The Complete Guide to Hazing Laws, Cases, and Accountability for Elgin, Texas Families
If Your Child Was Hazed at a Texas University, You’re Not Alone—And You Have Rights
For parents in Elgin, Bastrop, Manor, and across Travis County, sending your child to college is a milestone filled with pride and hope. You imagine them making friends, joining campus organizations, and building their future at schools like the University of Texas at Austin, Texas A&M, or other Texas universities. What you don’t imagine is the phone call that changes everything—a call where your child is injured, hospitalized, or worse, because of dangerous “traditions” disguised as bonding.
Right now, in Houston just 45 minutes from Elgin, our firm is actively litigating one of the most serious hazing cases in Texas. We represent Leonel Bermudez in his $10 million lawsuit against the University of Houston and the Pi Kappa Phi fraternity’s Beta Nu chapter. According to the Click2Houston investigation, Bermudez was subjected to months of abuse as a pledge in fall 2025: forced to carry a humiliating “pledge fanny pack” containing condoms and sex toys, endure hours of sprints and bear crawls at Yellowstone Boulevard Park, and face threats of expulsion if he didn’t comply. The physical abuse culminated in a November 3 workout where he was forced through over 100 push-ups and 500 squats. Days later, he was hospitalized for four days with rhabdomyolysis and acute kidney failure—his urine had turned brown from muscle tissue breakdown, a potentially life-threatening condition.
This isn’t an isolated incident. It’s proof that severe, dangerous hazing is happening right now at Texas universities, and families in our Central Texas community need to understand their rights and options when tradition turns into trauma.
IMMEDIATE HELP FOR HAZING EMERGENCIES IN ELGIN:
If your child is in danger RIGHT NOW:
- Call 911 for medical emergencies
- Then call Attorney911: 1-888-ATTY-911 (1-888-288-9911)
- We provide immediate help—that’s why we’re the Legal Emergency Lawyers™
In the first 48 hours:
- Get medical attention immediately, even if your child insists they’re “fine”
- Preserve evidence BEFORE it’s deleted:
- Screenshot group chats, texts, DMs immediately
- Photograph injuries from multiple angles
- Save physical items (clothing, receipts, objects used in hazing)
- Write down everything while memory is fresh (who, what, when, where)
- Do NOT:
- Confront the fraternity/sorority directly
- Sign anything from the university or insurance company
- Post details on public social media
- Let your child delete messages or “clean up” evidence
Contact an experienced hazing attorney within 24–48 hours. Evidence disappears fast—deleted group chats, destroyed paddles, coached witnesses. Universities move quickly to control the narrative. We can help preserve evidence and protect your child’s rights. Call 1-888-ATTY-911 for immediate consultation.
What This Guide Offers Elgin Families
This comprehensive guide is written specifically for parents and families in Elgin, Bastrop, Lockhart, and throughout Travis and Bastrop counties who need to understand:
- What modern hazing actually looks like in 2025—beyond the stereotypes
- How Texas and federal law protects—or fails to protect—your child
- What we’ve learned from national hazing deaths and how those lessons apply to Texas universities
- What’s happening at UT Austin, Texas A&M, Baylor, SMU, and UH—schools where Elgin families commonly send their children
- Your legal options when hazing causes injury, trauma, or death
- Practical steps to protect your child and hold organizations accountable
Whether your child attends UT Austin just 25 miles from Elgin, Texas A&M two hours away, or any other Texas campus, this information could be critical to their safety and your family’s recovery.
Hazing in 2025: What It Really Looks Like for Central Texas Students
Hazing isn’t just “boys will be boys” or harmless pranks. For Elgin students at Texas universities, hazing in 2025 falls into three dangerous categories that often overlap:
1. Alcohol and Substance Hazing: The Most Common Killer
This remains the leading cause of hazing deaths nationwide. For UT Austin, Texas A&M, or Baylor students from Elgin, this might look like:
- “Big/Little” nights where pledges are given entire bottles of liquor to consume
- Drinking games like “Bible study” where wrong answers mean forced shots
- “Lineups” where pledges must chug alcohol in rapid succession
- Pressure to consume unknown substances or dangerous combinations
In the UH Pi Kappa Phi case we’re litigating, Leonel Bermudez was forced to consume milk, hot dogs, and peppercorns until vomiting, then immediately forced to sprint. This dangerous combination of forced consumption and extreme physical exertion directly caused his life-threatening kidney condition.
2. Physical Hazing: Beyond “Tough Love”
Physical abuse disguised as conditioning affects students from Elgin at Corps programs, athletic teams, and fraternities:
- “Smokings” or extreme workouts beyond safe limits (like Bermudez’s 500 squats)
- Paddling and beatings, especially in underground or off-campus settings
- Sleep and food deprivation during “hell weeks”
- Exposure to extreme elements—cold weather in minimal clothing, heat without water
3. Psychological and Digital Hazing: The 24/7 Torment
Modern technology means hazing follows Elgin students everywhere:
- Group chat monitoring with required instant responses at all hours
- Social media humiliation through forced posts or “challenges”
- Geo-tracking demands via Find My Friends or Life360
- Public shaming in chapter meetings or group settings
- Isolation from family and non-Greek friends
Where Hazing Happens at Texas Schools
Elgin families should understand that hazing extends beyond stereotypical fraternity parties:
- Fraternities and sororities (IFC, Panhellenic, NPHC, multicultural groups)
- Corps of Cadets and ROTC programs, especially at Texas A&M
- Athletic teams from football to cheerleading
- Spirit and tradition organizations like Texas Cowboys at UT
- Marching bands and performance groups
- Some academic and service organizations
The common thread? Power imbalance, secrecy, and tradition used to justify abuse.
Texas Hazing Law: What Elgin Families Need to Know
Texas Education Code Chapter 37: Your Child’s Legal Protection
Texas has specific anti-hazing laws that apply whether your Elgin student attends UT Austin, Texas A&M, or any other Texas campus. Here’s what matters most for Travis County families:
Definition (Texas Education Code § 37.151):
Hazing means any intentional, knowing, or reckless act that:
- Endangers the mental or physical health or safety of a student
- Occurs for the purpose of pledging, initiation, affiliation, or maintaining membership in any organization
- Can happen on or off campus—location doesn’t matter
Critical Protections for Elgin Families:
-
Consent Is NOT a Defense (§ 37.155):
Even if your child “agreed” to participate, it’s still hazing under Texas law. Courts recognize that peer pressure and power imbalance make true consent impossible. -
Criminal Penalties Scale with Harm (§ 37.152):
- Class B Misdemeanor: Hazing without serious injury (up to 180 days jail, $2,000 fine)
- Class A Misdemeanor: Hazing causing injury requiring medical treatment
- State Jail Felony: Hazing causing serious bodily injury or death
-
Organizational Liability (§ 37.153):
Fraternities, sororities, and clubs can be fined up to $10,000 per violation and face campus bans. -
Good-Faith Reporter Protection (§ 37.154):
Students who report hazing or call 911 in emergencies have legal protection, even if they were drinking underage or involved.
Criminal vs. Civil Cases: Understanding the Difference
Criminal Cases:
- Brought by the state (Travis County DA for UT Austin cases, Brazos County DA for Texas A&M, etc.)
- Aim: Punishment (jail, fines, probation)
- Common charges: Hazing, furnishing alcohol to minors, assault, manslaughter in deaths
Civil Cases:
- Brought by victims or families like yours
- Aim: Compensation for damages and accountability
- Focus: Medical bills, pain and suffering, lost education, wrongful death
- Can proceed even without criminal charges
Federal Laws That Protect Your Elgin Student
- Stop Campus Hazing Act (2024): Requires universities receiving federal aid to report hazing transparently and strengthen prevention (phased in through 2026)
- Title IX: Applies when hazing involves sexual harassment or gender-based hostility
- Clery Act: Requires reporting of certain crimes that often overlap with hazing
National Hazing Cases: Patterns That Repeat at Texas Schools
The tragedies happening at Texas universities follow the same patterns seen nationwide. Elgin families should understand these cases because they show how organizations repeat dangerous behaviors—and how families have held them accountable.
Alcohol Poisoning Deaths: The Most Common Pattern
Stone Foltz – Bowling Green State University, Pi Kappa Alpha (2021):
The 20-year-old pledge was forced to drink an entire bottle of alcohol during a “Big/Little” event. He died from alcohol poisoning. His family reached a $10 million settlement—$7 million from Pi Kappa Alpha national, $3 million from BGSU. This demonstrates that both universities and national fraternities face massive liability.
Max Gruver – LSU, Phi Delta Theta (2017):
Forced to participate in a “Bible study” drinking game where wrong answers meant drinking. His blood alcohol concentration reached 0.495%. His death led to Louisiana’s Max Gruver Act making hazing a felony. His family received a $6.1 million verdict.
Why This Matters for Elgin Families: The same fraternities involved in these deaths—Pi Kappa Alpha, Phi Delta Theta—have chapters at UT Austin, Texas A&M, Baylor, and SMU. Their national organizations knew these drinking games were deadly but failed to prevent them at multiple campuses.
Physical Hazing with Deadly Consequences
Chun “Michael” Deng – Baruch College, Pi Delta Psi (2013):
Blindfolded and weighted with a backpack, he was repeatedly tackled during a “glass ceiling” ritual at a Pennsylvania retreat. He died from traumatic brain injuries. The national fraternity was convicted of aggravated assault and involuntary manslaughter—proving organizations, not just individuals, face criminal liability.
Danny Santulli – University of Missouri, Phi Gamma Delta (2021):
Forced to drink excessive alcohol during a “pledge dad reveal,” he suffered permanent brain damage (cannot walk, talk, or see; requires 24/7 care). His family settled with 22 defendants, showing how many parties can share liability.
Athletic Program Hazing: Not Just Greek Life
Northwestern University Football (2023-2025):
Former players alleged sexualized, racist hazing within the program. Multiple lawsuits led to coach firings and confidential settlements. This proves hazing exists in multi-million dollar athletic programs with extensive oversight.
Key Takeaways for Travis County Parents:
- Patterns repeat: The same dangerous traditions (drinking games, physical endurance tests) recur across campuses
- Cover-ups are common: Organizations often delay medical care to avoid getting in trouble
- National organizations know: They have anti-hazing policies because they’ve been sued before
- Multi-million dollar accountability is possible: These cases show universities and fraternities can be held financially responsible
Texas University Focus: Where Elgin Students Are at Risk
University of Texas at Austin: Closest to Home, Highest Transparency
For Elgin families: UT Austin is just 25 miles away—the university most accessible to Travis County students. Its public hazing violations database offers transparency other schools lack.
Recent Documented Incidents from UT’s Public Hazing Log:
- Pi Kappa Alpha (2023): New members directed to consume milk and perform strenuous calisthenics. Chapter placed on probation with mandatory hazing prevention education.
- Texas Wranglers (multiple years): Sanctioned for forced workouts, alcohol-related hazing, and punishment-based practices.
- Spirit organizations: Multiple groups disciplined for physical endurance tests and humiliation rituals.
How UT Handles Hazing:
- Public violations log at hazing.utexas.edu
- Office of the Dean of Students investigations
- UTPD and Austin Police Department jurisdiction depending on location
- Organizational probation, suspension, or revocation of recognition
What Elgin Families Should Know About UT Cases:
- Prior violations matter: UT’s public log can show patterns that strengthen civil cases
- Mixed jurisdiction: Off-campus hazing might involve Austin PD instead of UTPD
- Transparency advantage: Public records requests can uncover more than at private schools
Texas A&M University: Corps Culture and Greek Life
For Elgin families: Many Central Texas students choose A&M for its traditions and community. The Corps of Cadets and Greek system both have documented hazing issues.
Notable A&M Hazing Incidents:
Sigma Alpha Epsilon Chemical Burns Case (2021):
Two pledges alleged being covered in substances including industrial-strength cleaner, causing severe chemical burns requiring skin graft surgeries. They sued for $1 million. The fraternity was suspended for two years. This shows how hazing methods evolve to include chemical dangers.
Corps of Cadets “Roasted Pig” Case (2023):
A cadet alleged degrading hazing including simulated sexual acts and being bound between beds in a “roasted pig” position with an apple in his mouth. He sought over $1 million. Texas A&M stated it handled the matter internally.
How A&M Responds:
- Student Conduct Office investigations
- Corps-specific regulations and discipline
- Organizational suspensions and probation
- Challenge: Less public transparency than UT’s violations log
Baylor University: Private School Complexities
For Elgin families: Baylor’s religious identity and Waco location attract many Central Texas students. Its history with institutional scandals affects how it handles hazing.
Baylor Baseball Hazing (2020):
14 players suspended following hazing investigation. The staggered suspensions during the season showed the program’s systemic issues.
What Makes Baylor Cases Different:
- Private university status affects transparency
- Religious branding influences institutional response
- Prior sexual assault scandal context shapes oversight approaches
Southern Methodist University: Affluent Greek Culture
For Elgin families: SMU’s Dallas location and strong Greek life attract students seeking private education with social connections.
Kappa Alpha Order Paddling Incident (2017):
New members reportedly paddled, forced to drink alcohol, and deprived of sleep. Chapter suspended with recruiting restrictions until 2021.
SMU’s Approach:
- Private university with less public disclosure
- Anonymous reporting systems like Real Response
- Greek Life office oversight with varying effectiveness
University of Houston: Active Litigation Shows Systemic Issues
For Elgin families: UH is a common choice for Houston-area students. Our firm’s active litigation there reveals how hazing operates in large urban Greek systems.
The Leonel Bermudez Pi Kappa Phi Case (2025):
Beyond the physical abuse, the case reveals systemic failures:
- Multiple locations: Pi Kappa Phi house, Culmore Drive residence, Yellowstone Park
- Chapter officer involvement: President, pledgemaster, risk manager all named
- Institutional response: Chapter suspended Nov. 6, voted to surrender charter Nov. 14
- Medical consequences: Rhabdomyolysis, acute kidney failure, four-day hospitalization
This case demonstrates that even when chapters are quickly shut down, the damage to students is already done—and accountability requires legal action.
Fraternities and Sororities: National Histories That Matter for Elgin Families
When your Elgin student joins a fraternity or sorority at a Texas university, they’re joining an organization with a national history. Those histories matter because they show patterns of behavior—and knowledge—that can create liability.
Why National Organizations Are Legally Responsible
National fraternities and sororities aren’t just letterheads. They:
- Collect dues from members
- Provide insurance coverage (often with hazing exclusions)
- Set policies and training requirements
- Have prior incident reports from chapters nationwide
- Know which “traditions” are dangerous because they’ve caused deaths before
Organizations with Documented Nationwide Patterns
Pi Kappa Alpha (Pike):
- Stone Foltz death at Bowling Green (2021): $10 million settlement
- David Bogenberger death at Northern Illinois (2012): $14 million settlement
- UH chapter incidents: Prior suspensions for hazing violations
- Pattern: Alcohol-focused “Big/Little” events repeatedly cause deaths
Sigma Alpha Epsilon (SAE):
- Multiple hazing deaths nationwide led to elimination of traditional pledge process (2014)
- Texas A&M chemical burns case (2021): $1 million lawsuit
- UT Austin assault case (2024): Over $1 million lawsuit for exchange student injuries
- Pattern: Physical and alcohol hazing across multiple Texas campuses
Pi Kappa Phi:
- Andrew Coffey death at Florida State (2017): Led to Greek system suspension
- Leonel Bermudez case at UH (2025): $10 million lawsuit, chapter closure
- Pattern: Endurance-based hazing causing physical collapse
Phi Delta Theta:
- Max Gruver death at LSU (2017): $6.1 million verdict, Louisiana felony hazing law
- Multiple chapter suspensions nationwide for alcohol hazing
- Pattern: Drinking games disguised as “education” or “tradition”
How National Histories Strengthen Your Elgin Case
In litigation, we use these patterns to prove:
- Foreseeability: The national organization knew this type of hazing was dangerous
- Inadequate prevention: Their training and policies failed to stop predictable harm
- Prior notice: Previous incidents at other chapters put them on notice
- Pattern and practice: This wasn’t “rogue individuals” but organizational culture
Building a Hazing Case: Evidence, Strategy, and Damages for Elgin Families
Critical Evidence That Wins Cases
Digital Evidence (Most Important):
- Group chats: GroupMe, WhatsApp, iMessage, Discord—even deleted messages can be recovered
- Social media: Instagram stories, Snapchat, TikTok videos showing hazing events
- Location data: Geo-tags, Find My Friends tracking, timestamped photos
- Planning communications: Emails, texts about “traditions” or “pledge education”
Watch our video on using your phone to document evidence for best practices on preserving digital proof.
Physical Evidence:
- Photographs of injuries (initial and progression)
- Medical records explicitly stating “hazing” as cause
- Objects used in hazing (paddles, alcohol bottles, props)
- Damaged clothing or personal items
Institutional Records:
- University conduct files through public records requests
- National fraternity incident reports obtained via discovery
- Insurance policies covering chapters and nationals
- Prior warning letters or probation documents
Witness Testimony:
- Other pledges experiencing similar abuse
- Former members who quit due to hazing
- Roommates, RAs, or friends who observed changes
- Medical professionals documenting injuries
Types of Damages in Hazing Cases
Economic Damages (Quantifiable):
- Medical bills (ER, hospitalization, surgery, therapy)
- Future medical care (ongoing treatment, life care plans)
- Lost educational costs (withdrawn semesters, transfer expenses)
- Lost earning capacity (if injuries affect career prospects)
Non-Economic Damages (Substantial):
- Pain and suffering from physical injuries
- Emotional distress, PTSD, depression, anxiety
- Humiliation and loss of dignity
- Loss of enjoyment of life and educational experience
Wrongful Death Damages:
- Funeral and burial expenses
- Loss of companionship and guidance for family
- Emotional suffering of parents and siblings
- Lost financial support the student would have provided
Punitive Damages (When Appropriate):
- Punish especially reckless or malicious conduct
- Deter future hazing
- Available when defendants knew risks and ignored them
Navigating Insurance Coverage Fights
Fraternities and universities have insurance—but insurers often fight hazing claims:
Common Insurance Defenses:
- “Hazing is an intentional act, not covered”
- “The policy excludes criminal conduct”
- “This chapter wasn’t officially recognized”
Our Insider Advantage:
Mr. Lupe Peña spent years as an insurance defense attorney at a national firm. He knows exactly how insurers value claims, use Independent Medical Exams to reduce settlements, and delay cases to pressure families. This insider knowledge is invaluable when negotiating with fraternity and university insurance companies.
Practical Guides for Elgin Parents, Students, and Witnesses
For Elgin Parents: Warning Signs and Action Steps
Red Flags Your Child May Be Hazed:
- Unexplained bruises, burns, or injuries with inconsistent explanations
- Extreme fatigue beyond normal college stress
- Sudden secrecy about organization activities
- Personality changes: anxiety, depression, withdrawal
- Constant phone use for group chat monitoring
- Financial requests for unexplained “fines” or purchases
- Academic decline from missing classes for “mandatory” events
If You Suspect Hazing:
- Talk openly but non-confrontationally: “I’m concerned about your safety, not judgmental”
- Listen without interrupting: Let them share at their own pace
- Prioritize safety: If they’re in immediate danger, call 911
- Document everything: Write down what they tell you with dates and details
- Preserve evidence: Help them screenshot messages before deletion
- Seek medical care: Even if they resist, some injuries need immediate attention
- Consult an attorney early: Before talking to the university or organization
For Elgin Students: Recognizing and Escaping Hazing
Is This Hazing? Ask Yourself:
- Would I do this if I truly had a free choice?
- Is this activity dangerous, degrading, or illegal?
- Would my parents or the university approve if they knew details?
- Am I being told to keep secrets or lie?
- Are older members making me do things they don’t have to do?
How to Exit Safely:
NETPOSITIVE
- Tell someone first: Contact a trusted adult, RA, or friend outside the organization
- Send written resignation: Email chapter president: “I resign my membership effective immediately”
- Avoid “one last meeting”: They may pressure or retaliate
- Document retaliation: Save any threatening messages
- Use campus resources: Dean of Students, counseling center, campus police
Your Legal Rights in Texas:
- You cannot be punished for calling 911 in an emergency
- Consent is not a defense to hazing charges
- You can request no-contact orders if harassed
- You have the right to leave any organization at any time
Critical Mistakes That Can Ruin Your Case
MISTAKES TO AVOID:
- Deleting evidence: Messages, even embarrassing ones, are critical proof
- Confronting the organization directly: They’ll lawyer up and destroy evidence
- Signing university “resolution” forms: Often waive your right to sue
- Posting on social media: Defense attorneys screenshot everything
- Waiting for university investigations: Evidence disappears, statutes of limitations run
- Talking to insurance adjusters alone: Recorded statements are used against you
- Letting your child return for “closure”: Pressure and intimidation often follow
Watch our video on client mistakes that can ruin your injury case for more guidance on protecting your rights.
Frequently Asked Questions for Elgin Families
“Can we sue a Texas university for hazing?”
Yes. Public universities (UT, Texas A&M, UH) have some sovereign immunity, but exceptions exist for gross negligence and Title IX violations. Private schools (SMU, Baylor) have fewer protections. Every case depends on specific facts.
“Is hazing a felony in Texas?”
It can be. Texas law makes hazing a state jail felony when it causes serious bodily injury or death. Individual officers can also face misdemeanor charges for failing to report hazing.
“What if my child ‘agreed’ to the activities?”
Texas Education Code § 37.155 explicitly states consent is not a defense. Courts recognize that peer pressure and power imbalance make true consent impossible in hazing situations.
“How long do we have to file a lawsuit?”
Generally 2 years from the date of injury or death in Texas, but exceptions exist. Evidence disappears quickly, so immediate action is critical. Learn more in our video on Texas statutes of limitations.
“What if the hazing happened off-campus?”
Location doesn’t eliminate liability. Universities and nationals can still be liable based on sponsorship, control, and knowledge. Many major hazing cases occurred off-campus.
“Will my child’s name be public?”
Most cases settle confidentially before trial. We prioritize your family’s privacy while pursuing accountability.
“How much does it cost to hire a lawyer?”
We work on contingency—you pay nothing unless we win. Watch our video explaining how contingency fees work.
Why Attorney911 for Elgin Hazing Cases
Texas-Based, Nationally Relevant Expertise
From our Houston office, we serve families throughout Texas, including Elgin, Bastrop, Lockhart, and across Travis and Bastrop counties. When your family faces a hazing crisis, you need more than a general personal injury lawyer. You need attorneys who understand how powerful institutions fight back—and how to win anyway.
Our Unique Qualifications for Hazing Litigation
Insurance Insider Advantage (Mr. Lupe Peña):
Mr. Peña spent years as an insurance defense attorney at a national firm. He knows exactly how fraternity and university insurance companies value claims, use delay tactics, and fight coverage. “We know their playbook because we used to run it.”
Complex Institutional Litigation (Ralph Manginello):
As one of the few Texas firms involved in BP Texas City explosion litigation, we’ve faced billion-dollar defendants with unlimited legal budgets. We’re not intimidated by national fraternities or universities.
Multi-Million Dollar Results:
We’ve recovered millions in wrongful death and catastrophic injury cases. We work with economists, life care planners, and medical experts to build cases that force real accountability, not cheap settlements.
Dual Civil/Criminal Expertise:
Ralph’s membership in the Harris County Criminal Lawyers Association (HCCLA) means we understand how criminal hazing charges interact with civil litigation. We can advise on both tracks.
Investigative Depth:
We deploy digital forensics experts to recover deleted messages, subpoena national fraternity records, and uncover university files others miss. We investigate like your child’s life depends on it—because it does.
How We Approach Hazing Cases Differently
- Immediate Evidence Preservation: We act within hours to secure digital evidence before deletion
- Comprehensive Defendant Identification: We identify all liable parties—individuals, chapters, nationals, universities, insurers
- Pattern Evidence Development: We document prior incidents showing organizational knowledge
- Strategic Settlement vs. Trial Decisions: We prepare every case for trial, which forces better settlements
- Privacy Protection: We shield families from unnecessary public exposure while pursuing justice
Your Next Steps: Contact Us Today
If hazing has impacted your Elgin family—whether your child attends UT Austin, Texas A&M, Baylor, SMU, UH, or any Texas campus—you don’t have to face this alone.
What to Expect in Your Free Consultation:
- We listen without judgment: Tell us what happened in complete confidence
- We review your evidence: Photos, messages, medical records—whatever you have
- We explain your options: Criminal reporting, civil lawsuit, both, or neither
- We discuss realistic expectations: Timelines, possible outcomes, challenges
- We answer all your questions: About costs, privacy, process, everything
- No pressure to decide: Take time to think before committing
Contact Information:
Call: 1-888-ATTY-911 (1-888-288-9911)
Direct: (713) 528-9070
Cell: (713) 443-4781
Website: https://attorney911.com
Email: ralph@atty911.com
Spanish Services Available:
Hablamos Español—Contact Mr. Lupe Peña at lupe@atty911.com for consultation in Spanish.
Serving All of Texas from Our Houston Office
While based in Houston, we serve families throughout Texas. Distance doesn’t matter—we handle cases remotely and travel as needed. What matters is getting your family the experienced legal help you deserve.
Whether you’re in Elgin, Austin, College Station, Waco, Dallas, or anywhere in Texas, if hazing has hurt your child, call us today. Let us help you get answers, hold the right people accountable, and prevent this from happening to another family.
Plain Text Links to Key Resources
News Coverage of the Leonel Bermudez / UH Pi Kappa Phi Hazing Lawsuit:
- Click2Houston investigation:
https://www.click2houston.com/news/local/2025/11/21/only-on-2-lawsuit-alleges-severe-hazing-at-university-of-houstons-pi-kappa-phi-chapter-fraternity/ - ABC13 coverage:
https://abc13.com/post/waterboarding-forced-eating-physical-punishment-lawsuit-alleges-abuse-faced-injured-pledge-uhs-pi-kappa-phi-fraternity/18186418/ - Hoodline summary:
https://hoodline.com/2025/11/university-of-houston-and-pi-kappa-phi-fraternity-face-10m-lawsuit-over-alleged-hazing-and-abuse/
Attorney911 Educational Videos:
- Using your phone to document evidence:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LLbpzrmogTs - Texas statutes of limitations:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MRHwg8tV02c - Client mistakes that can ruin your case:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r3IYsoxOSxY - How contingency fees work:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=upcI_j6F7Nc
Attorney911 Main Website:
- Contact for free consultation:
https://attorney911.com
Legal Disclaimer
This article is provided for informational and educational purposes only. It is not legal advice and does not create an attorney–client relationship between you and The Manginello Law Firm, PLLC.
Hazing laws, university policies, and legal precedents can change. The information in this guide is current as of late 2025 but may not reflect the most recent developments. Every hazing case is unique, and outcomes depend on the specific facts, evidence, applicable law, and many other factors.
If you or your child has been affected by hazing, we strongly encourage you to consult with a qualified Texas attorney who can review your specific situation, explain your legal rights, and advise you on the best course of action for your family.
The Manginello Law Firm, PLLC / Attorney911
Houston, Austin, and Beaumont, Texas
Call: 1-888-ATTY-911 (1-888-288-9911)
Direct: (713) 528-9070 | Cell: (713) 443-4781
Website: https://attorney911.com
Email: ralph@atty911.com