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February 17, 2026 27 min read
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The Complete Guide to Hazing Litigation for Families in Jarrell, Texas

A Jarrell Parent’s Worst Nightmare: When Campus “Tradition” Turns to Trauma

Imagine your child, a student from our close-knit Jarrell community, is excited to join a fraternity, sorority, or campus organization at a Texas university. What begins as camaraderie slowly twists into something darker: forced all-night study sessions, humiliating “fanny pack” requirements, degrading tasks, and eventually, extreme physical workouts that leave them vomiting, injured, or worse. Your child is afraid to speak up, pressured by a culture of silence, and the institution they trusted seems more concerned with protecting its reputation than your child’s safety. This is not a hypothetical scenario—it is happening right now to Texas families, and our firm is leading the fight against it.

Right now, we represent Leonel Bermudez in a $10 million hazing and abuse lawsuit against the University of Houston (UH), the Pi Kappa Phi Beta Nu chapter, its national headquarters, and 13 fraternity leaders. The allegations are severe and specific: a “pledge fanny pack” filled with humiliating items, enforced servitude, and physical hazing that included being sprayed in the face with a hose “similar to waterboarding,” forced consumption of milk and hot dogs until vomiting, and an extreme November 3 workout of 100+ push-ups and 500 squats that led to rhabdomyolysis and acute kidney failure. Mr. Bermudez’s urine turned brown, he was hospitalized for four days, and he faces ongoing risk of permanent kidney damage. This case, detailed in Click2Houston and ABC13 reports, is proof that dangerous, institutionalized hazing is a present and active threat in Texas.

This guide is for you—parents and families in Jarrell, Temple, Georgetown, and across Williamson County and Central Texas. If your child has been hurt, humiliated, or endangered in connection with fraternities, sororities, Corps of Cadets programs, athletic teams, or other campus groups, you are not alone. We will explain what hazing looks like in 2025, your legal rights under Texas law, the realities at universities where Jarrell students enroll, and how our data-driven, experienced legal team can help you seek accountability and prevent this from happening to another family.

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:

  1. Get Medical Attention: Even if your child insists they are “fine,” seek professional evaluation. Symptoms of conditions like rhabdomyolysis can be delayed.
  2. Preserve Evidence: Before digital evidence is deleted:
    • Screenshot all group chats (GroupMe, WhatsApp, iMessage), texts, and social media DMs.
    • Photograph injuries from multiple angles.
    • Save physical items (clothing, props, receipts).
  3. Document Everything: Write down who, what, when, and where while memories are fresh.
  4. Do NOT:
    • Confront the fraternity/sorority directly.
    • Sign anything from the university or an insurance company.
    • Post details on public social media.
    • Allow your child to delete messages or “clean up” evidence.

Contact an experienced hazing attorney within 24–48 hours. Evidence disappears rapidly. We can help you preserve it and protect your child’s rights. Call 1-888-ATTY-911 for a free, confidential consultation.

Understanding Hazing in 2025: Beyond the Stereotypes

For families in Jarrell, the idea of hazing might evoke outdated images of simple pranks. The reality in 2025 is far more sinister, sophisticated, and often digitally enabled. Hazing 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. Critically, under Texas law, a victim’s “consent” is not a defense.

Modern Hazing Methods: A Jarrell Family’s Guide to Recognition

1. Alcohol & Substance Hazing (The Most Common Killer):

  • Forced or coerced rapid consumption (“chugging,” “funneling,” “keg stands”).
  • Drinking games with punitive rules (“Bible study,” “family tree” where wrong answers mean drinks).
  • “Big/Little” nights where pledges are given handles of hard liquor.
  • Pressure to consume unknown substances or dangerous mixtures.

2. Physical Hazing:

  • Paddling, beatings, or “smokings” (extreme, punitive calisthenics).
  • Sleep deprivation through all-night tasks or mandatory late meetings.
  • Food/water deprivation or forced consumption of vile/spoiled food (like the milk and hot dogs in the UH case).
  • Exposure to extreme elements (cold weather in underwear, lying in vomit).
  • Dangerous “workouts” designed to cause exhaustion and injury.

3. Psychological & Sexualized Hazing:

  • Verbal abuse, humiliation, and threats.
  • Forced nudity or simulated sexual acts.
  • Degrading costumes or roles.
  • Social isolation and control over personal relationships.

4. Digital Hazing & Coercion:

  • 24/7 Group Chat Control: Pledges required to respond instantly to messages at all hours, causing sleep deprivation and anxiety.
  • Social Media Humiliation: Forced to post embarrassing content on TikTok, Instagram, or Snapchat.
  • Geo-Tracking: Required to share live location via apps.
  • Evidence Dilemma: Hazing is often recorded, but videos are shared privately or deleted to avoid detection.

Where Hazing Happens: It’s Not Just “Fraternities”

Jarrell students participate in a wide array of campus activities. Hazing risk extends to:

  • Fraternities & Sororities (IFC, Panhellenic, NPHC, Multicultural councils).
  • Corps of Cadets and ROTC programs (notable at Texas A&M).
  • Athletic Teams (from football to cheerleading).
  • Spirit & Tradition Organizations (like Texas Cowboys, song leaders).
  • Marching Bands and performance groups.
  • Academic, Service, and Cultural Clubs.

The common thread is a power imbalance between new and existing members, wrapped in the cloak of “tradition,” “bonding,” or “earning your place.”

Texas Hazing Law & Liability: A Framework for Jarrell Families

Texas has some of the nation’s strongest statutory tools to combat hazing. Understanding this framework is the first step toward accountability.

The Texas Education Code: Chapter 37, Subchapter F

Definition (§37.151): Hazing is any intentional, knowing, or reckless act, on or off campus, directed against a student for the purpose of initiation or affiliation, that endangers the mental or physical health or safety of the student.

Key Provisions for Jarrell Families:

  • Criminal Penalties (§37.152): Hazing is a Class B misdemeanor. It becomes a Class A misdemeanor if it causes bodily injury and a STATE JAIL FELONY if it causes serious bodily injury or death.
  • Organizational Liability (§37.153): The fraternity, sorority, or club itself can be prosecuted and fined up to $10,000 per violation.
  • Consent is NOT a Defense (§37.155): Even if your child “agreed,” it is still a crime. The law recognizes the coercive power of peer pressure.
  • Immunity for Good-Faith Reporting (§37.154): Individuals who report hazing or call for medical help in good faith are protected from liability.

Criminal vs. Civil Cases: Two Paths to Accountability

Criminal Cases:

  • Brought by the state (DA’s office).
  • Goal: Punishment (jail, fines, probation).
  • Charges can include hazing, assault, furnishing alcohol to minors, and even manslaughter.

Civil Lawsuits:

  • Brought by the victim and their family.
  • Goal: Compensation for damages and institutional accountability.
  • Based on negligence, wrongful death, negligent supervision, and emotional distress.
  • Critical: A criminal conviction is not required to pursue a civil case. The standards of proof are different.

Who Can Be Held Liable in a Civil Hazing Lawsuit?

Our investigative approach, which we call the Texas Hazing Intelligence Engine, is designed to identify every potentially liable entity. This includes:

  1. Individual Perpetrators: Members who planned, executed, or covered up the hazing.
  2. Chapter Officers & Leaders: The pledge educator, president, risk manager, etc., who had direct oversight.
  3. The Local Chapter: As a legal entity (often a housing corporation).
  4. The National Headquarters: For failing to supervise, enforce policies, or act on prior knowledge.
  5. The University: For negligent supervision, deliberate indifference, or Title IX violations (if sexual harassment is involved).
  6. Third Parties: Property owners, landlords, or alcohol providers.

Federal Law Overlay

  • Stop Campus Hazing Act (2024): Requires colleges receiving federal aid to report hazing incidents more transparently and maintain public data.
  • Title IX & Clery Act: Come into play when hazing involves sexual harassment or assault, triggering specific investigation and reporting duties for universities.

National Hazing Case Patterns: The Scripts That Repeat in Texas

The tragic cases below are not just news stories; they are legal precedents that show the predictable patterns of hazing. These same patterns occur at Texas schools, and they form the basis for proving negligence and foreseeability in court.

The Alcohol Poisoning Death Pattern

  • Timothy Piazza (Penn State, Beta Theta Pi, 2017): Died from traumatic brain injuries after a bid-acceptance night of extreme drinking. Brothers delayed calling 911. Result: Dozens of criminal charges, civil suits, and Pennsylvania’s “Timothy J. Piazza Anti-Hazing Law.”
  • Max Gruver (LSU, Phi Delta Theta, 2017): Died from alcohol toxicity after a “Bible study” drinking game. Result: Felony convictions and Louisiana’s “Max Gruver Act.”
  • Stone Foltz (Bowling Green State, Pi Kappa Alpha, 2021): Died after being forced to drink a bottle of alcohol. Result: $10 million settlement ($7M from national fraternity, ~$3M from university).
  • Andrew Coffey (Florida State, Pi Kappa Phi, 2017): Died from alcohol poisoning at a “Big Brother” event, leading to a temporary suspension of all Greek life at FSU.

The Physical & Ritualized Violence Pattern

  • Chun “Michael” Deng (Baruch College, Pi Delta Psi, 2013): Died from traumatic brain injury after a violent, blindfolded “glass ceiling” ritual at a retreat. Result: National fraternity convicted of felonies and banned from Pennsylvania for 10 years.
  • Danny Santulli (Univ. of Missouri, Phi Gamma Delta, 2021): Suffered permanent, catastrophic brain damage from forced drinking. Result: Settlements with 22 defendants, illustrating multi-party liability for severe injury.

The Athletic & Programmatic Hazing Pattern

  • Northwestern University Football (2023-25): Widespread allegations of sexualized and racist hazing led to multiple lawsuits, coach firations, and confidential settlements, proving hazing is endemic in high-profile sports.

What This Means for Jarrell Families: These are not “rogue” incidents. They are predictable outcomes of known, dangerous traditions. When the same patterns appear at UH, Texas A&M, or UT, it demonstrates that national organizations and universities had prior notice and a duty to prevent them.

Texas Universities Under the Microscope: Where Jarrell Students Go

Jarrell families are part of the vibrant Central Texas educational corridor. Our students attend universities across the state, from local gems to major flagship institutions. Each campus has its own Greek ecosystem and hazing history.

The University of Texas at Austin (UT) – A Major Destination for Central Texas

For Jarrell Families: UT Austin is a premier destination, just an hour’s drive south. Its size and prestige come with a complex Greek life landscape of over 60 fraternities and sororities.

Hazing Transparency & Record: UT maintains one of Texas’s most transparent public hazing violations log. This public record is a powerful tool for families, as it documents patterns. Examples include:

  • Pi Kappa Alpha (2023): Sanctioned for directing new members to consume milk and perform strenuous calisthenics.
  • Sigma Alpha Epsilon: Faced a lawsuit from a student alleging a severe assault at a party resulting in fractures.
  • Various spirit groups and fraternities have been placed on probation for alcohol hazing, forced workouts, and degrading behavior.

Legal Jurisdiction: A hazing case involving UT could involve the UT Police Department (UTPD), Austin Police, and be filed in Travis County courts. UT’s public violator log can be used as evidence to show the university’s prior knowledge of risky behaviors within specific organizations.

Texas State University (San Marcos) – The Nearby Regional Powerhouse

For Jarrell Families: Located in neighboring Hays County, Texas State is a common choice for Jarrell students seeking a large university experience close to home.

Greek Life & Hazing Context: Texas State has an active Greek community. While less publicly documented than UT’s, hazing incidents occur. The university’s student conduct office handles reports, and cases can involve the Texas State University Police Department and Hays County courts.

Central Texas & Regional Campuses

Jarrell students also attend:

  • Southwestern University (Georgetown): A private liberal arts college with Greek life in Williamson County itself.
  • Temple College & Central Texas College: Important community institutions.
  • Texas A&M University-Central Texas (Killeen): Part of the A&M system, serving the region.

The Common Thread: No campus is immune. Wherever there are groups with initiation processes, power imbalances, and traditions, hazing risk exists.

Other Major Texas Hubs Jarrell Families Trust

While UT and Texas State are closest, Jarrell students also pursue excellence across Texas:

  • Texas A&M University (College Station): Known for its Corps of Cadets and robust Greek life. Has faced serious lawsuits, including a Sigma Alpha Epsilon case where pledges suffered chemical burns requiring skin grafts and Corps hazing allegations involving degrading restraint.
  • University of Houston (UH): The site of our flagship Leonel Bermudez case, demonstrating severe, contemporary hazing involving physical abuse, humiliation, and life-threatening injury.
  • Baylor University (Waco) & Southern Methodist University (Dallas): Both private universities with significant Greek life and documented hazing histories, including athletic team hazing at Baylor.

The Greek Ecosystem: National Histories & Local Chapters

National fraternities and sororities are not monoliths, but they share common risk profiles. Their national histories matter because they show what the organization knew, or should have known, about the dangers of their traditions.

Connecting National Patterns to Texas Campuses

Our Texas Hazing Intelligence Engine tracks over 1,400 Greek-related entities across Texas. This data helps us connect local chapters to their national organizations’ documented histories of hazing. For example:

  • Pi Kappa Alpha (ΠΚΑ): The national organization behind the Stone Foltz death. Chapters exist at UT, Texas A&M, Texas State, and elsewhere in Texas.
  • Sigma Alpha Epsilon (ΣΑΕ): Has faced hazing-related deaths and severe injury lawsuits nationwide, including cases at Texas A&M (chemical burns) and UT (assault lawsuit).
  • Pi Kappa Phi (ΠΚΦ): The national organization in our UH/Bermudez case, also responsible for the Andrew Coffey death at Florida State.
  • Phi Delta Theta (ΦΔΘ): The national organization behind the Max Gruver death. Chapters are active at multiple Texas schools.

When a Texas chapter repeats a hazing script—a forced drinking game, a violent ritual, an extreme workout—that has caused death or injury elsewhere, it powerfully demonstrates foreseeability. The national organization cannot claim ignorance.

Public Records: A Snapshot of the Greek Landscape Serving Jarrell

To illustrate the scale and structure of what we track, here is a sampling of real, Texas-registered Greek organizations relevant to our region. This is the kind of directory we maintain to understand the full network of potential liability.

Williamson County & Central Texas Area Entities (From IRS B83 Filings):

  • HONOR SOCIETY OF PHI KAPPA PHI – EIN 463831593, Austin, TX 78723 (recorded at Texas State University)
  • SIGMA ALPHA OMEGA CHRISTIAN SORORITY INC – EIN 851262394, P.O. Box 302701, Austin, TX 78703
  • SIGMA LAMBDA ALPHA SORORITY INC – EIN 900956019, P.O. Box 92471, Austin, TX 78709
  • BETA UPSILON CHI – EIN 742911848, 12650 N Beach St Ste 114 PMB 305, Fort Worth, TX 76244

Greater Austin-Round Rock Metro Entities (From Cause IQ Data):
The Austin-Round Rock metro is reported to have 154 Greek-related organizations. Examples include:

  • Sigma Alpha Epsilon – Texas Rho Corp. (Austin – UT chapter house corporation)
  • Delta Tau Delta – Gamma Iota Chapter (Austin – UT chapter house)
  • Building Corporation – Alpha Delta Pi (Delta) (Austin – UT chapter property)

Statewide University Hub Entities:

  • TEXAS KAPPA SIGMA EDUCATIONAL FOUNDATION INC – EIN 741380362, P.O. Box 470061, Fort Worth, TX 76147 (supporting Kappa Sigma chapters statewide)
  • KAPPA SIGMA – MU CAMMA CHAPTER INC – EIN 133048786, 3007 Earl Rudder Fwy S, College Station, TX 77845 (Texas A&M chapter)
  • BETA NU PI KAPPA PHI FRATERNITY HOUSING CORPORATION INC – EIN 462267515, 10601 Big Horn Trl, Frisco, TX 75035 (entity related to the Pi Kappa Phi national brand involved in the UH case)

This is not an accusation against these organizations. It is a demonstration of the complex, documented ecosystem we navigate. When hazing occurs, we know how to identify the local chapter, its housing corporation, its alumni support network, and its national headquarters—because we’ve already mapped them.

Building a Hazing Case: Evidence, Strategy, and Damages

Pursuing a hazing case requires a methodical, evidence-first approach. It is a fight against institutions with deep pockets and experienced defense lawyers. Our strategy is built on investigation, expert collaboration, and proven litigation experience.

The Evidence That Wins Cases

1. Digital Evidence (The Most Critical):

  • Group Chats: GroupMe, WhatsApp, Discord, iMessage threads showing planning, coercion, and boasts.
  • Social Media: Instagram stories, Snapchats, TikTok videos, and Facebook posts documenting events or humiliation.
  • Recovered Data: Digital forensics can often retrieve deleted messages and media.

2. Physical & Medical Evidence:

  • Medical Records: ER reports, hospitalization records, lab tests (like elevated creatine kinase proving rhabdomyolysis), and psychological evaluations for PTSD.
  • Photographs: Of injuries, locations, and hazing paraphernalia.
  • Physical Items: Clothing, paddles, “pledge packs,” alcohol containers.

3. Institutional Records (Obtained via Discovery):

  • University Files: Prior conduct violations for the same group, internal investigation reports, Clery Act reports.
  • National Fraternity Records: Risk management reports, prior incident history from other chapters, internal communications.
  • Insurance Policies: To identify all potential sources of coverage.

Understanding Damages: What Can Be Recovered

Damages in a hazing case aim to make the victim whole and hold wrongdoers accountable. They fall into key categories:

Economic Damages (Quantifiable Losses):

  • All Medical Expenses: Past and future, including hospital stays, surgery, therapy, and long-term care for permanent injuries.
  • Lost Earnings & Capacity: Income lost during recovery and reduced future earning potential if disabilities persist.
  • Educational Costs: Tuition for semesters disrupted, lost scholarships.

Non-Economic Damages (For Harm and Suffering):

  • Physical Pain & Suffering: From the immediate injuries and ongoing chronic pain.
  • Emotional Distress & Psychological Harm: For PTSD, depression, anxiety, trauma, and humiliation.
  • Loss of Enjoyment of Life: Inability to participate in college, sports, or social activities as before.

Wrongful Death Damages (For Families):

  • Funeral and burial costs.
  • Loss of financial support, love, companionship, and guidance.
  • The family’s own emotional anguish.

Punitive Damages: In cases of particularly egregious or reckless conduct, courts may award punitive damages to punish the defendant and deter future behavior.

Our role is to work with economists, life-care planners, and medical experts to fully document and value every aspect of these damages, ensuring any settlement or verdict reflects the true cost of the harm done.

Overcoming Institutional Defenses

We anticipate and counter common defenses:

  • “The Victim Consented”: Texas law (§37.155) nullifies this. We demonstrate the coercive environment.
  • “It Was Rogue Individuals”: We use pattern evidence from the national organization’s history and the local chapter’s past to show systemic failure.
  • “It Happened Off-Campus”: Liability is based on duty and foreseeability, not just geography. Nationals and universities still control and benefit from chapters.
  • “We Have Anti-Hazing Policies”: We show the gap between paper policies and actual enforcement or oversight.

A Practical Guide for Jarrell Parents & Students

For Parents: Warning Signs and Action Steps

Red Flags Your Child May Be Being Hazed:

  • Unexplained injuries, bruises, or burns.
  • Extreme fatigue, sleep deprivation, or drastic weight changes.
  • Secrecy about organization activities; defensive answers.
  • Sudden personality shifts: anxiety, depression, withdrawal.
  • Constant, anxious phone use related to group chats.
  • Financial requests for unexplained “fines” or “dues.”

If You Suspect Hazing:

  1. Talk Openly: Ask non-judgmental questions. “Are you safe?” “Is anything making you uncomfortable?”
  2. Prioritize Medical Care: If there’s any injury or illness, see a doctor immediately and mention hazing.
  3. Preserve Evidence: Help your child screenshot messages and photograph injuries. Write down a timeline.
  4. Report Strategically: You can report to the university’s Dean of Students and/or campus police. However, consider consulting an attorney first to ensure evidence is protected.
  5. Contact a Lawyer Early: Before speaking to university administrators or insurance adjusters. We can guide you through the process and protect your rights.

For Students: Your Rights and Safety

Is It Hazing? Trust Your Gut. If it feels coercive, dangerous, or degrading, it likely is. “Tradition” is not an excuse.

How to Exit Safely:

  • Your safety is paramount. You have the right to leave any situation that feels unsafe.
  • If you need to de-pledge, do so in writing (email/text) to create a record.
  • If you fear retaliation, document it and report it immediately to campus authorities and your parents.

Evidence Collection:

  • Screenshot Everything: Group chats, DMs, social media posts—even if they’re embarrassing.
  • Photograph Injuries: Daily photos as bruises develop.
  • Record Conversations: Texas is a one-party consent state; you can record conversations you are part of.
  • Tell Medical Providers: “I was hazed.” Get it in your medical record.

Critical Mistakes That Can Damage a Case

  1. Deleting Evidence: Messages may be embarrassing, but they are crucial. Preserve, don’t delete.
  2. Confronting the Organization: This triggers their defense lawyers and leads to evidence destruction.
  3. Signing University Papers: Do not sign any waivers, releases, or “resolution agreements” without an attorney.
  4. Posting on Social Media: Public posts can be used against you. Keep details private.
  5. Waiting Too Long: Evidence disappears, witnesses scatter, and the statute of limitations runs. Texas generally gives you two years from the date of injury to file a lawsuit.

Why Choose Attorney911 for Your Jarrell Hazing Case

When your family faces a hazing crisis, you need more than a general personal injury lawyer. You need a firm with specific experience fighting the institutions that enable hazing: national fraternities and major universities. At The Manginello Law Firm, PLLD (Attorney911), we bring a unique combination of insider knowledge, complex litigation experience, and a victim-centered approach.

Our Unfair Advantage in Hazing Litigation

1. Insurance Insider Knowledge – Lupe Peña’s Defense Background:
Mr. Lupe Peña (he/him) spent years as an attorney at a national insurance defense firm. He knows exactly how fraternity and university insurance companies think. He understands their tactics for denying claims, undervaluing injuries, and dragging out cases to pressure families. We know their playbook because we used to run it. This insight is invaluable in negotiating maximum compensation.

2. Proven Experience Against Massive Defendants – Ralph Manginello’s BP Litigation Credential:
Managing Partner Ralph Manginello was one of the few Texas attorneys involved in the BP Texas City explosion litigation, taking on a billion-dollar corporation. We are not intimidated by the deep pockets or aggressive defense teams of national fraternities or university systems. We have the federal court experience and complex case management skills these battles require.

3. Multi-Million Dollar Wrongful Death & Catastrophic Injury Results:
We have recovered millions for clients in wrongful death and severe injury cases. We know how to work with economists and life-care planners to document the full, lifelong impact of injuries like traumatic brain damage or permanent organ injury (like the kidney damage in the UH case).

4. Dual Criminal & Civil Capability – HCCLA Membership:
Ralph Manginello is a member of the Harris County Criminal Lawyers Association (HCCLA). We understand the criminal hazing process and how it interacts with civil lawsuits. We can effectively advise clients or witnesses who may have potential criminal exposure.

5. The Texas Hazing Intelligence Engine – Data-Driven Investigation:
As shown in this guide, we don’t start from scratch. We maintain and utilize a proprietary database of Texas Greek organizations, campus histories, and national patterns. We know how to trace liability from the individual member all the way up to the national headquarters and its insurers.

6. Spanish-Language Services – Lupe Peña habla Español:
Mr. Peña is fluent in Spanish. We are committed to serving all Texas families in the language they are most comfortable with.

We Serve Jarrell and All of Texas

While our offices are in Houston, Austin, and Beaumont, we serve families across Texas, including those in Jarrell, Williamson County, and the entire Central Texas region. Hazing does not respect county lines, and neither does our commitment to justice. We handle cases stemming from any Texas university and can work as co-counsel with local attorneys for out-of-state incidents.

Your Next Step: A Free, Confidential Consultation

If hazing has hurt your child and your family, you don’t have to navigate this alone. The path to accountability begins with a conversation.

During your free consultation, we will:

  • Listen compassionately to your story.
  • Review any evidence you have gathered.
  • Explain your legal rights and options under Texas law.
  • Discuss the investigation process and potential strategies.
  • Answer your questions about timelines, costs, and what to expect.
  • There is no pressure to hire us. Our goal is to inform and empower you.

We work on a contingency fee basis for personal injury cases. This means you pay no attorney fees unless we win your case.

Contact The Manginello Law Firm, PLLC / Attorney911 Today

Call the Legal Emergency Lawyers™: 1-888-ATTY-911 (1-888-288-9911)

Direct Line: (713) 528-9070
24/7 Cell: (713) 443-4781

Email: ralph@atty911.com or lupe@atty911.com
Website: https://attorney911.com

Se habla Español. Servicios legales en español disponibles.

We stand with the families of Jarrell, Georgetown, Temple, and all Texas communities in the fight to end hazing and hold powerful institutions accountable.

Plain Text Links to Key Resources

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

  • Click2Houston Coverage: 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 Coverage: https://abc13.com/post/waterboarding-forced-eating-physical-punishment-lawsuit-alleges-abuse-faced-injured-pledge-uhs-pi-kappa-phi-fraternity/18186418/

Attorney911 Educational Videos:

  • Using Your Cellphone to Document Evidence: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LLbpzrmogTs
  • Texas Statutes of Limitations Explained: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MRHwg8tV02c
  • Client Mistakes That Can Ruin a Case: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r3IYsoxOSxY
  • How Contingency Fees Work: 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)

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