Hazing, Accountability & Your Legal Rights: A Guide for Throckmorton, Texas Families
If Your Child Was Hurt in a Fraternity, Sorority, or Campus Group, You’re Not Alone
For parents in Throckmorton and across North Texas, sending a child to college is a proud milestone. You imagine them building a future, finding community, and creating lifelong memories. But for some families, that dream turns into a nightmare when a call comes in the middle of the night. Your child is in the hospital. The story doesn’t add up. Words like “tradition,” “pledging,” and “brotherhood” are used to explain away injuries that look like abuse.
Right now, just a few hours from Throckmorton in Houston, our firm is fighting one of the most serious hazing cases in Texas. We represent Leonel Bermudez, a University of Houston student who nearly lost his life pledging Pi Kappa Phi. The allegations in this $10 million lawsuit are graphic: forced consumption of milk and hot dogs until vomiting, extreme workouts of 100+ push-ups and 500 squats, lying in vomit-soaked grass, and being sprayed in the face with a hose in a manner “similar to waterboarding.” The result? Leonel developed rhabdomyolysis—severe muscle breakdown—and acute kidney failure. His urine turned brown. 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, and the University of Houston called the conduct “deeply disturbing.”
What happened at UH can and does happen across Texas. If you’re a parent in Throckmorton, Throckmorton County, or anywhere in North Texas whose child has been injured in connection with fraternity, sorority, Corps, athletic, or spirit group activities, this guide is for you. We’ll explain what hazing really looks like in 2025, your legal rights under Texas law, and how our data-driven approach at Attorney911 helps families like yours seek accountability.
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 your child insists they are “fine.” Document everything.
- Preserve evidence BEFORE it disappears: screenshot group chats (GroupMe, WhatsApp), photograph injuries, save any physical items.
- Write down everything your child tells you while their memory is fresh.
- Do NOT:
- Confront the fraternity, sorority, or university directly.
- Let your child delete messages or “clean up” their phone.
- Sign anything from the university or an insurance company.
- Post details on social media.
Contact our experienced hazing team within 24–48 hours. Evidence vanishes quickly. Universities and national organizations move fast to control the narrative. We can help you preserve evidence, understand your rights, and protect your child. Call 1-888-ATTY-911 for a free, confidential consultation.
Hazing in 2025: What It Really Looks Like Beyond the Stereotypes
Hazing isn’t just “boys being boys” or harmless pranks. It’s a pattern of coercion and abuse tied to gaining membership or status in a group. For Throckmorton families, understanding the modern reality is crucial, as tactics have evolved to avoid detection.
A Clear, Modern Definition
Hazing is any forced, coerced, or strongly pressured action tied to joining or maintaining membership in a group that endangers physical or mental health or involves humiliation or exploitation. Crucially, “I agreed to it” is not a defense under Texas law. The power imbalance between pledges and members, combined with fear of social exclusion, creates an environment where true, voluntary consent is impossible.
Main Categories of Hazing
Alcohol and Substance Hazing
This remains the most common and deadliest form. It includes forced chugging, “lineup” drinking games, “Big/Little” nights with handles of liquor, and games like “Bible study” where wrong answers mean drinking. The goal is rapid intoxication, not social drinking.
Physical Hazing
This ranges from “smokings” (extreme, punitive calisthenics) and paddling to sleep deprivation, food/water restriction, and exposure to extreme elements. The recent UH Pi Kappa Phi case included forced workouts that crossed into life-threatening physical abuse.
Psychological and Humiliating Hazing
This includes verbal abuse, threats, isolation, forced confessions, and public shaming. “Pledge fanny packs” filled with humiliating items, as alleged in the UH case, are designed to degrade.
Sexualized Hazing
This involves forced nudity, simulated sexual acts, and degrading sexualized rituals. It’s a severe violation that often overlaps with criminal sexual assault.
Digital Hazing
The 2025 frontier. Pledges are subjected to 24/7 monitoring via group chats (GroupMe, Discord), required to share live locations, forced to post humiliating content on social media, and harassed if they don’t respond instantly, even at 3 AM.
Where Hazing Happens
While fraternities and sororities are most associated with hazing, it pervades many groups:
- Fraternities & Sororities (IFC, Panhellenic, NPHC, multicultural councils)
- Athletic Teams (from football to cheerleading)
- Corps of Cadets & ROTC units
- Marching Bands & Performance Groups
- Spirit & Tradition Organizations (like Texas A&M’s Corps or spirit groups)
- Some Academic, Service, and Cultural Clubs
The common threads are hierarchy, tradition, and secrecy. For Throckmorton parents, the key is to look at your child’s behavior, not just the letters on a sweatshirt.
Texas Hazing Law & Liability: What Throckmorton Families Need to Know
Texas has specific laws against hazing, and understanding this framework is the first step toward accountability.
Texas Education Code – Chapter 37: The Hazing Statute
Texas law defines hazing broadly as any intentional, knowing, or reckless act (on or off campus) that endangers the mental or physical health or safety of a student for the purpose of initiation, affiliation, or membership in a school organization.
Key Provisions for Throckmorton Families:
- Criminal Penalties: Hazing is a crime. It’s typically a Class B misdemeanor but escalates to a state jail felony if it causes serious bodily injury or death. Individuals can also be charged for failing to report hazing.
- Consent is NOT a Defense: Texas Education Code § 37.155 states clearly that a victim’s “consent” to the hazing activity is not a valid defense. The law recognizes the coercive power dynamics at play.
- Organizational Liability: The fraternity, sorority, or club itself can be prosecuted and fined up to $10,000 per violation if it authorized or encouraged the hazing.
- Immunity for Good-Faith Reporting: Those who report hazing in good faith or seek medical help in an emergency are protected from certain liabilities, encouraging bystanders to act.
Criminal vs. Civil Cases: Two Paths to Accountability
Criminal Cases are brought by the state (DA or county attorney). The goal is punishment: jail time, fines, probation. Charges can include hazing, furnishing alcohol to minors, assault, or even manslaughter.
Civil Lawsuits are brought by victims and their families. The goal is compensation for damages and institutional accountability. These cases address:
- Negligence & Gross Negligence (failure to exercise reasonable care)
- Wrongful Death (if hazing results in a fatality)
- Negligent Supervision (against nationals or universities)
- Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress
These paths can run simultaneously. You do not need to wait for a criminal conviction to explore a civil case. In fact, waiting can be detrimental as evidence disappears.
The Federal Overlay: Title IX, Clery, and New National Laws
- Stop Campus Hazing Act (2024): This new federal law requires colleges receiving federal aid to report hazing incidents more transparently and strengthen prevention programs. Public reporting will increase by 2026.
- Title IX: When hazing involves sexual harassment or assault, federal Title IX obligations are triggered, requiring specific investigations by the university.
- Clery Act: Requires universities to report certain campus crime statistics, which can include hazing-related assaults.
The National Hazing Crisis: Patterns That Repeat in Texas
The tragedy at UH is not an isolated incident. It follows a national script that has played out for decades. Understanding these patterns shows that what happened to your child was foreseeable—and preventable.
The Alcohol Poisoning Pattern: From Pennsylvania to Texas
- Timothy Piazza – Penn State, Beta Theta Pi (2017): A bid-acceptance night with extreme drinking led to fatal falls. Brothers delayed calling 911 for hours. The case resulted in the Timothy J. Piazza Anti-Hazing Law in Pennsylvania and dozens of criminal convictions.
- Stone Foltz – Bowling Green State, Pi Kappa Alpha (2021): A pledge was forced to drink a bottle of liquor during a “Big/Little” event. He died from alcohol poisoning. The family secured a $10 million settlement ($7M from the national fraternity, ~$3M from the university).
- Max Gruver – LSU, Phi Delta Theta (2017): A “Bible study” drinking game led to a fatal alcohol overdose (BAC 0.495%). Louisiana responded with the Max Gruver Act, making hazing a felony.
The Takeaway for Texas: The “Big/Little” night, the drinking game, the delay in seeking help—these are not accidents. They are predictable outcomes of a dangerous culture that national organizations have failed to eradicate.
The Physical & Ritualized Abuse Pattern
- Chun “Michael” Deng – Baruch College, Pi Delta Psi (2013): A pledge was blindfolded, weighted down, and repeatedly tackled during a “glass ceiling” ritual at a remote retreat. He died from traumatic brain injury. The national fraternity was criminally convicted of manslaughter and banned from Pennsylvania for 10 years.
- Danny Santulli – University of Missouri, Phi Gamma Delta (2021): An 18-year-old pledge suffered permanent, catastrophic brain damage from forced drinking. His family has settled with 22 defendants, and members face criminal charges.
The Takeaway for Texas: Off-campus retreats, brutal physical rituals, and life-altering injuries are part of the hazing landscape. The UH case allegations of waterboarding-style abuse and extreme workouts fit squarely within this national pattern.
The Texas Campus Landscape: Where Throckmorton Families Send Their Kids
Students from Throckmorton and Throckmorton County attend universities across our state. Each campus has its own Greek life ecosystem and history of incidents. Accountability requires understanding this local context.
The University of Houston & The Pi Kappa Phi Case
The ongoing case against UH and Pi Kappa Phi is a master class in institutional hazing failure. Beyond the horrific acts, the lawsuit reveals a system designed to avoid accountability:
- Multiple Hazing Locations: Abuse occurred at the Pi Kappa Phi chapter house, an off-campus residence on Culmore Drive, and at Yellowstone Boulevard Park for late-night workouts.
- Systematic Humiliation: The “pledge fanny pack” rule, enforced dress codes, and mandatory overnight chauffeuring created a culture of control.
- Medical Catastrophe: Leonel Bermudez’s rhabdomyolysis and acute kidney failure, confirmed by critically high creatine kinase levels, demonstrate the life-threatening nature of this hazing.
- The Defendant Universe: The lawsuit names 17 defendants: UH, the UH System Board of Regents, Pi Kappa Phi’s national headquarters, the Beta Nu housing corporation, and 13 individual fraternity leaders (president, pledgemaster, risk manager, etc.).
- Institutional Response: Only after the lawsuit was filed did Pi Kappa Phi national suspend the chapter (Nov 6, 2025) and members vote to surrender their charter (Nov 14, 2025). UH called the conduct “deeply disturbing.”
For Throckmorton families, this case proves that even major public universities and national fraternities with deep pockets can be held accountable. You can read the detailed media coverage in the Click2Houston report on UH Pi Kappa Phi hazing and ABC13 coverage of the $10M lawsuit.
Texas A&M University & The Corps of Cadets
Many North Texas students choose Texas A&M, drawn by its tradition and community. However, its Corps of Cadets and robust Greek life have faced serious hazing allegations.
- Corps of Cadets Lawsuit (2023): A cadet alleged degrading hazing including being bound between beds in a “roasted pig” position with an apple in his mouth. He sought over $1 million in damages. Texas A&M stated it handled the matter internally.
- Sigma Alpha Epsilon Chemical Burns Case (2021): Two A&M pledges sued after alleged hazing that included having industrial-strength cleaner, raw eggs, and spit poured on them, causing severe chemical burns requiring skin graft surgeries. They sought $1 million. The chapter was suspended.
- Culture of Tradition: The very traditions that define A&M can sometimes mask or enable abusive behaviors under the guise of “building discipline.”
For Throckmorton parents with children in the Corps or A&M Greek life, vigilance is key. “Tradition” is not a legal defense for abuse.
University of Texas at Austin
UT Austin maintains one of the most transparent hazing violation logs in the country. A review shows recurring patterns:
- Public Hazing Log: UT’s website lists sanctioned organizations. Recent entries include:
- Pi Kappa Alpha (2023): New members directed to consume milk and perform strenuous calisthenics. Chapter probation.
- Sigma Alpha Epsilon (2024): Chapter already under suspension faced new allegations of assault against an exchange student.
- Various spirit groups for forced workouts and alcohol-related hazing.
- The Pattern: UT’s data shows that even with public transparency, violations recur. This indicates a systemic issue, not just “rogue” individuals.
Other Texas Universities Relevant to Throckmorton Families
Students from our region attend schools across the state. Each has faced incidents:
- Texas Tech University (Lubbock): Has dealt with hazing allegations in Greek life and athletic teams.
- Midwestern State University (Wichita Falls): A closer regional option with active Greek life.
- Tarleton State University (Stephenville): Another university within driving distance for Throckmorton County families.
Behind the Letters: The National Organizations Operating in Texas
The fraternities and sororities on Texas campuses are chapters of national organizations. These nationals have long, documented histories of hazing incidents across the country. This history matters in court because it shows foreseeability—they knew or should have known the risks.
National Patterns That Show Up in Texas
- Pi Kappa Alpha (Pike): Responsible for the Stone Foltz death at BGSU ($10M settlement). Multiple chapters nationwide have been shut down for alcohol hazing.
- Sigma Alpha Epsilon (SAE): Has faced dozens of hazing deaths and injuries nationwide, including the chemical burn case at Texas A&M and ongoing litigation at the University of Alabama.
- Pi Kappa Phi: The national organization now named in our UH lawsuit also had a chapter at Florida State where pledge Andrew Coffey died from alcohol poisoning in 2017.
- Phi Delta Theta: The fraternity involved in Max Gruver’s death at LSU.
- Kappa Alpha Order: Has faced repeated hazing suspensions, including at SMU.
When a Texas chapter repeats the exact same dangerous “traditions” that have killed pledges in other states, it demonstrates a failure by the national organization to enforce its own policies and protect students.
The Attorney911 Texas Hazing Intelligence Engine: Data-Driven Accountability
Most families start from zero when hazing strikes. They don’t know who to sue beyond the obvious chapter name. At Attorney911, we don’t start from zero. We start from a proprietary database of over 1,423 Greek-related organizations across 25 Texas metros—a data advantage we built to help families like yours.
Our Public Records Directory: Seeing the Full Picture
To show you the depth of our investigation capability, here is a sample of the public records we maintain on Texas Greek organizations. This is the kind of information we use to identify every potentially liable entity in a hazing case.
Sample Texas Greek Organization Public Records (IRS B83 & Cause IQ Data):
- Beta Nu Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity Housing Corporation Inc – EIN 462267515 – Frisco, TX 75035 (IRS B83 Filing)
- Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity – Epsilon Kappa Chapter – EIN 746064445 – Nederland, TX 77627 (IRS B83 Filing)
- Texas Kappa Sigma Educational Foundation Inc – EIN 741380362 – Fort Worth, TX 76147 (IRS B83 Filing)
- Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority – Mu Epsilon Chapter – Beaumont, TX (Cause IQ Metro Listing – Beaumont-Port Arthur)
- Beta Upsilon Chi Fraternity – Fort Worth, TX 76244 (Cause IQ Metro Listing – Dallas-Fort Worth)
- Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi – Lamar Univ. Chapter – Beaumont, TX (Cause IQ Metro Listing – Beaumont-Port Arthur. Also appears in IRS data under EINs 263170920, 352335400, etc.)
- Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity – Beaumont Alumni – Beaumont, TX (Cause IQ Metro Listing. Also appears in IRS data under EIN 237279532, Prairie View, TX)
What This Means for Your Case:
These aren’t just names. Each entity represents a potential source of insurance coverage, a deeper pocket, or an oversight body that failed in its duty. A local chapter house corporation (like the Pi Kappa Phi one in Frisco) often holds the property insurance. An alumni chapter or educational foundation may have assets. National headquarters (like Pi Kappa Alpha in Nederland) have liability policies and a duty to supervise. By mapping this entire ecosystem from the start, we maximize leverage and ensure no responsible party escapes accountability.
Where Throckmorton Families Send Their Kids: Campus Connections
Based on our Texas Universities database and understanding of North Texas, students from Throckmorton County commonly attend:
- Regional & State Schools: Texas A&M University, Texas Tech University, University of Texas at Austin, Tarleton State University, Midwestern State University.
- Community Colleges & Transfers: Many begin at local colleges before transferring to larger universities with Greek systems.
Our data engine includes the specific fraternity and sorority rosters for these campuses, allowing us to immediately connect an incident to the national organization’s history and the specific Texas entities behind it.
Building a Serious Hazing Case: Evidence, Strategy, and Damages
Winning a hazing case requires more than outrage. It requires a meticulous, strategic build from day one.
Critical Evidence We Preserve & Pursue
- Digital Evidence: Group chats (GroupMe, WhatsApp, Discord), deleted texts recovered via forensics, social media posts and DM’s, geolocation data.
- Physical Evidence: Photographs of injuries, damaged clothing, paddles or props, receipts for forced alcohol purchases.
- Medical Records: ER reports, hospitalization records, lab tests (like CK levels for rhabdomyolysis), psychological evaluations for PTSD, anxiety, and depression.
- Institutional Records: Prior complaints against the chapter (obtained via subpoena), national fraternity risk management files, university Clery Act reports and disciplinary records.
- Witness Testimony: Other pledges, former members, roommates, bystanders—interviewed early before narratives are aligned.
We have a detailed video on using your cellphone to document a legal case that guides families on immediate evidence preservation.
Understanding Damages: What Can Be Recovered
Every case is unique, but damages in hazing lawsuits typically include:
- Economic Damages: All medical bills (past and future), lost wages, lost educational costs (withdrawn semesters), diminished future earning capacity if injuries are permanent.
- Non-Economic Damages: Physical pain and suffering, emotional distress, trauma, humiliation, loss of enjoyment of life.
- Wrongful Death Damages (if applicable): Funeral costs, loss of financial support, loss of companionship and guidance for the family.
- Punitive Damages: In cases of particularly egregious or reckless conduct, to punish the defendants and deter future behavior.
We work with life-care planners, economists, and medical experts to build a comprehensive picture of the harm done, ensuring we seek full and fair compensation.
Overcoming Common Defense Tactics
We know the playbook because our attorney, Mr. Lupe Peña (he/him), used to be an insurance defense lawyer for large companies. We anticipate their arguments:
- “The Pledge Consented”: We counter with Texas law (§ 37.155) and expert testimony on coercive group dynamics.
- “It Was Off-Campus / Rogue Individuals”: We show national and university knowledge through prior incidents and policy failures.
- “Insurance Doesn’t Cover Intentional Acts”: We argue negligent supervision and use our insider knowledge to navigate coverage disputes.
Practical Guides & FAQs for Throckmorton Parents and Students
A Parent’s Action Plan
Warning Signs:
- Unexplained injuries, bruises, or burns.
- Extreme exhaustion, sleep deprivation.
- Sudden secrecy about group activities (“I can’t talk about it”).
- Personality changes: anxiety, depression, withdrawal.
- Constant, anxious phone use for group chats.
- Financial pressure for unexplained “fines” or purchases.
What to Do If You Suspect Hazing:
- Prioritize Safety & Health: Get medical attention if needed.
- Preserve Evidence: Screenshot everything. Photograph injuries. Do not delete.
- Document: Write down what your child tells you, with dates and names.
- Seek Legal Counsel BEFORE Reporting: Contact us at 1-888-ATTY-911. We can guide you on how to report to the university or police while protecting your child’s rights and preserving evidence.
- Avoid Critical Mistakes: Do not confront the organization, sign anything from the university, or post on social media. Watch our video on client mistakes that can ruin your injury case.
Critical Mistakes That Can Destroy a Hazing Case
- Deleting Evidence: “Cleaning up” group chats is often seen as obstruction.
- Confronting the Organization: This triggers their legal defense and evidence destruction.
- Signing University “Resolution” Forms: These often contain waivers of your right to sue.
- Waiting Too Long: Texas has a statute of limitations. Evidence and witness memories fade. Learn more in our video on Texas statutes of limitations.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Can we sue a Texas university for hazing?
A: Yes. While public universities have some sovereign immunity, exceptions exist for gross negligence, Title IX violations, and when suing individuals. Private universities (like SMU, Baylor) have fewer protections. The specifics depend on the facts of your case.
Q: How long do we have to file a lawsuit?
A: Generally, 2 years from the date of injury in Texas for personal injury. For wrongful death, it’s 2 years from the date of death. However, exceptions and “tolling” provisions can apply. Do not wait. Call us to understand your specific deadline.
Q: How much does it cost to hire Attorney911?
A: We work on a contingency fee basis for personal injury and wrongful death cases. This means you pay no upfront fees or hourly costs. Our fee is a percentage of the recovery we secure for you. If we don’t win, you don’t pay. We explain this fully in our video on how contingency fees work.
Q: Will our case be public?
A: Most hazing cases settle confidentially before a public trial. We prioritize your family’s privacy and can negotiate for sealed records and confidential settlement terms.
Why Attorney911? Texas-Based Hazing Specialists for Throckmorton Families
When your family is in crisis, you need more than a lawyer. You need advocates who understand the institutions you’re up against and have the proven skill to fight them.
Our Unique Qualifications for Hazing Litigation
- Insider Insurance Knowledge (Mr. Lupe Peña’s Defense Background): Mr. Peña spent years as an insurance defense attorney for a national firm. He knows exactly how fraternity and university insurers value claims, fight coverage, and use delay tactics. We know their playbook because we used to run it.
- Complex Institutional Litigation Experience: Managing partner Ralph Manginello was one of the few Texas attorneys involved in the BP Texas City explosion litigation, taking on a billion-dollar corporate defendant. We are not intimidated by national fraternities or large universities.
- Data-Driven Investigation: We don’t start from scratch. We use our Texas Hazing Intelligence Engine—tracking 1,400+ Greek entities—to immediately identify all potentially liable parties, from local house corporations to national headquarters.
- Dual Civil & Criminal Expertise: Ralph Manginello’s membership in the Harris County Criminal Lawyers Association (HCCLA) means we understand the criminal side of hazing cases, which often runs parallel to civil suits. We can advise on all facets of the legal battle.
- Proven Multi-Million Dollar Results: We have a track record of securing significant settlements and verdicts in wrongful death and catastrophic injury cases. We work with economists and life-care planners to ensure we seek full compensation.
- Spanish-Language Services: Mr. Peña speaks fluent Spanish, ensuring we can serve all Texas families with comfort and clarity.
We Serve Families Across Texas, Including Throckmorton
While our offices are in Houston, Austin, and Beaumont, we serve hazing victims and their families statewide. Distance is no barrier. We handle cases from Throckmorton, Throckmorton County, and every corner of Texas. The same national fraternities, the same insurance companies, the same institutional cover-up tactics exist everywhere. Our expertise travels with us.
Your Next Step: A Free, Confidential Consultation
If hazing has hurt your child, you don’t have to navigate this alone. The institutions involved have lawyers protecting them from day one. You deserve the same advantage.
Contact The Manginello Law Firm, PLLC (Attorney911) today.
- Call: 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
In your free, no-obligation consultation, we will:
- Listen carefully to your story.
- Review any evidence you have.
- Explain your legal rights and options under Texas law.
- Outline our investigative strategy.
- Answer your questions about the process, timeline, and our contingency fee structure.
- Help you decide on the best path forward for your family.
Hablamos Español. Contact Mr. Lupe Peña directly at lupe@atty911.com for a consultation in Spanish.
You have the right to answers. You have the right to accountability. You have the right to ensure no other family in Throckmorton or elsewhere endures what you have. Let us help you fight for it.
Plain Text Links to Key Resources
News Coverage of the UH Pi Kappa Phi Case:
- Click2Houston Investigation:
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 as Evidence:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LLbpzrmogTs - Texas Statutes of Limitations:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MRHwg8tV02c - Client Mistakes to Avoid:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r3IYsoxOSxY - How Contingency Fees Work:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=upcI_j6F7Nc
Contact Attorney911:
- Main Website & Contact:
https://attorney911.com
Legal Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Reading this does not create an attorney-client relationship. Hazing laws and university policies are complex and fact-specific. If you believe your child has been hazed, you should immediately consult with a qualified attorney to discuss your specific situation. The information in this article is current as of late 2025. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome.
The Manginello Law Firm, PLLC / Attorney911 – Legal Emergency Lawyers™
Serving Throckmorton, Throckmorton County, and All of Texas
Call 1-888-ATTY-911 (1-888-288-9911) for Immediate Help.