VCU Freshman Adam Oakes Died of Alcohol Poisoning in a Delta Chi Hazing Ritual: Richmond Fraternity Hazing Wrongful Death Attorneys — Attorney911 Pursues the National Fraternity and Its Local Chapter for Negligent Supervision and Gross Negligence, Ralph Manginello’s 27+ Years Federal-Court Trial Experience, Lead Counsel in the Active $10M+ Bermudez v. Pi Kappa Phi Hazing Case, Lupe Peña the Former Insurance-Defense Insider Who Knows How Fraternity Insurers Deploy Hazing Exclusions, We Preserve the Group Chats, Ritual Manuals and Toxicology Reports Before Deletion, the Stop Campus Hazing Act and Adam’s Law Define the Standard of Care the Fraternity Ignored, Virginia’s Pure Contributory-Negligence Rule Defeated by Coercion and Incapacity, Millions Recovered in Wrongful-Death Cases — Free 24/7 Consultation, No Fee Unless We Win, Hablamos Español, 1-888-ATTY-911
Richmond Hazing Wrongful Death: When a Fraternity Takes Your Child The phone call that ends your world does not come with a warning. It comes at an hour when you were already afraid — your son went to Virginia Commonwealth University, joined a fraternity, and stopped answering his phone. By the time someone calls you back, the story has already started to change. “There was an incident.” “He was drinking.” “We found him unresponsive.” The words get smaller and more devastating as the night goes on, until you are standing in a hospital hallway or talking to a detective, and someone is telling you your child is dead from alcohol poisoning during a fraternity ritual. We are writing this page for you — the parent, the sibling, the grandparent who just learned that a fraternity hazing event took someone you love. You may be reading this because of what happened to Adam Oakes, a 19-year-old VCU freshman who died in February 2021 during a Delta Chi fraternity hazing ritual — and whose parents, Eric and Linda Oakes, turned their grief into the federal Stop Campus Hazing Act signed by President Biden on Christmas Eve 2024. You may be a family…