Texas Hazing Guide for Somerville Families: Understanding Your Rights & Finding Accountability
A Somerville Parent’s Worst Fear Realized
Imagine receiving a call in the middle of the night. Your child, a student at a Texas university you trusted, is in the emergency room. Their story comes out in pieces: forced drinking, humiliating tasks, extreme physical exertion, and a culture of silence. As a parent in Somerville, Burleson County, you sent your child off to pursue their dreams, not to be subjected to abuse disguised as tradition.
Right now, just a few hours from Somerville in Houston, we are fighting exactly this kind of case. We represent Leonel Bermudez, a University of Houston student who was horrifically hazed by the Pi Kappa Phi fraternity’s Beta Nu chapter in fall 2025. His story—detailed in a $10 million lawsuit—involves being forced to carry a degrading “pledge fanny pack,” endure “waterboarding” with a hose, complete hundreds of push-ups and squats until he collapsed, and consume outrageous amounts of food until vomiting. The result was catastrophic: rhabdomyolysis (severe muscle breakdown) and acute kidney failure that required a four-day hospitalization, with brown urine signaling the life-threatening damage. The Pi Kappa Phi chapter was quickly suspended and voted to surrender its charter, but the physical and psychological harm to Leonel is ongoing.
This guide is for you—the parents, families, and students of Somerville, Snook, Lyons, and across Burleson County. Whether your child attends nearby Blinn College, has ventured to Texas A&M University in College Station, the University of Texas at Austin, or any other Texas campus, the reality of modern hazing can touch any family. Our goal is to arm you with knowledge: what hazing truly looks like in 2025, the Texas laws designed to protect your child, the sobering national patterns, and the specific landscapes at major Texas universities. Most importantly, we explain your family’s legal rights and the path to accountability.
Immediate Help for Hazing Emergencies
If your child is in danger RIGHT NOW:
- Call 911 for any medical emergency.
- Then call us, Attorney911, at 1-888-ATTY-911 (1-888-288-9911). We provide immediate legal help—that’s why we’re the Legal Emergency Lawyers™.
In the first 48 hours:
- Get Medical Attention: Seek care immediately, even if your child insists they are “fine.” Internal injuries like rhabdomyolysis may not be obvious.
- Preserve Evidence BEFORE It’s Deleted:
- Screenshot all group chats (GroupMe, WhatsApp, texts), DMs, and social media posts.
- Photograph any injuries from multiple angles.
- Save physical items (clothing, paddles, receipts).
- Document Everything: Write down a detailed account of what happened, including who, what, when, and where, while memories are fresh.
- DO NOT:
- Confront the fraternity, sorority, or team directly.
- Sign anything from the university or an insurance company.
- Post details on public social media.
- Allow your child to delete messages or “clean up” evidence.
Contact an experienced hazing attorney. Evidence disappears rapidly. We can help you preserve it and protect your child’s rights. Call us at 1-888-ATTY-911 for a free, confidential consultation.
Hazing in 2025: What It Really Looks Like
Hazing has evolved far beyond the stereotypes of “hell week.” For families in Somerville, it’s crucial to recognize that hazing is not “just partying” or “harmless tradition.” Under Texas law, hazing is any intentional, knowing, or reckless act that endangers the mental or physical health of a student for the purpose of joining or maintaining membership in a group. This can happen on or off campus and includes acts by individuals or groups.
The Modern Categories of Abuse
1. Alcohol and Substance Hazing: This remains the most common and deadliest form.
- Forced or coerced consumption of alcohol during “Big/Little” nights, “family tree” games, or lineups.
- Being pressured to consume unknown mixtures, large quantities of liquor, or drugs.
- In the UH Pi Kappa Phi case, Leonel Bermudez was forced to drink milk and eat hot dogs and peppercorns until he vomited, after which he was forced to sprint.
2. Physical Hazing:
- Extreme, punitive calisthenics (“smokings”) like the 100+ push-ups and 500 squats forced upon Leonel Bermudez.
- Paddling, beatings, or “wall-sits” until collapse.
- Sleep deprivation, food/water restriction, and exposure to extreme elements.
- In the UH case, pledges were made to lie in vomit-soaked grass and were sprayed in the face with a hose “similar to waterboarding.”
3. Psychological & Humiliating Hazing:
- Verbal abuse, threats, and isolation.
- Forced nudity or wearing degrading costumes.
- Public shaming, “roasts,” or being assigned derogatory names.
- In the UH case, the mandatory “pledge fanny pack” containing condoms, a sex toy, and nicotine devices was a tool of daily humiliation.
4. Digital Hazing:
- 24/7 monitoring and mandatory instant replies in group chats (GroupMe, Discord).
- Forced participation in embarrassing social media “challenges” or dares.
- Geo-location tracking and cyber-harassment.
5. Sexualized Hazing:
- Simulated sexual acts or degrading positions.
- Sexual assault or coercion.
- In the UH Pi Kappa Phi case, another pledge was allegedly hog-tied face-down on a table with an object in his mouth for over an hour.
Where Hazing Happens
It is not limited to fraternities. In Texas, hazing occurs in:
- Sororities (Panhellenic and culturally-based).
- Corps of Cadets programs (like at Texas A&M).
- Athletic teams (from football to cheerleading).
- Spirit and tradition groups (like Texas Cowboys or Aggie Bonfire crews).
- Marching bands and performance ensembles.
- Academic clubs and honor societies.
The common thread is a misuse of power, where tradition and secrecy are weaponized to exploit new members.
Texas Hazing Law & Liability: A Framework for Somerville Families
For parents in Burleson County, understanding the legal landscape is the first step toward accountability. Texas has specific statutes, and federal laws provide additional layers of protection.
Texas Education Code Chapter 37: The Anti-Hazing Statute
The Texas hazing law (Education Code, Chapter 37, Subchapter F) provides clear definitions and penalties:
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Definition (§37.151): Hazing is any intentional, knowing, or reckless act that endangers the physical or mental health of a student for the purpose of initiation into, affiliation with, or maintaining membership in any organization.
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Key Point for Somerville Parents: The law explicitly states that consent of the victim is NOT a defense (§37.155). Even if your child “went along with it,” the perpetrators are not shielded from liability.
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Criminal Penalties (§37.152):
- Class B Misdemeanor: Basic hazing (up to 180 days jail, $2,000 fine).
- Class A Misdemeanor: Hazing that causes injury requiring medical treatment.
- State Jail Felony: Hazing that causes serious bodily injury or death.
- It is also a crime for an organization to haze or for an officer/member to knowingly fail to report it.
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Organizational Liability (§37.153): The fraternity, sorority, or club itself can be prosecuted and fined up to $10,000 per violation.
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Immunity for Reporting (§37.154): A person who in good faith reports hazing is immune from civil or criminal liability. Many universities have “medical amnesty” policies to encourage calling 911 in alcohol-related emergencies.
Criminal vs. Civil Cases: Two Paths to Accountability
Criminal Cases:
- Brought by the state (e.g., Burleson County District Attorney, Harris County DA).
- Goal: Punishment (jail, fines, probation).
- Charges can include hazing, assault, furnishing alcohol to minors, or manslaughter.
Civil Cases:
- Brought by the victim or their family (like the Bermudez lawsuit).
- Goal: Financial compensation for damages and institutional accountability.
- Based on theories like negligence, wrongful death, negligent supervision, and intentional infliction of emotional distress.
These cases can proceed simultaneously. A lack of criminal charges does not prevent a civil lawsuit.
Federal Law Overlay: Title IX, Clery, and the Stop Campus Hazing Act
- Title IX: If hazing involves sexual harassment or assault, universities have a duty to investigate and address it under federal law.
- Clery Act: Requires universities to report certain crimes, including aggravated assault, which some hazing acts may constitute.
- Stop Campus Hazing Act (2024): This new federal law requires colleges to publish more transparent hazing incident reports and strengthen prevention programs, with full implementation by 2026.
Who Can Be Held Liable?
In a civil hazing lawsuit, multiple entities may share responsibility:
- The Individual Perpetrators: The students who planned, carried out, or covered up the hazing.
- The Local Chapter: As an organization that authorized or failed to stop the conduct.
- The National Fraternity/Sorority Headquarters: For failing to adequately supervise, train, or discipline chapters despite known patterns of abuse (a key argument in the UH Pi Kappa Phi case).
- The University: If it knew or should have known about the hazing and failed to take reasonable steps to prevent it (the lawsuit alleges UH had this duty).
- Third Parties: Landlords of off-campus houses, alumni advisors, or event venues.
National Hazing Case Patterns: The Scripts That Repeat
The tragic case at UH is not an anomaly. It follows devastatingly predictable patterns seen across the country. Understanding these national precedents shows why institutions can be held liable and gives Somerville families a sense of the legal landscape.
The Alcohol Poisoning Pattern
- Stone Foltz – Bowling Green State (Pi Kappa Alpha, 2021): A pledge died after being forced to drink a bottle of alcohol. Result: A $10 million settlement ($7M from national, $3M from university).
- Max Gruver – LSU (Phi Delta Theta, 2017): Died after a “Bible study” drinking game. Result: Spurred Louisiana’ “Max Gruver Act,” a felony hazing law.
- Andrew Coffey – Florida State (Pi Kappa Phi, 2017): Died after a “Big Brother” night. This is the same national fraternity involved in the UH case.
The Physical & Ritualized Hazing Pattern
- Chun “Michael” Deng – Baruch College (Pi Delta Psi, 2013): Died from a traumatic brain injury after a violent, blindfolded “glass ceiling” ritual at a retreat. The national fraternity was criminally convicted and banned from Pennsylvania.
The Athletic Hazing Pattern
- Northwestern University Football (2023-2025): Widespread allegations of sexualized and racist hazing led to multiple lawsuits, the firing of the head coach, and confidential settlements.
What This Means for Texas
These cases establish critical legal principles: national organizations can be liable for chapter conduct, universities have a duty to protect students, and juries will award significant damages for catastrophic injuries and deaths. The foreseeability of these harms—because they’ve happened repeatedly elsewhere—is a powerful tool in holding entities accountable in Texas courts.
Texas University Focus: Where Somerville Families Send Their Kids
Parents in Somerville and Burleson County often have children at a mix of local colleges and major state universities. Understanding the specific environments and histories of these campuses is crucial.
For Somerville Families: The Local & Regional Campus Landscape
Primary University Destinations from Burleson County:
- Blinn College (Brenham & Bryan Campuses): A common starting point for many local students, with transfer pathways to Texas A&M. While less traditional Greek life exists, clubs, athletic teams, and other groups can still be venues for hazing.
- Texas A&M University (College Station): The flagship university closest to Somerville. Its massive Greek life and storied Corps of Cadets program have complex histories with hazing.
- University of Texas at Austin: Another top destination, with a large Greek system and a relatively transparent public hazing violations log.
- University of Houston: As evidenced by the Bermudez case, UH has active Greek life where serious hazing occurs.
- Other Texas Schools: Baylor, Texas State, Texas Tech, and others are also common choices.
Public Records: Fraternities, Sororities & Greek Organizations Connected to Texas Campuses
As part of our Texas Hazing Intelligence Engine, we maintain detailed data on the Greek organizations operating across the state. This investigative depth means we don’t start from scratch when a family from Somerville calls. Below is a sampling of the public records we utilize to identify every potentially liable entity behind a hazing incident.
Sample of Texas-Registered Greek Entities (IRS B83 Data):
- Kappa Sigma – Mu Camma Chapter Inc, EIN 133048786, 3007 Earl Rudder Fwy S, College Station, TX 77845. (IRS B83 filing)
- Beta Nu Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity Housing Corporation Inc, EIN 462267515, 10601 Big Horn Trl, Frisco, TX 75035. (IRS B83 filing) This is the housing corp for the UH chapter.
- Alpha Sigma Phi Fraternity Inc, EIN 475381060, 601 University Dr, San Marcos, TX 78666. (IRS B83 filing, likely related to Texas State University).
- Texas Kappa Sigma Educational Foundation Inc, EIN 741380362, PO Box 470061, Fort Worth, TX 76147. (IRS B83 filing).
- Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi, EIN 900293166, 114 Henderson Hall 4233 TAMU, College Station, TX 77843. (IRS B83 filing, Texas A&M University chapter).
Metro-Level Greek Presence (Cause IQ Data):
The College Station–Bryan metro area, which includes Texas A&M, shows 42 Greek-related organizations in Cause IQ data. Examples include the Sigma Chi Fraternity – Eta Upsilon Chapter (Texas A&M) and the Delta Sigma Theta Sorority – Brazos Valley Alumnae chapter.
Cross-Validated National Brands (IRS-Cause IQ Overlap):
Brands like Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority and the Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi appear in both IRS and metro datasets, showing how national organizations manifest through multiple legal entities (undergrad chapters, alumni associations, honor societies) across Texas.
This directory illustrates a key point for Somerville parents: when hazing occurs, there is often a web of organizations—local, regional, and national—that may share legal responsibility. We know how to identify and investigate them all.
Campus-Specific Hazing Environments
Texas A&M University – College Station
- Culture: Deep tradition in both Greek life and the Corps of Cadets. The “Aggie family” ethos can sometimes be exploited to normalize or conceal abuse.
- Documented Incidents: Sigma Alpha Epsilon (SAE) faced a lawsuit where pledges alleged being doused with industrial cleaner, causing severe chemical burns requiring skin grafts. The Corps of Cadets has faced lawsuits alleging degrading hazing, including being bound in “roasted pig” positions.
- For Somerville Families: A&M is your closest major university. Hazing reports may involve the Brazos County Sheriff’s Office or College Station PD. Civil suits could be filed in Brazos County courts.
University of Texas at Austin
- Culture: A large, vibrant Greek system with significant social influence.
- Transparency: UT maintains a public Hazing Violations page, listing sanctioned organizations. For example, Pi Kappa Alpha was sanctioned in 2023 for forcing new members to consume milk and perform strenuous calisthenics.
- For Somerville Families: This public log can be valuable evidence, showing a pattern of known issues within an organization.
University of Houston
- Culture: A large, diverse commuter and residential campus with active Greek councils (IFC, NPHC, Multicultural).
- The Active Case: The Leonel Bermudez v. UH & Pi Kappa Phi lawsuit is the current, devastating example. It alleges extreme physical hazing, humiliation, and a systemic failure by the chapter, its national headquarters, and the university to protect pledges.
- For Somerville Families: This case, unfolding in Harris County courts, demonstrates the severe injuries—like rhabdomyolysis and kidney failure—that can result from hazing. Media coverage includes the Click2Houston report on UH Pi Kappa Phi hazing case and ABC13 coverage of Leonel Bermudez’s UH hazing lawsuit.
Southern Methodist University & Baylor University
- Culture: Both are private universities with strong Greek affiliations and their own disciplinary processes, which can be less transparent than public institutions.
- Documented Incidents: SMU’s Kappa Alpha Order chapter was suspended for paddling and forced drinking. Baylor’s baseball team suspended multiple players for hazing in 2020.
Fraternities & Sororities: National Histories and Local Chapters
The organizations on Texas campuses are chapters of national brands with long, often troubling histories. This is not to defame all members, but to establish a critical legal concept: foreseeability.
Why National Histories Matter in Court
If a national fraternity has seen deaths from forced drinking at other chapters, it is on notice that such activities are deadly. If it fails to implement and enforce meaningful prevention at its University of Houston or Texas A&M chapter, that failure can be evidence of negligence.
Patterns from National Data:
- Pi Kappa Alpha (Pike): National pattern of “Big/Little” alcohol hazing (Stone Foltz death). A chapter at UH was suspended in 2016 after a pledge suffered a lacerated spleen.
- Sigma Alpha Epsilon (SAE): One of the deadliest fraternities historically, with multiple alcohol-related deaths nationwide. Faced the chemical burn lawsuit at Texas A&M.
- Pi Kappa Phi: The national organization involved in the UH Bermudez case and the Andrew Coffey death at Florida State.
- Phi Delta Theta: The fraternity involved in the Max Gruver death at LSU.
When we take a case for a family in Somerville, part of our investigation involves uncovering these national patterns and the communications between the local chapter and its headquarters. This data builds a powerful argument for institutional liability.
Building a Hazing Case: Evidence, Strategy, and Damages
If your family is facing this crisis, understanding the legal process can reduce fear and empower you to take the right steps.
The Critical Evidence in a Modern Hazing Case
- Digital Communications: The #1 source of evidence. We pursue GroupMe, WhatsApp, iMessage, and social media DMs. Even deleted messages can often be recovered through digital forensics or cloud backups. Our video on using your cellphone to document a legal case explains best practices.
- Photos & Videos: Content shot by members during events is damning evidence of what occurred and who was involved.
- Medical Records: Documentation of injuries like rhabdomyolysis (high creatine kinase levels), fractures, burns, or psychological diagnoses (PTSD, anxiety) is essential.
- University Records: Through discovery, we obtain prior conduct reports, warning letters, and internal emails showing what the school knew about the offending organization.
- National Fraternity Records: We subpoena risk management files, incident reports from other chapters, and training materials to prove pattern and knowledge.
- Witness Testimony: Other pledges, former members, roommates, and RAs can provide crucial accounts.
Types of Damages Families Can Recover
A civil lawsuit seeks to make the victim whole and hold wrongdoers accountable through financial compensation:
- Economic Damages: All past and future medical expenses, lost wages, and costs of psychological care.
- Non-Economic Damages: Compensation for physical pain, emotional suffering, trauma, humiliation, and loss of enjoyment of life.
- Wrongful Death Damages (if applicable): Funeral costs, loss of financial support, and loss of companionship for the family.
- Punitive Damages: In cases of especially reckless or malicious conduct, these damages aim to punish the defendant and deter future behavior.
Case outcomes vary, but national precedents like the $10 million settlement in the Stone Foltz case and the $6.1 million verdict in the Max Gruver case show that significant accountability is possible.
Overcoming Common Defense Tactics
We anticipate and counter the standard defenses:
- “They Consented”: Texas law nullifies this defense. We demonstrate the coercive power imbalance.
- “It Was a Rogue Chapter”: We use national pattern evidence to show the headquarters knew or should have known the risks.
- “It Happened Off-Campus”: Liability is based on duty and control, not just property lines.
- Insurance Coverage Fights: Mr. Lupe Peña’s background as a former insurance defense attorney is invaluable here. We know how insurers try to deny claims and how to force coverage.
Practical Guide for Somerville Parents, Students & Witnesses
A Parent’s Action Plan
Warning Signs: Unexplained injuries, extreme fatigue, personality changes, withdrawal, secrecy about group activities, constant anxiety over group chat notifications, sudden academic decline.
If You Suspect Hazing:
- Talk Calmly: Ask open-ended questions. “I’m worried about you. Is anything happening with your [fraternity/team] that makes you uncomfortable?”
- Prioritize Safety & Evidence: If there’s immediate danger, call 911. Then, help your child screenshot everything. Write down a timeline.
- Seek Medical Care: A doctor can document injuries and is a mandatory reporter, creating an independent record.
- Consult a Lawyer BEFORE Reporting to the University: We can guide you on how to report while protecting your child’s rights and preserving legal claims. Do not sign any university-offered resolution agreement without legal review.
A Student’s Guide to Safety and Rights
- Trust Your Gut: If it feels degrading, dangerous, or coercive, it is hazing.
- You Have the Right to Leave: Your safety is more important than any organization. There is life after quitting a group.
- How to Report Anonymously: Use campus hotlines, the National Anti-Hazing Hotline (1-888-NOT-HAZE), or ask a trusted professor or counselor to report on your behalf.
- Texas is a “One-Party Consent” State: You can legally record conversations you are a part of, which can capture admissions or threats.
Critical Mistakes That Can Ruin a Case
- Deleting Evidence: Preserve all messages and photos. Destruction can be seen as obstruction.
- Confronting the Organization: This triggers evidence destruction and witness coaching.
- Signing University Papers Unreviewed: Early “resolution” offers often waive your right to sue.
- Posting on Social Media: Defense lawyers scour social media for inconsistencies.
- Waiting Too Long: Texas has a two-year statute of limitations for personal injury, but evidence and memories fade fast. Watch our video on Texas statutes of limitations.
About Attorney911: Why Texas Hazing Families Choose Us
When your family in Somerville faces a hazing crisis, you need advocates who understand both the profound personal trauma and the complex legal battlefield. You need The Manginello Law Firm, PLLC (Attorney911).
Our Unique Qualifications for Hazing Litigation
1. We Are Fighting a Major Texas Hazing Case Right Now.
We are lead counsel for Leonel Bermudez in the $10 million lawsuit against the University of Houston and Pi Kappa Phi. We are not theorists; we are in the trenches, taking on a major university and a national fraternity. This gives us current, firsthand knowledge of the tactics these institutions use.
2. Insider Insurance Knowledge.
Our attorney, Mr. Lupe Peña (he/him), spent years as an insurance defense lawyer for a national firm. He knows exactly how fraternity and university insurance companies value claims, deploy delay tactics, and fight coverage. Learn more about Lupe Peña’s insurance defense experience. We use this insider knowledge to build claims that insurers cannot easily dismiss.
3. Experience Against Billion-Dollar Institutions.
Managing Partner Ralph Manginello was one of the few plaintiff attorneys involved in the BP Texas City explosion litigation. We have faced corporations with unlimited legal resources and deep-pocketed defense teams. Universities and national fraternities use the same playbook. Learn about Ralph Manginello’s background.
4. A Data-Driven Investigative Engine.
We don’t start from zero. We maintain the Texas Hazing Intelligence Engine, a proprietary database built from public records (like the samples shown earlier) that tracks Greek organizations across the state. We know how to find the housing corporations, alumni associations, and national entities that may share liability.
5. Comprehensive Damages & Life-Care Planning.
For catastrophic injuries like rhabdomyolysis or traumatic brain injury, we work with medical experts, economists, and life-care planners to project the true lifetime cost of care, ensuring a settlement or verdict truly provides for the victim’s future.
6. Spanish-Language Services.
Mr. Peña speaks fluent Spanish. We are committed to serving all Texas families.
We operate on a contingency fee basis: you pay nothing unless we win your case. Our video explains how contingency fees work.
Call to Action for Somerville and Burleson County Families
If hazing has hurt your child—whether at Texas A&M, UH, UT, or any Texas campus—you are not alone. The path forward begins with a conversation.
Contact The Manginello Law Firm, PLLC / Attorney911 for a free, confidential, no-obligation consultation. We serve families across Texas from our offices in Houston, Austin, and Beaumont.
During your consultation, we will:
- Listen compassionately to your story.
- Review any evidence you have gathered.
- Explain your family’s legal rights under Texas and federal law.
- Outline the potential strategies and realistic timelines.
- Answer all your questions about the process and our fee structure.
You don’t have to navigate this nightmare alone. Let us help you find answers, secure accountability, and protect your child’s future.
Call us 24/7 at 1-888-ATTY-911 (1-888-288-9911)
Direct: (713) 528-9070 | Cell: (713) 443-4781
Website: https://attorney911.com
Email: ralph@atty911.com or lupe@atty911.com
Se habla Español.
Plain Text Links to Key Resources
News Coverage of the Leonel Bermudez / UH Pi Kappa Phi Hazing Lawsuit:
- Click2Houston (KPRC 2): 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 Eyewitness News (KTRK): https://abc13.com/post/waterboarding-forced-eating-physical-punishment-lawsuit-alleges-abuse-faced-injured-pledge-uhs-pi-kappa-phi-fraternity/18186418/
- Hoodline: https://hoodline.com/2025/11/university-of-houston-and-pi-kappa-phi-fraternity-face-10m-lawsuit-over-alleged-hazing-and-abuse/
Attorney911 Educational YouTube Videos:
- Using Your Cellphone 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 & Profiles:
- Main Website & Contact: https://attorney911.com
- Ralph Manginello Profile: https://attorney911.com/attorneys/ralph-manginello/
- Lupe Peña Profile: https://attorney911.com/attorneys/lupe-pena/
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