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February 13, 2026 27 min read
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The Complete Texas Hazing Guide for Rosebud Families: Know Your Rights, Protect Your Student

When your child leaves home for college, you imagine campus life filled with new friends, academic growth, and cherished memories. For families in Rosebud, the pride of sending a student to a Texas university is intertwined with the quiet hope that the community values we hold dear—respect, safety, and integrity—will follow them.

But what happens when that trust is shattered? What do you do when a late-night call reveals your child has been hurt, humiliated, or endangered by the very group they hoped would become their campus family?

This guide is written specifically for parents and students in Rosebud, Falls County, and across Central Texas. It is a comprehensive resource on hazing—what it looks like today, the Texas laws designed to protect your child, the sobering history of incidents at our state’s universities, and the legal pathways to accountability for families right here in our community.

If you are facing this crisis now, please know: you are not alone, and you do not have to navigate this alone.

IMMEDIATE HELP FOR HAZING EMERGENCIES

If your child is in danger RIGHT NOW:

  • Call 911 for any medical emergency.
  • Then call us immediately: 1-888-ATTY-911 (1-888-288-9911)
  • We provide immediate help—that’s why we are the Legal Emergency Lawyers™.

In the First 48 Hours:

  • Get Medical Attention: Even if your child insists they are “fine,” seek medical evaluation. Injuries like rhabdomyolysis (severe muscle breakdown) or internal trauma may not be immediately apparent.
  • Preserve Evidence BEFORE It’s Deleted:
    • Screenshot all group chats (GroupMe, WhatsApp, iMessage), texts, and social media DMs immediately.
    • Photograph any visible injuries from multiple angles.
    • Save physical items (soiled clothing, receipts for forced purchases, paddles or props).
  • Document Everything: Write down what your child tells you—names, dates, locations, and specific acts—while memories are fresh.
  • DO NOT:
    • Confront the fraternity, sorority, or team directly.
    • Sign any documents from the university or an insurance company.
    • Post details about the incident on public social media.
    • Allow your child to delete messages or “clean up” evidence.

Contact an Experienced Hazing Attorney, like our team at Attorney911, within 24–48 hours. Evidence disappears with terrifying speed. We can help you preserve it and protect your child’s rights. Call 1-888-ATTY-911 for a free, immediate, and confidential consultation.

1. The Nightmare in Our Backyard: A Texas Hazing Case That Demands Our Attention

For parents in Rosebud, Marlin, Lott, and throughout Falls County, the idea of “hazing” can feel like a distant problem from national headlines. But the reality is that the same dangerous rituals, the same institutional failures, and the same life-altering injuries are happening at Texas universities where our children study.

Right now, as a firm, we are actively litigating one of the most severe hazing cases in the country—a case that serves as a stark warning for every Texas family.

We represent Leonel Bermudez, a former pledge of the Pi Kappa Phi (Beta Nu chapter) at the University of Houston. In late 2025, we filed a $10 million lawsuit detailing a campaign of abuse that nearly killed him. The hazing included:

  • A degrading “pledge fanny pack” he was forced to carry 24/7, containing condoms, a sex toy, and nicotine devices.
  • Hours-long “study blocks,” forced chauffeuring duties, and weekly interrogations.
  • Extreme physical abuse: sprints, bear crawls, wheelbarrow races, and being forced to lie in vomit-soaked grass.
  • Being sprayed in the face with a hose “similar to waterboarding” and threatened with actual waterboarding.
  • Forced consumption of excessive amounts of milk, hot dogs, and peppercorns until vomiting, followed immediately by more sprints.
  • A November 3rd “workout” where he was forced to perform over 100 push-ups and 500 squats under threat of expulsion.

The result was catastrophic. Leonel developed rhabdomyolysis, a severe skeletal muscle breakdown that led to acute kidney failure. He was passing brown urine, couldn’t stand without help, and was hospitalized for four days with critically elevated creatine kinase levels. He faces an ongoing risk of permanent kidney damage.

This didn’t happen in a vacuum. The lawsuit names 13 individual fraternity leaders, the Pi Kappa Phi national headquarters, the local housing corporation, the University of Houston, and the UH System Board of Regents. The chapter was swiftly suspended by its nationals and voted to surrender its charter. UH called the conduct “deeply disturbing”.

This case is not an anomaly. It is the direct proof that severe, injurious hazing is a present and active danger on Texas campuses. As reported by ABC13, the abuse was systematic and known. If this can happen at a major public institution like UH, it can and does happen across the Texas university system where Rosebud students enroll.

This guide exists to equip you with the knowledge we use every day to fight for families like yours. We will explain what modern hazing looks like, the laws that are supposed to protect your child, the patterns of behavior at specific Texas schools, and how a dedicated legal team can help you seek answers, accountability, and justice.

2. Hazing in 2025: What It Really Looks Like in Texas

Hazing is not just “boys being boys” or “harmless tradition.” Texas law defines it clearly. It is any intentional, knowing, or reckless act that endangers the mental or physical health of a student for the purpose of initiation, affiliation, or maintaining membership in a group.

For Rosebud parents, understanding the modern face of hazing is critical. It has evolved beyond crude stereotypes and often hides in plain sight, disguised as “team bonding” or “pledge education.”

The Four Pillars of Modern Hazing:

1. Alcohol & Substance Hazing: This remains the most common and deadliest form.

  • Forced Consumption: “Lineups” where pledges must quickly drink shots; “Big/Little” nights where a pledge is given a bottle of liquor to finish.
  • Drinking Games: Games like “Bible Study” or trivia where wrong answers mandate drinking.
  • Coerced Drug Use: Pressure to consume marijuana, prescription pills, or nitrous oxide to “prove” commitment.

2. Physical Hazing: Brutality disguised as conditioning.

  • Paddling & Beatings: Still prevalent despite national bans.
  • Extreme “Workouts” or “Smokings”: Calisthenics to the point of collapse (like the 500 squats in the UH case), often in extreme weather.
  • Sleep & Deprivation: Mandatory all-night “study sessions,” early-morning wake-up calls, withholding food or water.
  • Dangerous Exposure: Being locked in cold rooms, left outside in underwear, or subjected to chemical exposure (as in a Texas A&M case where pledges suffered chemical burns from cleaner).

3. Psychological & Sexualized Hazing: Designed to break down identity and incite humiliation.

  • Verbal Abuse & Threats: Constant yelling, degradation, threats of expulsion from the group.
  • Forced Nudity & Simulated Sexual Acts: Traditions like the “elephant walk” or “roasted pig.”
  • Public Humiliation: Forcing pledges to wear degrading costumes, perform embarrassing acts in public, or be the target of social media ridicule.

4. Digital Hazing: The 24/7 control enabled by smartphones.

  • Group Chat Tyranny: Mandatory immediate responses to messages at all hours; punishment for non-compliance.
  • Social Media Humiliation: Forced to post embarrassing content on TikTok or Instagram.
  • Location Tracking: Required to share live location via apps like Find My Friends.
  • Evidence Creation & Destruction: Hazing is recorded for the group’s amusement, then members are instructed to delete everything if an investigation arises.

Who Hazes? It’s Not Just Fraternities.

While fraternities are often the focus, hazing pervades many groups:

  • Sororities
  • Athletic Teams (from football to cheerleading)
  • Marching Bands & Performance Groups
  • Corps of Cadets & ROTC Units
  • Spirit & Tradition Organizations (like the Texas Cowboys or Aggie Bonfire crew)
  • Academic & Cultural Clubs

The common thread is a power imbalance between new members and veterans, a culture of secrecy, and a twisted notion of “tradition” that justifies abuse.

3. The Law & Liability in Texas: Your Child’s Rights, Explained for Rosebud Families

Texas has specific laws to combat hazing, but they are only as strong as the will to enforce them. As parents in the Falls County area, you have the right to understand the legal landscape protecting your student.

Texas Education Code, Chapter 37: The Anti-Hazing Statute

The law that governs our work is clear. Key provisions every Rosebud parent should know:

  • Broad Definition: Hazing is any reckless or intentional act that endangers physical or mental health for the purpose of initiation or affiliation. This includes on- and off-campus activities.
  • Criminal Penalties:
    • 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.
  • “Consent is NOT a Defense”: Texas law (Sec. 37.155) explicitly states that a victim’s “agreement” to be hazed is not a legal defense. The courts understand that peer pressure and coercion negate true consent.
  • Immunity for Good-Faith Reporting: Individuals who report hazing or call for medical help in good faith are protected from prosecution related to that report (e.g., underage drinking).
  • Organizational Liability: The fraternity, sorority, or club itself can be fined up to $10,000 per violation and lose its university recognition.

Criminal Cases vs. Civil Lawsuits: Two Paths to Accountability

It’s crucial to understand the difference:

  • Criminal Case: Brought by the state (DA’s office). Aim is punishment (jail, fines, probation). A criminal conviction is not required for you to seek civil justice.
  • Civil Lawsuit: Brought by the victim and family. Aim is compensation for damages and institutional accountability. This is where we help families recover medical costs, therapy expenses, and achieve some measure of justice for their pain and suffering.

Who Can Be Held Liable in a Civil Hazing Case?

A thorough investigation, like the one we conduct in every case, seeks to identify all responsible parties:

  1. The Individuals: The members who planned, carried out, or covered up the abuse.
  2. The Local Chapter: The campus organization as a legal entity.
  3. The National Headquarters: The fraternity/sorority national organization that sets policies, collects dues, and supervises chapters. Their knowledge of prior incidents is crucial.
  4. The University: Public universities like UH, Texas A&M, and UT Austin have a duty to protect students. They can be liable for negligent supervision or deliberate indifference to known dangers.
  5. Third Parties: Landlords of off-campus houses, bars that overserved alcohol, or security companies that failed in their duty.

Federal Laws That Apply: Title IX and the Stop Campus Hazing Act

  • Title IX: If hazing involves sexual harassment or assault, it triggers federal Title IX obligations for the university, requiring a specific investigation and response process.
  • Stop Campus Hazing Act (2024): This new federal law requires colleges to publicly report hazing incidents and strengthen prevention programs, increasing transparency for families by 2026.

4. Where Rosebud Families Send Their Kids: The Texas Campus Landscape

Parents in Rosebud and Falls County have students spread across the great state of Texas. Some attend regional schools close to home, while others head to our flagship universities. Hazing is a risk at all of them. Our investigative work tracks the Greek ecosystems surrounding each campus.

Universities Relevant to Rosebud Students

For Students Staying Closer to Home:

  • Texas A&M University-Central Texas (Killeen)
  • University of Mary Hardin-Baylor (Belton)
  • Baylor University (Waco) – A major destination with significant Greek life.
  • Tarleton State University (Stephenville)
  • Texas State University (San Marcos)

Major Statewide Hubs Where Rosebud Students Excel:

  • University of Texas at Austin
  • Texas A&M University (College Station)
  • University of Houston
  • Southern Methodist University (Dallas)
  • Texas Tech University (Lubbock)

The Hidden Network: Greek Organizations Behind the Letters

When your child joins “Fraternity X” at “University Y,” they are not just joining a campus club. They are connecting to a complex web of legal entities. Our Texas Hazing Intelligence Engine—built from IRS public records, university filings, and national databases—helps us map this network for your case.

This is not theoretical. In the UH Pi Kappa Phi case, we sued not only the students but also the Beta Nu Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity Housing Corporation Inc. (EIN 46-2267515, Frisco, TX) and the Pi Kappa Phi national headquarters. Holding these deeper entities accountable is key to securing meaningful compensation and forcing systemic change.

A Snapshot of Texas Greek Entities from Public Records:
To show the scale and structure we investigate, here are examples of registered Greek organizations in Texas that may be connected to chapters at schools Rosebud students attend:

  • Kappa Sigma – Mu Camma Chapter Inc (EIN 13-3048786 | College Station, TX 77845)
  • Alpha Sigma Phi Fraternity Inc – Theta Delta Chapter (EIN 47-5370943 | Houston, TX 77204)
  • Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity – Epsilon Kappa Chapter (EIN 74-6064445 | Nederland, TX 77627)
  • Sigma Chi Fraternity Epsilon Xi Chapter (EIN 74-6084905 | Houston, TX 77204)
  • Texas Kappa Sigma Educational Foundation Inc (EIN 74-1380362 | Fort Worth, TX 76147)
  • Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi – Texas A&M Chapter (EIN 90-0293166 | College Station, TX 77843)
  • Building Corporation of Delta Chapter of Alpha Delta Pi (EIN 74-6047117 | Austin, TX 78705)

These entities, visible in public IRS B83 filings, often hold insurance policies, own property, and are the true financial backbones of campus chapters. Uncovering them is a standard part of our investigative process for every Texas hazing case we undertake for families from Rosebud and beyond.

5. A History of Harm: Hazing Incidents at Texas Universities

Patterns of behavior establish foreseeability—the legal concept that an organization should have known a risk was likely. The national histories of fraternities are one thing; what they have done here in Texas is what matters for your case. The following are documented incidents that shape the legal landscape for Rosebud families.

University of Houston

  • Pi Kappa Phi (Beta Nu Chapter) – 2025: Our active litigation, as detailed above, involving rhabdomyolysis, kidney failure, and a $10M lawsuit. This chapter is now closed. Hoodline coverage details the $10M demand.
  • Pi Kappa Alpha – 2016: Pledges allegedly deprived of food, water, and sleep; one suffered a lacerated spleen after being body-slammed. The chapter faced misdemeanor hazing charges and suspension.

Texas A&M University

  • Corps of Cadets – 2023: A lawsuit alleged a cadet was subjected to degrading hazing, including being bound between beds in a “roasted pig” pose with an apple in his mouth. The suit sought over $1 million.
  • Sigma Alpha Epsilon (SAE) – ~2021: Pledges alleged being covered in substances including industrial-strength cleaner, causing severe chemical burns requiring skin graft surgeries. The chapter was suspended and a $1 million lawsuit was filed.
  • Aggie Bonfire Collapse – 1999: While not hazing in the traditional sense, this student-run tradition that killed 12 and injured 27 demonstrated the catastrophic risks of unsupervised, high-pressure campus traditions and resulted in over $6 million in settlements.

University of Texas at Austin

UT maintains a relatively transparent public hazing violations log. Entries include:

  • Pi Kappa Alpha (2023): New members directed to consume milk and perform strenuous calisthenics. Sanction: probation and mandatory hazing prevention education.
  • Texas Wranglers (Spirit Group): Multiple sanctions for forced workouts, alcohol-related hazing, and punishment-based activities.
  • Sigma Alpha Epsilon (SAE) – 2024: An Australian exchange student allegedly assaulted at a party, suffering a dislocated leg, broken nose, and fractured tibia. He sued the chapter for over $1 million, noting the chapter was already on suspension for prior violations.

Southern Methodist University

  • Kappa Alpha Order – 2017: New members reported being paddled, forced to drink alcohol, and deprived of sleep. The chapter was suspended until at least 2021.

Baylor University

  • Baseball Team – 2020: 14 players were suspended following a hazing investigation, with staggered suspensions affecting the start of the season.

What This Means for You: When we take a case for a Rosebud family, we don’t start from zero. We begin with this documented history. If your child was hazed by Sigma Alpha Epsilon at Texas A&M, we already know about the chemical burn lawsuit. If it’s Pi Kappa Alpha at UT, we start with their public probation record. This history builds a powerful argument that the organizations knew the risks and failed to prevent them.

6. Building a Case with the Texas Hazing Intelligence Engine

When you contact us after a hazing incident, we deploy a methodical, data-driven strategy honed over decades of complex litigation. This is not a simple injury claim; it is an institutional investigation.

Phase 1: Evidence Preservation & Collection

Evidence vanishes quickly. Our immediate guidance, as seen in our video on using your phone to document a legal case, is critical. We seek:

  • Digital Forensics: Deleted GroupMe chats, Snapchat messages, Instagram DMs. We work with experts to recover what has been “erased.”
  • Internal Documents: Pledge manuals, chapter meeting notes, emails between members and national advisors.
  • University Records: Prior conduct complaints against the same group, obtained through discovery or public records requests.
  • Medical Evidence: Complete records detailing the injury, from ER admission to long-term psychological care for PTSD, depression, or anxiety.
  • Witness Testimony: Other pledges, former members, roommates, and bystanders.

Phase 2: Identifying All Liable Parties

Using our proprietary directory and public records, we map the entire organizational structure:

  1. The individual perpetrators.
  2. The local chapter officers.
  3. The chapter’s housing corporation (like the one we sued in the UH case).
  4. The national fraternity/sorority headquarters.
  5. The university administration and its governing board.
  6. Third-party property owners or insurers.

Phase 3: Overcoming the Defense Playbook

We know their strategies because Mr. Lupe Peña spent years as an insurance defense attorney. We anticipate and counter their arguments:

  • “The Victim Consented”: We cite Texas law that voids consent and present evidence of coercion.
  • “It Was a Rogue Chapter”: We subpoena national records to show prior incidents and lax enforcement of anti-hazing policies.
  • “It Happened Off-Campus”: We argue the university and nationals still had a duty of care and that moving hazing off-campus is a predictable tactic.
  • “Insurance Doesn’t Cover Intentional Acts”: We argue that negligent supervision by the national or university is covered, and we fight bad-faith denial of claims.

Phase 4: Valuing the True Cost of Harm

We fight for full and fair compensation, which includes:

  • All Medical Expenses: Past and future, including surgery, rehabilitation, and lifelong therapy.
  • Lost Educational Opportunities: Tuition for lost semesters, diminished academic performance.
  • Pain & Suffering: Physical pain, emotional trauma, humiliation, and loss of enjoyment of life.
  • Punitive Damages: In cases of egregious conduct, we seek damages to punish the defendants and deter future hazing.

We work with life-care planners, economists, and vocational experts to build an undeniable picture of the harm done, whether it’s a physical injury like rhabdomyolysis or a psychological injury like severe PTSD.

7. Your Action Plan: A Guide for Rosebud Parents & Students

For Parents: Warning Signs & First Steps

Recognize the Red Flags:

  • Unexplained injuries, bruises, or burns.
  • Extreme fatigue, sleep deprivation, or drastic weight change.
  • Sudden secrecy about group activities; being “always on call” for the group.
  • Personality changes: anxiety, depression, withdrawal, or defensiveness.
  • Constant, anxious phone use related to group chats.
  • Requests for unusual amounts of money with vague explanations.

If You Suspect Hazing:

  1. Talk Calmly & Supportively: Ask open-ended questions. “How are you really doing with the pledging process?” “Is anything making you uncomfortable?” Assure them your love is unconditional.
  2. Prioritize Safety & Health: If there is any immediate danger or injury, get medical help first.
  3. Preserve Evidence: Gently encourage your child to screenshot messages and photograph injuries. Do this together if needed.
  4. Document: Write down everything they tell you with dates and names.
  5. Consult an Attorney FIRST: Before reporting to the university or confronting the group, speak with us. We can help you navigate the process strategically to protect your child from retaliation and preserve your legal rights.

For Students: Is This Hazing? What Can You Do?

Trust Your Instincts: If it feels dangerous, humiliating, or coerced, it probably is hazing.
You Have Rights:

  • You Can Leave: You have the legal right to quit any group, at any time, for any reason.
  • “Consent” is Not a Defense: You are not at fault for wanting to belong.
  • Good-Faith Reporting Protections: Texas law and most university policies protect you from getting in trouble for underage drinking if you are calling 911 to save someone’s life.
    How to Exit Safely:
  • Tell a trusted person outside the group (parent, RA, counselor) first.
  • Submit your resignation in writing (email/text) to the chapter president.
  • Do NOT go to a “final meeting” alone where pressure or retaliation could occur.
    How to Report:
  • Anonymous Options: National Anti-Hazing Hotline: 1-888-NOT-HAZE.
  • University Reporting: Dean of Students Office, Office of Student Conduct, or Campus Police.
  • Legal Reporting: Contact our firm. We can help you report to the appropriate law enforcement agencies while protecting your interests.

Critical Mistakes That Can Ruin a Case

We’ve detailed common pitfalls in a dedicated video on client mistakes that can ruin your injury case. They include:

  1. Deleting Evidence: Messages seem embarrassing, but they are your proof.
  2. Confronting the Group: This triggers evidence destruction and witness coaching.
  3. Signing University Papers: Do not sign any waiver, release, or “resolution” agreement without an attorney’s review.
  4. Posting on Social Media: Defense attorneys scour social media for inconsistencies.
  5. Waiting Too Long: Evidence disappears, witnesses scatter, and the statute of limitations runs. In Texas, you generally have two years from the date of injury to file a lawsuit, but the clock starts ticking immediately. Learn more in our video on Texas statutes of limitations.

8. Why Choose Attorney911? Our Promise to Rosebud Families

When your family is in crisis, you need more than a lawyer; you need advocates who understand the depth of your pain and the complexity of the fight ahead. At The Manginello Law Firm, PLLC (Attorney911), we bring a unique combination of insider knowledge, proven experience, and relentless dedication to hazing cases.

Our Unmatched Texas Hazing Litigation Advantage:

1. Insider Knowledge of Insurance Company Tactics:
Mr. Lupe Peña spent years as a defense attorney for a national insurance firm. He knows exactly how fraternity and university insurers will try to deny, delay, and underpay your claim. We know their playbook because we helped write it. This insider perspective is invaluable in securing full compensation for Texas families.

2. Proven Experience Against Massive Institutions:
Managing Partner Ralph Manginello was one of the few plaintiff attorneys involved in the BP Texas City explosion litigation, taking on one of the world’s largest corporations. National fraternities and major universities have deep pockets and aggressive defense teams. We are not intimidated. We have the federal court experience and complex litigation skills to meet them head-on.

3. A Data-Driven Investigative Engine:
We don’t just take your word for it—we investigate like prosecutors. Our Texas Hazing Intelligence Engine, built from the public records and data shared in this guide, allows us to immediately identify the network of responsible entities. We know how to subpoena national fraternity records, uncover prior incidents, and build an unassailable case.

4. Comprehensive Compass for All Damages:
Hazing inflicts physical, emotional, and financial wounds. We collaborate with medical experts, psychologists, life-care planners, and economists to document the full scope of harm—from tomorrow’s medical bill to a lifetime of lost potential—ensuring our settlement demands reflect true justice.

5. Dual Civil & Criminal Insight:
With Ralph’s membership in the Harris County Criminal Lawyers Association (HCCLA), we understand the criminal process that may run parallel to your civil case. We can advise you and your child on interacting with law enforcement and protect your interests in both arenas.

6. We Are Your Neighbors, Fighting for Texas Values.
We are a Texas-based firm with deep roots in this state. We understand the pride Rosebud families have in their students and the profound betrayal they feel when a trusted institution fails. We fight not just for a settlement, but for accountability that can prevent this from happening to another family in our community.

Our “No Fee Unless We Win” Commitment

We handle hazing cases on a contingency fee basis. This means you pay no upfront attorney fees. We only get paid if we successfully recover money for you through a settlement or court verdict. Learn exactly how this works in our video on contingency fees.

Take the First Step Toward Accountability Today

If hazing has impacted your child and your family, silence and inaction only protect those responsible. You have the power to seek answers, secure justice for your child, and help force the changes that will protect future students from Rosebud and beyond.

Contact Attorney911 for a free, confidential, and no-obligation consultation. We will listen to your story, explain your legal options clearly and honestly, and help you make the best decision for your family’s future.

Call us 24/7 at 1-888-ATTY-911 (1-888-288-9911).
You can also visit our website at https://attorney911.com or email Managing Partner Ralph Manginello directly at ralph@atty911.com.

Se habla Español. Associate Attorney Mr. Lupe Peña provides fluent Spanish-language legal services. Contact him at lupe@atty911.com.

We serve families across Texas from our offices in Houston, Austin, and Beaumont, and we are here to stand with you.

Plain Text Links to Key Resources

News Coverage of the UH Pi Kappa Phi Case:

Attorney911 Educational Videos:

Main Firm Website:

Legal Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. The information is current as of late 2025. Every case is unique, and outcomes depend on specific facts and law. Contacting Attorney911 does not create an attorney-client relationship. Please consult with a qualified attorney for advice on your specific situation.

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