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Hazing at Texas Universities: A Comprehensive Legal Guide for Hutto Families A Night No Hutto Parent Should Imagine It's late on a Thursday night in the fall semester. Your student, a freshman at the University of Houston, texts that they're "studying with friends" and will be home late. What you don't know is that they're actually at the Pi Kappa Phi fraternity house, being forced through their third hour of extreme calisthenics as part of "pledge week." They've already consumed excessive amounts of milk and hot dogs until vomiting, been sprayed in the face with a hose, and are now being told that failure to complete 500 squats means expulsion from the fraternity they worked so hard to join. Across Texas, from Houston to College Station to Austin, similar scenes play out every semester—not just in fraternities, but in sororities, Corps programs, athletic teams, and spirit groups. What begins as "tradition" or "bonding" often crosses into illegal hazing that causes serious injury, psychological trauma, and sometimes death. Right now, in Harris County, we're actively litigating one of the most serious hazing cases in Texas: Leonel Bermudez's $10 million lawsuit against the University of Houston and Pi Kappa Phi. Bermudez, a UH student, suffered rhabdomyolysis and acute kidney failure after brutal hazing that included forced consumption of milk and hot dogs, extreme workouts, and simulated waterboarding. He was hospitalized for four days and faces ongoing risk of permanent kidney damage. The Pi Kappa Phi Beta Nu chapter has been shut down,…