.
Until next time, I am
Yours in the Bond,
Reuben A. Shelton (Past Province Polemarch)
General Counsel
Middle Western Province
GeneralCounsel@KAPsiMWP.com