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February 14, 2026 33 min read
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Hazing Lawsuits in Texas: A Comprehensive Guide for Gruver Families Seeking Justice

When Hazing Hits Home: What Every Gruver Parent Needs to Know Right Now

Imagine your child—who you raised with Texas Panhandle values of hard work, integrity, and community—has just started their freshman year at a major Texas university. They’re excited to join a fraternity, sorority, or campus organization, wanting that sense of belonging you hoped college would provide. Then the phone rings late at night. Your child is in the emergency room with kidney failure from extreme exercise, or hospitalized with alcohol poisoning, or psychologically shattered from systematic humiliation. The university says they’re “investigating.” The fraternity claims it was “voluntary.” And you’re left in Gruver, 400 miles away, feeling powerless, angry, and unsure what to do next.

This isn’t hypothetical. Right now, we’re actively litigating one of the most severe hazing cases in Texas history—the Leonel Bermudez v. University of Houston and Pi Kappa Phi Beta Nu chapter lawsuit. This $10 million case involves a student who developed rhabdomyolysis and acute kidney failure after being forced through hundreds of push-ups and squats, made to lie in vomit-soaked grass, sprayed in the face with a hose “similar to waterboarding,” and subjected to degrading “pledge fanny pack” rules containing condoms and sex toys. When his urine turned brown and he couldn’t stand, he was hospitalized for four days. The Pi Kappa Phi chapter has been shut down, but the physical and psychological damage remains.

If you’re a parent in Gruver, Texas, with a child at any Texas university—from West Texas A&M in nearby Canyon to Texas Tech in Lubbock to major hubs like UT Austin, Texas A&M, or University of Houston—this guide explains exactly what hazing looks like in 2025, how Texas law protects your child, what legal options you have, and why our firm brings unique expertise to these complex institutional cases. We serve families throughout Hansford County and the Texas Panhandle, bringing Houston-based hazing litigation experience to communities like Gruver that deserve justice when their students are harmed.

IMMEDIATE HELP FOR HAZING EMERGENCIES

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 the student insists they are “fine”
  • Preserve evidence BEFORE it’s deleted:
    • Screenshot group chats, texts, DMs immediately
    • Photograph injuries from multiple angles
    • Save physical items (clothing, receipts, objects)
  • Write down everything while memory is fresh (who, what, when, where)
  • Do NOT:
    • Confront the fraternity/sorority
    • 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 Hazing Really Looks Like in 2025: Beyond the Stereotypes

Hazing isn’t just “boys will be boys” or “harmless tradition.” For Gruver families unfamiliar with modern Greek life dynamics, today’s hazing involves sophisticated psychological coercion, digital surveillance, and physical abuse disguised as “bonding” or “team building.”

The Modern Definition of Hazing

Hazing is any forced, coerced, or strongly pressured action tied to joining, keeping membership, or gaining status in a group, where the behavior endangers physical or mental health, humiliates, or exploits. Texas law specifically defines hazing in Education Code Chapter 37 as “any intentional, knowing, or reckless act” that endangers mental or physical health for purposes of initiation or affiliation. Crucially, “I agreed to it” does not make it legal when there’s peer pressure and power imbalance.

Five Categories of Modern Hazing

1. Alcohol and Substance Hazing

  • Forced chugging challenges, “lineups,” drinking games where wrong answers mean consumption
  • “Big/Little” nights where pledges are given handles of liquor (as in the Stone Foltz case at Bowling Green)
  • Pressured consumption of unknown or mixed substances
  • In our UH Pi Kappa Phi case: forced consumption of milk, hot dogs, and peppercorns until vomiting

2. Physical Hazing

  • Paddling and beatings (still prevalent despite national bans)
  • Extreme calisthenics far beyond normal conditioning (“smokings” with hundreds of push-ups)
  • Sleep deprivation through all-night “study sessions” or 3 AM wake-up calls
  • Exposure to extreme cold/heat (in our UH case: cold-weather workouts in underwear)
  • Dangerous physical “tests” like blindfolded tackles or “glass ceiling” rituals

3. Sexualized and Humiliating Hazing

  • Forced nudity or partial nudity
  • Simulated sexual acts, “roasted pig” positions, degrading costumes
  • Acts with racial or sexist overtones, slurs, or role-play
  • Public shaming through social media or group meetings

4. Psychological Hazing

  • Verbal abuse, threats, isolation from non-members
  • Manipulation through “loyalty tests” or forced confessions
  • Systematic degradation of self-worth
  • Creating fear of expulsion from the group

5. Digital/Online Hazing

  • Group chat dares and “challenges” monitored 24/7
  • Requirement to share live location via Find My Friends or Snapchat Maps
  • Pressure to create compromising TikTok or Instagram content
  • Cyberstalking if pledges attempt to leave

Where Hazing Happens in Texas Universities

It’s not just fraternities:

  • Fraternities and Sororities (IFC, Panhellenic, NPHC, multicultural groups)
  • Corps of Cadets / ROTC / military-style groups (particularly relevant at Texas A&M)
  • Spirit squads and tradition clubs (like Texas Cowboys at UT)
  • Athletic teams (football, basketball, baseball, cheer)
  • Marching bands and performance groups
  • Some academic and service organizations

For Gruver families whose children attend Panhandle schools like West Texas A&M or Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, or who venture to larger universities elsewhere in Texas, understanding that hazing can occur in many group contexts is crucial.

Texas Hazing Law: How It Protects Your Child

Texas Education Code Chapter 37: Your Legal Foundation

Texas has specific anti-hazing provisions in the Education Code that protect students at both public and private institutions. Here’s what Gruver parents need to know:

§ 37.151 Definition: Hazing means any intentional, knowing, or reckless act, on or off campus, that endangers mental or physical health for purposes of pledging, initiation, affiliation, holding office, or maintaining membership.

Plain English translation: If someone makes your child do something dangerous, harmful, or degrading to join or stay in a group—and they meant to do it or were reckless about the risk—that’s hazing under Texas law. Location doesn’t matter (on or off campus), and mental harm counts as much as physical harm.

§ 37.152 Criminal Penalties:

  • Class B Misdemeanor: Hazing that doesn’t cause 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

§ 37.155 Consent Not a Defense: This is critical. Even if your child “agreed” to participate, it’s still hazing under Texas law. Courts recognize that true consent doesn’t exist when there’s peer pressure, power imbalance, and fear of exclusion.

§ 37.154 Immunity for Good-Faith Reporting: Students who report hazing or call 911 in medical emergencies are protected from criminal prosecution or university discipline related to underage drinking or participation. This “medical amnesty” is designed to save lives by removing fear of consequences.

Criminal vs. Civil Cases: Understanding the Difference

Criminal Cases:

  • Brought by the state (district attorney)
  • Aim: Punishment (jail, fines, probation)
  • Typical charges: Hazing, furnishing alcohol to minors, assault, battery, manslaughter in fatal cases
  • Burden of proof: “Beyond a reasonable doubt”

Civil Cases:

  • Brought by victims or surviving families (like our UH Pi Kappa Phi case)
  • Aim: Compensation for damages and accountability
  • Legal theories: Negligence, gross negligence, wrongful death, negligent supervision, premises liability, emotional distress
  • Burden of proof: “Preponderance of the evidence” (more likely than not)

Crucial point: You can pursue a civil case even if no criminal charges are filed. The standards of proof are different, and civil cases focus on compensating victims rather than punishing perpetrators.

Federal Laws That Overlay Texas Cases

Stop Campus Hazing Act (2024):

  • Requires colleges receiving federal aid to report hazing incidents more transparently
  • Strengthens hazing education and prevention programs
  • Mandates public hazing data (phased in by 2026)
  • Creates national reporting standards

Title IX: When hazing involves sexual harassment, sexual assault, or gender-based hostility, Title IX obligations are triggered. Universities must investigate and take appropriate action.

Clery Act: Requires reporting certain crimes and maintaining safety statistics; hazing incidents often overlap with assault or alcohol/drug crimes that must be disclosed.

Who Can Be Liable in a Texas Hazing Lawsuit?

1. Individual Students:

  • Those who planned, supplied alcohol, carried out acts, or helped cover them up
  • Chapter officers (president, pledge educator, risk manager)

2. Local Chapter/Organization:

  • The fraternity/sorority as a legal entity
  • Housing corporations that own chapter houses

3. National Fraternity/Sorority Headquarters:

  • Organizations that set policies, receive dues, and supervise chapters
  • Liability hinges on what they knew or should have known from prior incidents

4. University or Governing Board:

  • Public universities (UH, Texas A&M, UT) via the Board of Regents
  • Private institutions (SMU, Baylor) directly
  • Liability based on negligence, deliberate indifference, or failure to protect

5. Third Parties:

  • Landlords/owners of houses or event spaces
  • Bars or alcohol providers (under Texas dram shop law)
  • Security companies or event organizers

In our UH Pi Kappa Phi case, we’ve sued 13 individual members, the UH chapter, Pi Kappa Phi national headquarters, the chapter housing corporation, the University of Houston, and the UH System Board of Regents. This comprehensive approach ensures all responsible parties are held accountable.

National Hazing Cases: Patterns That Repeat in Texas

Alcohol Poisoning & Death Pattern

Timothy Piazza – Penn State, Beta Theta Pi (2017)

  • Bid-acceptance event with extreme drinking (18 drinks in 82 minutes)
  • Severe falls captured on chapter security cameras
  • 12-hour delay in calling 911
  • 18 fraternity members charged with over 1,000 criminal counts
  • Takeaway for Texas families: Delayed medical care dramatically increases liability and mirrors patterns we see in Texas cases.

Max Gruver – LSU, Phi Delta Theta (2017)

  • “Bible study” drinking game with wrong answers requiring consumption
  • BAC of 0.495% at death
  • Louisiana enacted Max Gruver Act making hazing a felony
  • Takeaway: Legislative change often follows tragedy—Texas has similar felony provisions for serious injury/death.

Stone Foltz – Bowling Green State, Pi Kappa Alpha (2021)

  • Forced to drink nearly a full bottle of whiskey
  • $10 million settlement ($7M from national Pi Kappa Alpha, ~$3M from BGSU)
  • Chapter president ordered to pay $6.5 million personally
  • Takeaway: Both institutions and individuals face massive liability in alcohol hazing deaths.

Physical & Ritualized Hazing Pattern

Chun “Michael” Deng – Baruch College, Pi Delta Psi (2013)

  • Blindfolded “glass ceiling” ritual with violent tackling
  • Fatal traumatic brain injury
  • National fraternity convicted of aggravated assault and involuntary manslaughter
  • Banned from Pennsylvania for 10 years
  • Takeaway: National organizations face criminal liability, not just civil.

Athletic Program Hazing

Northwestern University Football (2023–2025)

  • Sexualized and racist hacing within football program
  • Multiple lawsuits against university and staff
  • Head coach fired, then settled wrongful-termination suit confidentially
  • Takeaway: Hazing extends beyond Greek life to major athletic programs.

What These Cases Mean for Gruver Families

These national patterns—forced drinking, humiliation, violence, delayed medical care, cover-ups—repeat at Texas campuses. The settlements and verdicts (ranging from $1M to $14M) demonstrate what’s possible when families pursue accountability. Most importantly, these cases show that hazing is foreseeable and preventable—organizations that ignore known risks face the greatest liability.

Texas Universities: What Gruver Families Need to Know

West Texas A&M University (Canyon, TX – 45 miles from Gruver)

Campus & Culture Snapshot:
As the closest four-year university to Gruver, West Texas A&M serves many Panhandle families. With active Greek life including Pi Kappa Alpha, Kappa Sigma, Sigma Phi Epsilon, and multiple sororities, the campus embodies both regional values and national Greek traditions. The Frank Heflin Foundation (EIN 203507402), a Phi Delta Theta alumni fund in Canyon, exemplifies the alumni support networks that sustain Greek life.

Official Hazing Policy & Reporting:
WTAMU prohibits hazing under University Policy 33.02, aligning with Texas Education Code Chapter 37. Reporting channels include the Dean of Students, Office of Student Conduct, and campus police. The university’s relatively small size means incidents often become community knowledge quickly in the tight-knit Panhandle.

Recent Greek Life Context:
While major publicized hazing incidents have been less frequent than at larger universities, WTAMU’s Greek organizations face the same national pressures and traditions. The presence of chapter housing corporations like the Chi Omega – Upsilon Zeta Building Association in nearby Amarillo (EIN 752290669) shows the financial infrastructure supporting Greek life that can become targets in litigation.

How a WTAMU Hazing Case Might Proceed:

  • Jurisdiction: Potter County courts (Canyon) or federal court in Amarillo
  • Potential defendants: Individuals, local chapter, national organization, university
  • Evidence collection: Crucial given close-knit community where information spreads quickly
  • Our role: As Houston-based attorneys, we partner with local counsel when needed while bringing our institutional litigation experience

What WTAMU Students & Parents Should Do:

  • Document everything immediately—Panhandle communities talk, and evidence can disappear
  • Report to both WTAMU administration and local police if crimes occurred
  • Preserve digital evidence before group chats are deleted
  • Contact an attorney who understands both Texas hazing law and Panhandle community dynamics

Texas Tech University (Lubbock, TX – 110 miles from Gruver)

Campus & Culture Snapshot:
As a major destination for Gruver students, Texas Tech hosts one of Texas’s largest Greek communities with 59 Greek organizations in the Lubbock metro area according to Cause IQ data. The Texas Tech Chapter of Phi Delta Theta Housing (EIN 900927378) and Kappa Alpha Order – Gamma Chi chapter represent the substantial infrastructure supporting this system.

Public Records Directory – Fraternities & Sororities Serving Gruver Families:
Our Texas Hazing Intelligence Engine tracks 59 Greek organizations in the Lubbock metro area. These include:

  • Texas Tech Chapter of Phi Delta Theta Housing, EIN 900927378, Lubbock, TX (IRS B83 filing)
  • Kappa Alpha Order – Texas Tech (Gamma Chi), Lubbock, TX (Cause IQ metro listing)
  • Alpha Phi Omega – TTU Chapter, Lubbock, TX (Cause IQ metro listing)
  • Delta Kappa Gamma Society – Lubbock, Lubbock, TX (Cause IQ metro listing)
  • Epsilon Nu Housing Corporation, EIN 237359384, Lubbock, TX (IRS B83 filing)
  • Alpha Omega Epsilon-Beta Alpha Chapter, EIN 473967233, Lubbock, TX (IRS B83 filing)
  • TKE OP Housing, EIN 475033161, Lubbock, TX (IRS B83 filing)
  • Farm House Fraternity Inc, EIN 751565336, Lubbock, TX (IRS B83 filing)
  • Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi, EIN 820644459, Lubbock, TX (IRS B83 filing – Texas Tech Health Sciences)

Recent Hazing Context:
Texas Tech has faced multiple hazing allegations, including a 2023 case where pledges allegedly suffered rhabdomyolysis from extreme physical hazing—the same life-threatening condition in our UH Pi Kappa Phi case. The university has suspended chapters for violations, but like many large institutions, struggles with underground hazing that moves off-campus.

How a Texas Tech Hazing Case Might Proceed:

  • Lubbock County jurisdiction with potential federal court involvement
  • Multiple insurance policies typically involved (national, local, university)
  • Digital evidence recovery critical given tech-savvy student population
  • Often requires subpoenaing national headquarters records from other states

University of Houston – Our Active Case

Campus & Culture Snapshot:
UH hosts approximately 60 Greek organizations, including the now-shuttered Pi Kappa Phi Beta Nu chapter at the center of our lawsuit. With its large commuter and residential population, UH’s Greek life balances urban campus dynamics with traditional fraternity/sorority culture.

The Leonel Bermudez Case – What Happened:
Our client, Leonel Bermudez, suffered rhabdomyolysis and acute kidney failure after Pi Kappa Phi hazing that included:

  • “Pledge fanny pack” rule requiring degrading items 24/7
  • Forced consumption of milk, hot dogs, peppercorns until vomiting
  • 100+ push-ups and 500 squats under threat of expulsion
  • Hose spraying “similar to waterboarding”
  • Cold-weather exposure in underwear
  • Hospitalization with brown urine and critically high creatine kinase levels

Defendants in Our Lawsuit:

  • University of Houston and UH System Board of Regents
  • Pi Kappa Phi national headquarters
  • Beta Nu housing corporation
  • 13 individual fraternity leaders (president, pledgemaster, risk manager, etc.)

Institutional Response:

  • Nov 6, 2025: Pi Kappa Phi HQ suspends Beta Nu chapter
  • Nov 14, 2025: Chapter votes to surrender charter
  • UH calls conduct “deeply disturbing” and promises cooperation with law enforcement

What This Means for Gruver Families:
This active litigation demonstrates our firm’s capability to take on major universities and national fraternities simultaneously. The detailed allegations show how hazing has evolved beyond simple drinking games to systematic psychological and physical abuse.

Texas A&M University

Campus & Culture Snapshot:
With one of the nation’s largest Greek systems and the Corps of Cadets, Texas A&M presents unique hazing risks. The university’s tradition-heavy culture can sometimes enable abusive practices disguised as “character building.”

Sigma Alpha Epsilon Chemical Burns Case (2021):

  • Pledges allegedly covered in industrial-strength cleaner, raw eggs, and spit
  • Severe chemical burns requiring skin graft surgeries
  • $1 million lawsuit filed against fraternity
  • Chapter suspended for two years

Corps of Cadets “Roasted Pig” Case (2023):

  • Cadet allegedly bound between beds in degrading position with apple in mouth
  • Simulated sexual acts as hazing
  • Over $1 million lawsuit filed
  • University stated it handled matter under internal rules

Greek Infrastructure:
Texas A&M’s Greek community is supported by entities like:

  • Beta Theta Pi – Eta Chapter House Corp, College Station (Cause IQ)
  • Sigma Chi Fraternity – Eta Upsilon Chapter, College Station (Cause IQ)
  • Omega Psi Phi – Tau Tau Chapter, College Station (Cause IQ)
  • Delta Sigma Theta – Brazos Valley Alumnae, College Station (Cause IQ)

University of Texas at Austin

Campus & Culture Snapshot:
UT’s public hazing violations page represents one of Texas’s most transparent systems, listing organizations, conduct, and sanctions. This transparency actually strengthens civil cases by providing evidence of prior notice and patterns.

Public Hazing Violations Examples:

  • Pi Kappa Alpha (2023): New members directed to consume milk and perform strenuous calisthenics; chapter probation
  • Texas Wranglers (2022): Alcohol-related hazing during “transition period”; suspension
  • Multiple spirit groups sanctioned for forced workouts and humiliation

Sigma Alpha Epsilon Assault Case (2024):

  • Australian exchange student allegedly assaulted at party
  • Injuries: dislocated leg, broken ligaments, fractured tibia, broken nose
  • Over $1 million lawsuit filed
  • Chapter already under suspension for prior violations

Legal Advantage of UT’s Transparency:
When universities publicly document violations, they create records that can prove:

  • Notice of dangerous patterns
  • Inadequate responses to prior incidents
  • Deliberate indifference to known risks
    These records become powerful evidence in civil litigation.

Southern Methodist University & Baylor University

SMU’s Greek Culture:
As a private institution with affluent student population, SMU’s Greek life faces different pressures but similar risks. The 2017 Kappa Alpha Order suspension for paddling and forced drinking demonstrates that hazing persists even at prestigious private universities.

Baylor’s Context:
Following major Title IX scandals, Baylor faces heightened scrutiny of all misconduct. The 2020 baseball hacing suspension of 14 players shows athletic programs aren’t immune. Baylor’s religious identity sometimes complicates accountability discussions.

Fraternity & Sorority National Histories: Why Patterns Matter

The Foreseeability Principle

When a Texas chapter repeats hazing practices that caused deaths or injuries at other chapters nationally, that demonstrates foreseeability—the organization knew or should have known the risks. This principle is central to negligence claims.

Major Nationals with Documented Histories

Pi Kappa Alpha (Pike):

  • Stone Foltz death (Bowling Green, 2021) – $10M settlement
  • David Bogenberger death (Northern Illinois, 2012) – $14M settlement
  • Multiple chapters suspended at Texas schools including UT Austin
  • Pattern: “Big/Little” alcohol hazing

Sigma Alpha Epsilon (SAE):

  • Called “the deadliest fraternity” by Bloomberg
  • Multiple hazing deaths nationally
  • Chemical burns case at Texas A&M
  • Assault case at UT Austin
  • Pattern: Physical violence combined with alcohol

Phi Delta Theta:

  • Max Gruver death (LSU, 2017) – Louisiana felony hazing law
  • Multiple chapter suspensions
  • Pattern: Drinking games disguised as “education”

Pi Kappa Phi:

  • Andrew Coffey death (Florida State, 2017)
  • Our active UH case with rhabdomyolysis and kidney failure
  • Pattern: Extreme physical hazing combined with humiliation

How National Histories Strengthen Texas Cases

  1. Prior Notice Evidence: National headquarters received complaints about similar conduct at other chapters
  2. Inadequate Response: Minimal punishments (probation, short suspensions) failed to deter future hazing
  3. Policy vs. Practice Gap: Elaborate anti-hazing manuals ignored in practice
  4. Profit Motive: Nationals continued collecting dues from dangerous chapters

In litigation, we subpoena national headquarters records to prove they knew about patterns but failed to take meaningful action. This can support claims for punitive damages in addition to compensation.

Building a Hazing Case: Evidence, Damages & Strategy

Critical Evidence Categories

Digital Communications (Most Important):

  • GroupMe, WhatsApp, iMessage, Discord messages
  • Instagram DMs, Snapchat, TikTok content
  • Deleted message recovery via digital forensics
  • Location data and timestamps

Photos & Videos:

  • Content filmed during hazing events
  • Security camera footage from houses/venues
  • Doorbell camera recordings
  • Social media posts and stories

Internal Organization Documents:

  • Pledge manuals and “tradition” documents
  • Chapter meeting minutes
  • Communication with national headquarters
  • Risk management materials

University Records:

  • Prior conduct files and disciplinary history
  • Campus police reports
  • Clery Act reports
  • Internal emails about the organization

Medical & Psychological Records:

  • Emergency room and hospitalization records
  • Toxicology reports
  • Psychological evaluations (PTSD, depression, anxiety)
  • Long-term treatment plans

Witness Testimony:

  • Other pledges and members
  • Roommates and friends
  • Alumni and former members
  • University staff and advisors

Damages: What Families Can Recover

Economic Damages:

  • Medical bills (past and future)
  • Lost educational expenses (withdrawn semesters)
  • Lost earning capacity
  • Therapy and rehabilitation costs
  • Life care plans for permanent injuries

Non-Economic Damages:

  • Physical pain and suffering
  • Emotional distress and trauma
  • Humiliation and loss of dignity
  • Loss of enjoyment of life
  • Damage to reputation

Wrongful Death Damages:

  • Funeral and burial costs
  • Loss of financial support
  • Loss of companionship and love
  • Grief and emotional suffering
  • Parents’ and siblings’ therapy costs

Punitive Damages (When Applicable):

  • For particularly reckless or malicious conduct
  • When defendants ignored prior warnings
  • To punish and deter future behavior
  • Subject to Texas statutory caps

Insurance Coverage Strategies

Fraternity and university insurance companies often fight coverage using arguments that:

  • Hazing is an “intentional act” excluded from coverage
  • They didn’t receive proper notice
  • Multiple policies create coverage disputes

Our advantage: Mr. Lupe Peña spent years as an insurance defense attorney at a national firm. He knows exactly how insurers value claims, use IMEs (Independent Medical Exams) to reduce settlements, and deploy delay tactics. We navigate coverage disputes with insider knowledge of insurance company playbooks.

Practical Guides for Gruver Families

For Parents: Warning Signs & Immediate Actions

Warning Signs Your Child May Be Hazed:

  • Unexplained injuries or repeated “accidents”
  • Extreme exhaustion beyond normal college stress
  • Sudden secrecy about organization activities
  • Personality changes: anxiety, depression, withdrawal
  • Financial requests for unexplained expenses
  • Constant phone monitoring for group chat messages
  • Fear of “letting the chapter down” or “getting in trouble”

Questions to Ask (Non-Confrontationally):

  1. “How are things going with [organization]? Are you enjoying it?”
  2. “Have they been respectful of your time for classes and sleep?”
  3. “What do they ask you to do as a new member?”
  4. “Is there anything that makes you uncomfortable?”
  5. “Have you seen anyone get hurt, or have you been hurt?”
  6. “Do you feel like you can leave if you want to?”

48-Hour Action Checklist:

  1. Medical First: Get emergency care if injured or intoxicated
  2. Document Everything: Screenshot messages, photograph injuries, write notes
  3. Preserve Evidence: Save clothing, receipts, physical items
  4. Contact Attorney911: Call 1-888-ATTY-911 for immediate guidance
  5. Report Strategically: With attorney advice, report to appropriate authorities
  6. Avoid Mistakes: Don’t confront organization, sign university offers, or post on social media

For Students: Safety & Evidence Preservation

Is This Hazing? Decision Guide:

  • Am I being forced or pressured?
  • Would I do this if I had a real choice?
  • Is this dangerous, degrading, or illegal?
  • Would the university approve if they knew?
  • Am I being told to keep secrets?

How to Exit Safely:

  1. Immediate Danger: Call 911 or campus police
  2. Safe Location: Go to dorm, friend’s place, or public area
  3. Formal Resignation: Email chapter president: “I resign effective immediately”
  4. Do NOT attend “one last meeting” where pressure might occur
  5. Document Threats: Save any retaliation evidence

Evidence Collection Guide:

  • Screenshots: Capture full conversations with timestamps
  • Recordings: Texas is one-party consent—you can record conversations you’re part of
  • Photos: Injuries from multiple angles with scale reference
  • Medical Records: Tell providers you were hazed for documentation
  • Witness Info: Names and contacts of others who saw what happened

Critical Mistakes That Can Destroy Your Case

1. Deleting Evidence

  • What happens: Messages get deleted, case becomes “he said/she said”
  • Why it’s wrong: Looks like cover-up; digital forensics can often recover, but originals are best
  • Better approach: Preserve everything immediately—even embarrassing content

2. Confronting the Organization Directly

  • What happens: They lawyer up, destroy evidence, coach witnesses
  • Why it’s wrong: Gives them advantage and time to prepare defenses
  • Better approach: Document everything, then call attorney before any confrontation

3. Signing University “Resolution” Forms

  • What happens: You may waive right to sue or accept minimal settlement
  • Why it’s wrong: Early settlements are typically far below case value
  • Better approach: “I need to have my attorney review this before signing”

4. Posting on Social Media

  • What happens: Defense attorneys screenshot everything; inconsistencies hurt credibility
  • Why it’s wrong: Can waive privacy protections and attorney-client privilege
  • Better approach: Document privately; let attorney control public messaging

5. Waiting for University “Internal Process”

  • What happens: Evidence disappears, witnesses graduate, statute runs
  • Why it’s wrong: University process ≠ real accountability; they control narrative
  • Better approach: Preserve evidence now; consult attorney immediately

6. Talking to Insurance Adjusters

  • What happens: Recorded statements used against you; lowball settlements
  • Why it’s wrong: Adjusters work for insurance company, not you
  • Better approach: “My attorney will contact you”

7. Letting Child Return for “One Last Meeting”

  • What happens: Pressure, intimidation, extracted statements
  • Why it’s wrong: Creates risk and can harm case
  • Better approach: Once considering legal action, all communication through attorney

Why Choose Attorney911 for Your Hazing Case

Our Unique Qualifications

Insurance Insider Advantage (Mr. Lupe Peña):

  • Former insurance defense attorney at national firm
  • Knows exactly how fraternity and university insurers fight claims
  • Understands their valuation methods, delay tactics, and coverage arguments
  • “We know their playbook because we used to run it”

Complex Institutional Litigation (Ralph Manginello):

  • One of few Texas firms involved in BP Texas City explosion litigation
  • Federal court experience (U.S. District Court, Southern District of Texas)
  • Not intimidated by national fraternities or university legal teams
  • 25+ years handling high-stakes cases against powerful defendants

Multi-Million Dollar Results:

  • Wrongful death and catastrophic injury settlements
  • Experience with economist collaboration for lifetime care planning
  • Understanding of full damage valuation beyond medical bills
  • “We don’t settle cheap—we build cases that force accountability”

Dual Civil/Criminal Expertise:

  • Ralph’s HCCLA membership (Harris County Criminal Lawyers Association)
  • Understands how criminal hazing charges interact with civil cases
  • Can advise witnesses and former members with potential exposure
  • Navigates parallel proceedings effectively

Investigative Depth:

  • Network of experts: medical, digital forensics, economists, psychologists
  • Experience obtaining hidden evidence through discovery
  • Subpoena power for national headquarters records
  • “We investigate like your child’s life depends on it—because it does”

Spanish-Language Services:

  • Mr. Peña speaks fluent Spanish
  • Servicios legales en español disponibles
  • Cultural understanding of Texas Hispanic community needs

Our Approach to Hazing Cases

Immediate Response:
a. 24/7 availability for emergencies
b. Evidence preservation guidance within hours
c. Strategic planning before university or organization responds

Comprehensive Investigation:
a. Digital forensics for deleted messages
b. Subpoenas for national headquarters records
c. University public records requests
d. Witness interviews and evidence collection

Strategic Litigation:
a. Identifying all potentially liable parties
b. Navigating insurance coverage disputes
c. Balancing privacy concerns with public accountability
d. Preparing for trial while seeking fair settlement

Client-Centered Representation:
a. Regular communication updates
b. Respect for family privacy and trauma
c. Collaboration with medical and mental health providers
d. Focus on healing and prevention, not just compensation

Your Next Steps: Free Consultation

What to Expect in Your Free Consultation

When you call Attorney911 at 1-888-ATTY-911:

We’ll Listen Without Judgment:

  • Hear your complete story
  • Understand your family’s concerns and goals
  • Answer your initial questions

Case Evaluation:

  • Review any evidence you’ve collected
  • Explain applicable Texas laws
  • Identify potential defendants and claims
  • Discuss realistic timelines and outcomes

Options Explanation:

  • Criminal reporting considerations
  • Civil lawsuit possibilities
  • University disciplinary processes
  • Settlement vs. trial dynamics

Fee Transparency:

  • Contingency fee basis—no fee unless we win
  • Explanation of costs and expenses
  • No pressure to hire immediately

Next Steps Planning:

  • Evidence preservation guidance
  • Strategic timing considerations
  • Communication protocols with university/organization
  • Referrals to medical or counseling resources if needed

Contact Information

Attorney911 – The Manginello Law Firm, PLLC

Spanish Services:

  • Hablamos Español – Contact Mr. Lupe Peña at lupe@atty911.com
  • Consultas gratuitas en español disponibles

Service Areas:
While based in Houston, we serve hazing victims and families throughout Texas, including Gruver, Hansford County, and the entire Panhandle region. We handle cases involving:

  • Texas universities (public and private)
  • Fraternities and sororities (all councils)
  • Corps of Cadets and ROTC programs
  • Athletic teams and spirit groups
  • Other student organizations

Final Message to Gruver Families

If hazing has touched your family—whether your child attends West Texas A&M, Texas Tech, or any Texas university—you don’t have to face this alone. The isolation you feel in Gruver, miles from where the harm occurred, is compounded by university bureaucracies and organization stonewalling.

We understand Texas values: integrity, accountability, and protecting our children. We bring those values to every case, combined with sophisticated legal strategy born from decades of facing powerful institutions.

Your child deserves justice. Future students deserve prevention. Your family deserves answers.

Call us today at 1-888-ATTY-911 for a free, confidential consultation. Let us help you navigate this difficult journey toward accountability and healing.

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

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