Cochran County Fraternity Hazing Attorneys | $24M Pike Settlements Exposed | Attorney911 — We Shut Down Pi Kappa Phi’s Beta Nu | Federal Court | Former Insurance Defense | 1-888-ATTY-911
A Comprehensive Guide to Hazing and the Law in Texas: What Cochran County Families Need to Know The late Texas night is cool, but the atmosphere inside a dimly lit off-campus house is anything but calm. A young student from Cochran County stands with a dozen others, some shivering, some visibly anxious, while older members bark orders and hold bottles of cheap liquor. "Drink it all, pledge! Don't be a [derogatory term]!" one shouts, thrusting a bottle into the student's hands. The fear of being outcast—of losing the friends they thought they'd made, of failing to "make the cut"—mixes with the burning in their throat. They drink. Someone coughs, then vomits. Another is already slumped in a corner, barely conscious. No one calls for help. They all know what happens if the university finds out: "The chapter will get shut down, and it'll be your fault." This isn't a scene from a sensational movie; it's a chillingly familiar reality playing out on campuses across the Lone Star State, from the sprawling urban universities of Houston and Austin to the traditional halls of Texas A&M. This scenario, or one strikingly similar, could easily involve a child from Cochran County attending one…