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Booker & Panhandle Fraternity Hazing Wrongful Death Attorneys | West Texas A&M, Texas Tech, Angelo State, UT Austin & Texas A&M Cases | Attorney911 — Legal Emergency Lawyers™ | Former Insurance Defense Attorney Knows National Fraternity Insurance Tactics | Federal Court Experience Fighting Institutions | BP Explosion Litigation Proves Billion-Dollar Defendant Capability | Free Consultation: 1-888-ATTY-911

February 15, 2026 26 min read
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Hazing Injuries and Wrongful Death Lawsuits in Booker, Texas: A Complete Guide for Panhandle Families

If Your Child Was Hazed at a Texas University, You Have Rights Under Texas Law

As parents in Booker, we send our children to college with hope and pride. We imagine them making friends, joining organizations, and building their futures at schools across Texas—from West Texas A&M in nearby Canyon to major universities like Texas A&M in College Station or Texas Tech in Lubbock. What we don’t imagine is receiving a call that our child has been hospitalized because of what a fraternity, sorority, Corps program, or athletic team called “tradition.”

Right now, in Houston, we’re fighting one of the most serious hazing cases in Texas history. We represent Leonel Bermudez in his $10 million lawsuit against the University of Houston and the Pi Kappa Phi Beta Nu chapter. In fall 2025, Bermudez endured what the complaint describes as extreme physical hazing, forced consumption of food until vomiting, and brutal workouts that left him with rhabdomyolysis and acute kidney failure. He passed brown urine, was hospitalized for four days, and faces ongoing risk of permanent kidney damage. The chapter is now closed, but the harm is permanent.

This isn’t just a Houston problem. The same national organizations that operate at UH have chapters across Texas, including at universities where Booker families send their children. Hazing isn’t “boys will be boys” or “girls having fun”—it’s illegal, dangerous, and often covered up by organizations more concerned with their reputation than student safety.

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

Understanding the Greek Ecosystem Serving Booker Families

When we talk about “fraternities and sororities,” we’re not just talking about college students. We’re talking about complex networks of organizations with legal structures, insurance policies, and national headquarters. At Attorney911, we maintain what we call the Texas Hazing Intelligence Engine—a comprehensive database of every Greek organization registered in Texas. This isn’t theoretical; it’s built from public records that show exactly who owns what, where they’re located, and how they’re connected.

Public Records: Fraternities, Sororities & Greek Organizations Serving Texas Panhandle Families

For parents in Booker, Lipscomb County, and across the Texas Panhandle, you deserve to know who really stands behind the Greek organizations connected to your child at universities throughout our region. Below are just a few examples of Texas-registered Greek organizations from public IRS filings and metro databases. These are not accusations—they’re facts from public records that show how deep these networks run.

Texas Panhandle & Nearby Region Organizations:

Frank Heflin Foundation | EIN: 203507402 | Canyon, TX 79015-5815 | IRS B83 filing
Kappa Alpha Order – Gamma Sigma Chapter | Canyon, TX | West Texas A&M University chapter
Delta Kappa Gamma Society – Zeta Delta | Amarillo, TX | Educators’ society chapter
Chi Omega – Upsilon Zeta Building Assn. | Amarillo, TX | Chi Omega chapter housing entity
Delta Sigma Theta Sorority – Amarillo Alumnae | Amarillo, TX | Graduate chapter
Phi Delta Theta Fraternity – Texas Theta | Canyon, TX | West Texas A&M chapter
Lambda Chi Alpha – Iota Xi Zeta Chapter | Amarillo, TX | West Texas A&M chapter
Alpha Tau Omega – Zeta Kappa Chapter | Canyon, TX | West Texas A&M chapter

Major Statewide Organizations (Also Present at Panhandle Schools):

Kappa Sigma – Mu Camma Chapter Inc | EIN: 133048786 | College Station, TX 77845-6681 | IRS B83 filing
Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity | EIN: 746064445 | Nederland, TX 77627-8843 | IRS B83 filing
Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority | EIN: 364091267 | Waco, TX 76710-4154 | IRS B83 filing
Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi | EIN: 352335400 | Tyler, TX 75799-6600 | IRS B83 filing
Beta Upsilon Chi | EIN: 742911848 | Fort Worth, TX 76244-4245 | IRS B83 filing

What This Means for Booker Families:

These organizations aren’t just social clubs. They’re legal entities with employer identification numbers, mailing addresses, and often multiple layers of insurance coverage. When hazing occurs, we don’t start from zero—we already know how to identify every potentially liable organization, from the local chapter to the national headquarters to the housing corporation that owns the property.

The Amarillo metro area alone shows 18 Greek-related organizations in public records. Statewide, our data tracks over 1,423 fraternity and sorority organizations across 25 Texas metros. This depth of knowledge matters when your family needs accountability.

Where Booker Families Send Their Students—And Where Hazing Occurs

Booker parents have children at universities throughout Texas. Some attend nearby schools like West Texas A&M University in Canyon (just 67 miles from Booker) or Texas Tech University in Lubbock (115 miles away). Others venture farther to major universities like Texas A&M University in College Station, the University of Texas at Austin, or schools in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. Wherever your child attends, Greek life and organizational hazing risk exist.

Campuses Near Booker with Documented Greek Life:

West Texas A&M University (Canyon, TX) – 67 miles from Booker

  • Greek life includes traditional fraternities and sororities
  • Campus in Randall County, part of the Amarillo metropolitan area
  • Documented organizations include Phi Delta Theta Texas Theta, Lambda Chi Alpha Iota Xi Zeta, and Alpha Tau Omega Zeta Kappa

Texas Tech University (Lubbock, TX) – 115 miles from Booker

  • Major Greek life presence with over 40 fraternities and sororities
  • Includes traditional IFC, Panhellenic, and NPHC organizations
  • Lubbock metro shows 59 Greek organizations in public records

Other Regional Universities Booker Families Attend:

  • University of North Texas (Denton, TX)
  • Texas A&M University (College Station, TX)
  • University of Texas at Austin (Austin, TX)
  • Texas State University (San Marcos, TX)
  • Texas Christian University (Fort Worth, TX)
  • Baylor University (Waco, TX)

The Reality for Panhandle Students:

Distance doesn’t protect your child from hazing. In fact, students from smaller communities like Booker sometimes face additional pressure to “prove themselves” or “fit in” at larger universities. The same national organizations involved in high-profile hazing deaths across the country—Pi Kappa Alpha, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Phi Delta Theta, Pi Kappa Phi—have chapters at Texas schools your child might attend.

The fraternity that allegedly hazed Leonel Bermudez at UH? Pi Kappa Phi has chapters across Texas. The organization involved in Stone Foltz’s death at Bowling Green? Pi Kappa Alpha has Texas chapters. These aren’t isolated incidents—they’re patterns, and patterns mean foreseeability in legal terms.

The Organizations Behind the Letters at Texas Campuses

When your child joins “Sigma Alpha Epsilon” or “Pi Kappa Phi,” they’re not just joining a local group. They’re becoming part of a national organization with decades of history, millions in assets, and—often—a documented pattern of hazing incidents. This history matters legally because it shows what these organizations knew or should have known about the risks they were allowing to continue.

National Patterns at Organizations with Texas Presence:

Pi Kappa Alpha (ΠΚΑ / Pike):

  • Stone Foltz – Bowling Green State University (2021): Pledge forced to consume entire bottle of alcohol; died from alcohol poisoning. $10 million settlement ($7M from Pi Kappa Alpha national).
  • David Bogenberger – Northern Illinois University (2012): Pledge died from alcohol poisoning during fraternity event. $14 million settlement.
  • Texas Presence: Chapters at UT Austin, Texas A&M, Texas Tech, and other Texas universities.

Sigma Alpha Epsilon (ΣΑΕ / SAE):

  • University of Alabama – Traumatic Brain Injury Case (2023): Pledge suffered traumatic brain injury during hazing ritual.
  • Texas A&M University – Chemical Burns Case (2021): Pledges allegedly covered in industrial-strength cleaner, causing severe chemical burns requiring skin graft surgeries. $1 million lawsuit.
  • Texas Presence: Chapters at UT Austin, Texas A&M, Texas Tech, and multiple other Texas schools.

Pi Kappa Phi (ΠΚΦ):

  • Andrew Coffey – Florida State University (2017): Pledge died from acute alcohol poisoning during “Big Brother Night.”
  • Leonel Bermudez – University of Houston (2025): Our current case—pledge developed rhabdomyolysis and acute kidney failure from extreme hazing.
  • Texas Presence: Chapter at UH (now closed), plus other Texas campuses.

Why This History Matters for Your Case:

In legal terms, this is called “foreseeability.” If a national fraternity has seen multiple deaths from forced drinking at chapters across the country, they can’t claim “we didn’t know this could happen” when the same pattern occurs at a Texas chapter. This history strengthens negligence claims and can support arguments for punitive damages—damages designed to punish particularly reckless behavior and deter future harm.

Texas Hazing Law Explained in Terms Booker Families Understand

Texas has specific laws against hazing, and understanding them is crucial for protecting your child’s rights. The law isn’t just about punishment—it’s about creating accountability and preventing future harm.

Texas Education Code – Chapter 37, Subchapter F: The Core Provisions

Definition (Plain English):
Hazing means any intentional, knowing, or reckless act, on or off campus, directed against a student that:

  • Endangers the mental or physical health or safety of a student, AND
  • Occurs for the purpose of pledging, initiation into, affiliation with, holding office in, or maintaining membership in any organization.

Key Points for Booker Families:

  • Location doesn’t matter—hazing at an off-campus house, Airbnb, or retreat is still hazing
  • Mental harm counts—PTSD, severe anxiety, and psychological trauma qualify
  • “Reckless” is enough—they don’t have to intend harm, just disregard obvious risks
  • “Consent” is not a defense—even if your child “agreed,” it’s still illegal

Criminal Penalties:

  • Class B Misdemeanor: Basic hazing (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

Additional Protections:

  • Good-faith reporter immunity: Those who report hazing or call for help in good faith may be protected from liability
  • Organizational liability: Fraternities, sororities, and other organizations can be fined up to $10,000 per violation
  • University requirements: Texas schools must provide hazing prevention education and publish annual reports of violations

Criminal vs. Civil Cases: What’s the Difference?

Criminal Cases:

  • Brought by the state (prosecutor)
  • Aim: Punishment (jail, fines, probation)
  • Typical charges: Hazing, furnishing alcohol to minors, assault, manslaughter in fatal cases

Civil Cases:

  • Brought by victims or surviving families
  • Aim: Monetary compensation and accountability
  • Focus: Negligence, wrongful death, negligent supervision, emotional distress

Important: These can run simultaneously. A criminal conviction isn’t required for a civil case, and many families pursue both to achieve full accountability.

Federal Law Overlay: Additional Protections

Stop Campus Hazing Act (2024):

  • Requires colleges receiving federal aid to report hazing incidents more transparently
  • Strengthens hazing education and prevention
  • Public hazing data requirements phasing in by 2026

Title IX & Clery Act:

  • When hazing involves sexual harassment or assault, Title IX obligations trigger
  • Clery requires reporting certain crimes—hazing often overlaps with assault or alcohol crimes

Building a Hazing Case: The Attorney911 Approach

When your family faces a hazing crisis, you need more than a general personal injury lawyer. You need attorneys who understand how powerful institutions fight back—and how to win anyway. That’s where our specific experience makes the difference.

Our Investigative Process: From Group Chats to Courtroom

Phase 1: Immediate Evidence Preservation

  • Digital forensics: Recovering deleted group chats (GroupMe, WhatsApp, iMessage)
  • Social media documentation: Preserving Instagram stories, Snapchat, TikTok before deletion
  • Physical evidence: Securing clothing, objects, receipts before they disappear
  • Witness identification: Locating other pledges, members, and bystanders

Phase 2: Institutional Investigation

  • University records requests: Prior conduct files, probation records, incident reports
  • National organization discovery: Obtaining hazing incident histories, risk management files
  • Insurance coverage mapping: Identifying all potential policies from local chapter to national HQ
  • Expert consultation: Medical experts, psychologists, economists, Greek life specialists

Phase 3: Legal Strategy Development

  • Defendant identification: Individuals, local chapter, national organization, university, property owners
  • Legal theory selection: Negligence, negligent supervision, premises liability, Title IX claims
  • Damages calculation: Medical costs, future care, lost earning capacity, pain and suffering
  • Settlement vs. trial analysis: Most cases settle, but trial readiness improves leverage

Why Our Insurance Insider Knowledge Matters

Mr. Lupe Peña, our Associate Attorney (he/him/his), spent years as an insurance defense attorney at a national defense firm. He knows exactly how fraternity and university insurance companies:

  • Value (and undervalue) hazing claims
  • Use delay tactics to pressure families
  • Argue coverage exclusions for “intentional acts”
  • Set reserves and negotiate settlements

This insider knowledge is invaluable. We don’t just know the law—we know how the other side thinks, budgets, and fights. As Mr. Peña says, “We know their playbook because we used to run it.”

Our Complex Litigation Experience Against Massive Institutions

Ralph Manginello, our Managing Partner, is one of the few Texas attorneys involved in the BP Texas City explosion litigation. That case involved taking on a billion-dollar corporation with unlimited legal resources—exactly the type of opponent families face when suing national fraternities and major universities.

This experience matters because:

  • We’re not intimidated by powerful defendants or their defense teams
  • We understand complex document discovery and expert testimony
  • We know how to trace institutional knowledge and cover-up patterns
  • We’ve proven we can win against opponents with deep pockets

Practical Steps for Booker Parents and Students

For Parents: Warning Signs and Immediate Actions

Warning Signs Your Child May Be Being Hazed:

  • Unexplained bruises, burns, or injuries with inconsistent explanations
  • Extreme fatigue or exhaustion beyond normal college stress
  • Sudden secrecy about organizational activities (“I can’t talk about it”)
  • Personality changes: anxiety, depression, irritability, withdrawal
  • Constant phone monitoring for group chat messages
  • Grades dropping suddenly or missing classes for “mandatory” events
  • Financial red flags: unexpected large expenses or requests for money

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. “Do you feel like you can leave if you want to?”

If Your Child Opens Up:

  • Listen without judgment
  • Prioritize safety—if injured or intoxicated, get medical help immediately
  • Document everything they tell you (dates, times, names)
  • Preserve evidence before it disappears
  • Contact an experienced hazing attorney for guidance

For Students: Is This Hazing? A Self-Assessment Guide

Ask yourself:

  • Am I being forced or pressured to do something I don’t want to do?
  • Would I do this if I had a real choice (no social consequences)?
  • Is this activity dangerous, degrading, or illegal?
  • Would my parents or the university approve if they knew exactly what was happening?
  • Am I being told to keep secrets, lie, or hide this from outsiders?

If you answered YES to any, it’s likely hazing.

How to Exit Safely:

  • You have the legal right to leave at any time
  • Tell someone outside the organization first (parent, RA, friend)
  • Send a clear resignation message (email/text) to avoid “misunderstanding”
  • Do NOT go to “one last meeting” where pressure or retaliation might occur
  • If threatened or harassed, report immediately to campus authorities

Evidence Preservation for Students:

  • Screenshot group chats with timestamps and participant names visible
  • Photograph injuries immediately and over several days to show progression
  • Record conversations (Texas is a one-party consent state)
  • Save everything digital—don’t delete even if embarrassed
  • Get medical documentation and tell providers you were hazed

Critical Mistakes That Can Destroy Your Case

  1. Letting your child delete messages or “clean up” evidence

    • What parents think: “I don’t want them to get in more trouble”
    • Why it’s wrong: Looks like cover-up; can be obstruction of justice
    • Better approach: Preserve everything immediately
  2. Confronting the fraternity/sorority directly

    • What parents think: “I’m going to give them a piece of my mind”
    • Why it’s wrong: They immediately lawyer up and destroy evidence
    • Better approach: Document everything, then call a lawyer first
  3. Signing university “release” or “resolution” forms

    • What universities do: Pressure families to sign waivers
    • Why it’s wrong: You may waive your right to sue or get fair compensation
    • Better approach: Do NOT sign anything without attorney review
  4. Posting details on social media before talking to a lawyer

    • What families think: “I want people to know what happened”
    • Why it’s wrong: Defense attorneys screenshot everything; inconsistencies hurt your case
    • Better approach: Document privately; let your lawyer control messaging
  5. Waiting “to see how the university handles it”

    • What universities promise: “We’re investigating; let us handle this”
    • Why it’s wrong: Evidence disappears, witnesses graduate, statute runs
    • Better approach: Preserve evidence NOW; consult lawyer immediately

Frequently Asked Questions for Booker Families

“Can I sue a university for hazing in Texas?”
Yes, under certain circumstances. Public universities (like Texas A&M or Texas Tech) have some sovereign immunity protections, but exceptions exist for gross negligence, Title IX violations, and when suing individuals in personal capacity. Private universities (like Baylor or TCU) have fewer immunity protections. Every case depends on specific facts—contact us at 1-888-ATTY-911 for case-specific analysis.

“Is hazing a felony in Texas?”
It can be. Texas law classifies hazing as a Class B misdemeanor by default, but it becomes a state jail felony if the hazing causes serious bodily injury or death. Individual officers can also face charges for failing to report hazing.

“Can my child bring a case if they ‘agreed’ to the initiation?”
Yes. Texas Education Code § 37.155 explicitly states that consent is not a defense to hazing. Courts recognize that “consent” under peer pressure, power imbalance, and fear of exclusion is not true voluntary consent.

“How long do we have to file a hazing lawsuit?”
Generally 2 years from the date of injury or death in Texas, but the “discovery rule” may extend this if the harm or its cause wasn’t immediately known. In cases involving cover-ups, the statute may be tolled (paused). Time is critical—evidence disappears, witnesses forget, organizations destroy records. Call 1-888-ATTY-911 immediately.

“What if the hazing happened off-campus or at a private house?”
Location doesn’t eliminate liability. Universities and national fraternities can still be liable based on sponsorship, control, knowledge, and foreseeability. Many major hazing cases occurred off-campus and still resulted in multi-million-dollar judgments.

“Will this be confidential, or will my child’s name be in the news?”
Most hazing cases settle confidentially before trial. You can request sealed court records and confidential settlement terms. We prioritize your family’s privacy while pursuing accountability.

Why Attorney911 for Booker Hazing Cases

Our Unique Qualifications for Hazing Litigation

Insurance Insider Advantage (Mr. Lupe Peña):

  • Former insurance defense attorney at a 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 Litigation Experience (Ralph Manginello):

  • One of the 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 universities with unlimited legal budgets
  • “We’ve taken on billion-dollar corporations and won.”

Multi-Million Dollar Wrongful Death Experience:

  • Proven track record in complex wrongful death cases
  • Economist collaboration for accurate lifetime damage calculations
  • Experience with catastrophic injuries: brain damage, permanent disability, organ failure
  • “We don’t settle cheap. We build cases that force accountability.”

Dual Criminal + Civil Capability:

  • Ralph’s HCCLA membership signals elite criminal defense expertise
  • Understands how criminal hazing charges interact with civil litigation
  • Can advise witnesses and former members with dual exposure

Investigative Depth:

  • Network of experts: medical, digital forensics, economists, psychologists
  • Experience obtaining hidden evidence through subpoenas and discovery
  • Texas Hazing Intelligence Engine with 1,423+ organization database
  • “We investigate like your child’s life depends on it—because it does.”

We Serve Booker and All of Texas

From our offices in Houston, Austin, and Beaumont, we serve families throughout Texas, including Booker, Lipscomb County, and the entire Panhandle region. We understand that hazing at Texas universities affects families in our smallest towns and largest cities alike. Whether your child attends West Texas A&M just down the road or a university hours away, Texas law protects them, and we know how to enforce those protections.

Your Next Step: Confidential Consultation

If you or your child experienced hazing at any Texas campus, we want to hear from you. Families in Booker and throughout the Panhandle region have the right to answers and accountability.

Contact The Manginello Law Firm for a confidential, no-obligation consultation. We’ll listen to what happened, explain your legal options, and help you decide on the best path forward.

What to Expect in Your Free Consultation:

  • We’ll listen to your story without judgment
  • Review any evidence you have (photos, texts, medical records)
  • Explain your legal options: criminal report, civil lawsuit, both, or neither
  • Discuss realistic timelines and what to expect
  • Answer your questions about costs (contingency fee—we don’t get paid unless we win)
  • No pressure to hire us on the spot—take time to decide
  • Everything you tell us is confidential

Contact Information:

Call: 1-888-ATTY-911 (1-888-288-9911)
Direct: (713) 528-9070
Cell: (713) 443-4781
Website: https://attorney911.com
Email: ralph@atty911.com

Spanish-Language Services Available:
Hablamos Español—Contact Mr. Lupe Peña at lupe@atty911.com for consultation in Spanish

Servicios legales en español disponibles

Whether you’re in Booker or anywhere across Texas, if hazing has impacted your family, you don’t have to face this alone. The organizations responsible for harming your child have lawyers protecting them. You deserve the same protection, with attorneys who understand both the emotional trauma and legal complexity of hazing cases.

Call us today at 1-888-ATTY-911. Let’s discuss how we can help your family find answers, achieve accountability, and prevent this from happening to another student.

Plain Text Links to Key Resources

News Coverage of the Leonel Bermudez / UH Pi Kappa Phi Hazing Lawsuit:

Click2Houston (KPRC 2) — “‘Urine was brown’: Pledge sues over severe hazing at University of Houston’s shut down Pi Kappa Phi fraternity”
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) — “Waterboarding, forced eating, physical punishment: Lawsuit alleges abuse faced by injured pledge at UH’s Pi Kappa Phi fraternity”
https://abc13.com/post/waterboarding-forced-eating-physical-punishment-lawsuit-alleges-abuse-faced-injured-pledge-uhs-pi-kappa-phi-fraternity/18186418/

Hoodline — “University of Houston and Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity Face $10M Lawsuit Over Alleged Hazing and Abuse”
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:

“📱 Can You Use Your Cellphone to Document a Legal Case? | Attorney911 Explains”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LLbpzrmogTs

“Is There a Statute of Limitations on My Case? | Attorney911 with Injury Lawyer Ralph Manginello”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MRHwg8tV02c

“Client Mistakes That Can Ruin Your Injury Case | Attorney911 with Ralph Manginello”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r3IYsoxOSxY

“📢 How Do Contingency Fees Work? Injury Lawyer Explains!”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=upcI_j6F7Nc

Attorney911 Main Website & Contact:
https://attorney911.com

Legal Disclaimer

This article is provided for informational and educational purposes only. It is not legal advice and does not create an attorney–client relationship between you and The Manginello Law Firm, PLLC.

Hazing laws, university policies, and legal precedents can change. The information in this guide is current as of late 2025 but may not reflect the most recent developments. Every hazing case is unique, and outcomes depend on the specific facts, evidence, applicable law, and many other factors.

If you or your child has been affected by hazing, we strongly encourage you to consult with a qualified Texas attorney who can review your specific situation, explain your legal rights, and advise you on the best course of action for your family.

The Manginello Law Firm, PLLC / Attorney911
Houston, Austin, and Beaumont, Texas
Call: 1-888-ATTY-911 (1-888-288-9911)
Direct: (713) 528-9070 | Cell: (713) 443-4781
Website: https://attorney911.com
Email: ralph@atty911.com

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