Texas Hazing Lawsuits: A Comprehensive Guide for Waller, Harris County Families from Attorney911
If Your Child Was Hazed in Texas, You Are Not Alone. We Can Help.
For families in Waller and across Harris County, sending a child to college is a milestone filled with pride and hope. The nightmare begins when that child calls home, injured, traumatized, or worse, from a hospital bed after a fraternity, sorority, Corps of Cadets, or athletic team initiation. The confusion, fear, and anger are overwhelming. Is this just “boys being boys” or a serious crime? Will the university protect your child or its reputation? What are your legal rights?
Right now, in our own backyard, we are fighting one of the most serious hazing cases in Texas history. We represent Leonel Bermudez in a $10 million hazing and abuse lawsuit against the University of Houston (UH), the Pi Kappa Phi fraternity’s Beta Nu chapter, its national headquarters, housing corporation, and 13 individual fraternity leaders. The allegations are harrowing: forced consumption of food until vomiting, “pledge fanny packs” filled with humiliating items, being sprayed in the face with a hose “similar to waterboarding,” and extreme physical workouts that led to rhabdomyolysis and acute kidney failure, a four-day hospitalization, and ongoing risk of permanent damage. This case, documented in Click2Houston and ABC13 coverage, is not an isolated incident. It is a symptom of a dangerous culture that exists on campuses across Texas, including those where your Waller student may be enrolled.
This guide is for you—the parents, grandparents, and families in Waller, Pinehurst, Fields Store, and throughout Harris County who need answers, not platitudes. We will explain what modern hazing truly looks like, the Texas and federal laws designed to protect your child, the sobering history of fraternity and sorority misconduct, and the specific landscapes at universities like UH, Texas A&M, UT Austin, SMU, and Baylor. Most importantly, we will outline the path to accountability and recovery, showing how our firm uses a proprietary data intelligence engine and insider legal experience to build powerful cases for families like yours.
Immediate Help for Hazing Emergencies
If your child is in danger RIGHT NOW:
- Call 911 for any medical emergency.
- Then call us at 1-888-ATTY-911 (1-888-288-9911). We are Legal Emergency Lawyers™ for a reason.
In the first 48 hours:
- Get Medical Attention: Even if your child insists they are “fine,” hazing injuries like concussions, rhabdomyolysis, or internal trauma can be delayed. Go to the ER.
- Preserve Evidence: Screenshot every group chat (GroupMe, WhatsApp, iMessage), text, and social media post. Photograph injuries from multiple angles. Save any physical items involved.
- Write Everything Down: Document who, what, when, and where while memories are fresh.
- Do NOT:
- Confront the fraternity, sorority, or team directly.
- Sign anything from the university or an insurance company.
- Let your child delete messages or “clean up” their phone.
- Post details on public social media.
Contact an experienced hazing attorney within 24-48 hours. Evidence disappears at alarming speed. We can help you secure it and navigate the critical next steps. Call 1-888-ATTY-911 for an immediate, confidential consultation.
Hazing in 2025: What It Really Looks Like in Texas
Hazing is not a relic of the past or a simple prank. It is a calculated pattern of abuse that exploits power dynamics, often disguised as “tradition” or “bonding.” For Waller families, understanding its modern forms is the first step to recognizing it.
A Clear, Legal Definition
Under Texas Education Code Chapter 37, hazing is any intentional, knowing, or reckless act directed against a student for the purpose of initiation, affiliation, or membership in an organization that:
- Endangers the mental or physical health or safety of the student.
Critically, the law states that the victim’s “consent” is not a defense. The location—whether on-campus, at an off-campus house, or a remote retreat—does not matter. The power imbalance between pledges and members, the fear of social exclusion, and the desire to belong create an environment where true, voluntary consent is impossible.
The Three Tiers of Hazing
1. Subtle Hazing: The “Gateway” Behaviors
Often dismissed as harmless, these acts establish control and set the stage for escalation.
- Mandated Servitude: Being on-call 24/7 as a designated driver, cleaning members’ apartments, or running personal errands.
- Social Isolation: Being cut off from non-member friends or family; requiring permission to socialize.
- Psychological Control: Answering to derogatory nicknames; being forbidden from speaking unless spoken to; carrying a “pledge fanny pack” with humiliating items (as in the UH Pi Kappa Phi case).
- Digital Monitoring: Required instant responses in group chats at all hours; forced location sharing via apps like Find My Friends.
2. Harassment Hazing: Causing Deliberate Discomfort
- Sleep Deprivation: Mandatory late-night or 3 AM “meetings,” study sessions, or tasks.
- Forced Consumption: Eating excessive amounts of bland food (milk, hot dogs, bread) or disgusting substances until vomiting.
- Verbal Abuse: “Lineups” where pledges are screamed at, insulted, and degraded for hours.
- Extreme, Punitive Exercise: “Smokings” or forced calisthenics (100+ push-ups, 500 squats) under threat of expulsion, far beyond any reasonable physical conditioning.
3. Violent Hazing: High Risk of Injury or Death
- Forced Alcohol Consumption: The most common cause of hazing deaths. Includes “family tree” drinking games, “Big/Little” nights with handles of liquor, and chugging contests.
- Physical Assault: Paddling, beating, branding, or tackle rituals (like the “glass ceiling” ritual that killed Chun Deng).
- Sexualized Hazing: Forced nudity, simulated sexual acts, or sexual assault.
- Dangerous Environments: Exposure to extreme cold/heat; being tied up or restrained; dangerous driving assignments.
- Chemical Hazing: As alleged in a Texas A&M Sigma Alpha Epsilon case, where pledges were doused in industrial cleaner, causing severe chemical burns requiring skin grafts.
Where Hazing Happens: Beyond the Frat House
While fraternities and sororities are frequent offenders, hazing is an institutional problem.
- Corps of Cadets & ROTC Units (especially at Texas A&M)
- Athletic Teams (from football to cheerleading)
- Marching Bands and Performance Groups
- Spirit & Tradition Organizations (like Texas Cowboys)
- Academic and Cultural Clubs
The common thread is a hierarchy where existing members wield power over new members under the guise of tradition, with secrecy enforced by a code of silence.
Texas & Federal Hazing Law: The Legal Framework for Waller Families
When hazing strikes your family, understanding the legal landscape is crucial. Texas has specific laws, but federal statutes and institutional policies create a complex web of potential liability.
Texas Hazing Law (Education Code Chapter 37)
The Texas statutes provide both criminal penalties and a foundation for civil lawsuits.
- Criminal Penalties: Hazing is a Class B misdemeanor. However, if the hazing causes serious bodily injury, it becomes a state jail felony. Causing death elevates it further. Individuals who fail to report hazing or who retaliate against reporters also face misdemeanor charges.
- 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 Reporters: A person who in good faith reports hazing is immune from civil or criminal liability for that report. This “medical amnesty” is critical—it means calling 911 to save a life should not result in minor-in-possession charges for the caller.
- University Reporting Duty: Texas colleges must provide hazing prevention education and publish annual reports of violations. This public data can be a goldmine for showing an organization’s pattern of misconduct.
Civil Liability: The Path to Accountability and Recovery
A criminal case, handled by the state, seeks punishment. A civil lawsuit, which we file on behalf of victims, seeks compensation for damages and forces institutional change. They can proceed simultaneously. Defendants in a civil hazing case can include:
- The Individuals who planned, participated in, or supervised the hazing.
- The Local Chapter as an entity.
- The National Fraternity/Sorority Headquarters for negligent supervision and failure to curb known dangerous traditions.
- The University for negligent oversight, especially if it had prior knowledge of risks.
- Property Owners & Third Parties (e.g., landlords of off-campus houses, alcohol providers).
Federal Overlays: Title IX, Clery, and the Stop Campus Hazing Act
- Title IX: If hazing involves sexual harassment or assault, or is based on sex, gender, or race, it triggers the university’s Title IX obligations to investigate and provide a safe environment.
- Clery Act: Requires universities to report certain crimes, including assaults and arrests for liquor/drug violations, which often accompany hazing incidents.
- Stop Campus Hazing Act (2024): A landmark federal law requiring colleges receiving federal aid to dramatically increase transparency in hazing reporting and strengthen prevention programs by 2026.
National Hazing Cases: The Patterns That Repeat in Texas
The tragedies that make national headlines are not freak accidents. They are predictable outcomes of repeated, systemic failures. These cases set legal precedents that directly benefit Texas families pursuing justice.
The Fatal Alcohol Poisoning Pattern
- Timothy Piazza (Penn State, Beta Theta Pi, 2017): A bid acceptance night led to fatal falls captured on chapter security cameras, with brothers delaying 911 for hours. The criminal prosecution of 18 members and a multi-million-dollar civil settlement led to Pennsylvania’s Timothy J. Piazza Anti-Hazing Law.
- Max Gruver (LSU, Phi Delta Theta, 2017): Died during a “Bible study” drinking game where incorrect answers mandated drinking. Resulted in the Max Gruver Act making hazing a felony in Louisiana.
- Stone Foltz (Bowling Green State, Pi Kappa Alpha, 2021): Forced to drink a bottle of alcohol during a “Big/Little” event. His family secured a $10 million settlement ($7M from the national fraternity, ~$3M from the university).
- Andrew Coffey (Florida State, Pi Kappa Phi, 2017): Died of alcohol poisoning at a “Big Brother” night. His case is a direct parallel to the national pattern we see with the same fraternity in the UH case.
Violent Physical & Ritual Hazing
- Chun “Michael” Deng (Baruch College, Pi Delta Psi, 2013): Died from traumatic brain injury after a blindfolded, violent “glass ceiling” ritual at a retreat. The national fraternity was criminally convicted and banned from Pennsylvania for 10 years.
- Danny Santulli (Univ. of Missouri, Phi Gamma Delta, 2021): Suffered permanent, severe brain damage from forced drinking. His family reached multi-million-dollar settlements with 22 defendants, highlighting the web of liability.
Athletic & Institutional Hazing
- Northwestern University Football (2023-2025): Widespread allegations of sexualized and racist hazing led to player lawsuits, the firing of the head coach, and a confidential settlement. It proves hazing pervades multi-million-dollar athletic programs.
What This Means for Waller Families: These national cases create a playbook of “foreseeability.” When a Texas chapter of Pi Kappa Alpha, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, or Phi Delta Theta engages in the same behaviors that have killed students elsewhere, it becomes nearly impossible for those national organizations to claim they “didn’t know” the risks. This pattern evidence is powerful leverage in litigation.
Texas University Focus: Where Waller Families Send Their Kids
Waller students often attend major universities across Texas. Each campus has its own Greek ecosystem, history of incidents, and administrative response. Here is what you need to know.
University of Houston (UH)
For Waller & Greater Houston Families: UH is a cornerstone of higher education in our region. Its urban campus hosts a dense Greek life community, and as the Bermudez case proves, it is not immune to severe hazing.
- Recent Major Case: The Leonel Bermudez v. UH & Pi Kappa Phi lawsuit is the flagship. Hazing occurred at the chapter house, a Culmore Drive residence, and Yellowstone Boulevard Park. The university labeled the conduct “deeply disturbing,” and the chapter was shut down. We are actively litigating this case right now.
- Greek Landscape: UH has a large Interfraternity Council (IFC), Panhellenic Council, National Pan-Hellenic Council (NPHC “Divine Nine”), and Multicultural Greek Council. National organizations with known hazing histories—Pi Kappa Phi, Pi Kappa Alpha, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Kappa Alpha Order—all have chapters here.
- Legal Landscape: Cases may involve UH Police, Houston Police Department, and the Harris County court system. The university’s knowledge of prior incidents at these chapters will be a central issue.
Texas A&M University
For Waller Families with Aggies: The culture of tradition in College Station extends to hazing risks within both Greek life and the storied Corps of Cadets.
- Corps of Cadets Hazing: A 2023 lawsuit alleged a cadet was subjected to degrading hazing, including being bound in a “roasted pig” position. The university stated it handled the matter internally.
- Fraternity Hazing: A Sigma Alpha Epsilon (SAE) lawsuit alleged pledges were doused with industrial cleaner, causing severe chemical burns requiring skin grafts. The chapter was suspended.
- Unique Risk Factors: The combination of a powerful Greek system and the military-style hierarchy of the Corps creates environments where hazing can be normalized as “discipline” or “tradition.”
University of Texas at Austin
UT Austin is a national Greek life hub with a relatively high level of public transparency regarding violations.
- Public Hazing Log: UT maintains a searchable online list of hazing violations—a resource we use to establish patterns. For example:
- Pi Kappa Alpha (2023): Sanctioned for forcing new members to consume milk and perform strenuous calisthenics.
- Spirit Groups: Organizations like Texas Wranglers have been sanctioned for forced workouts and alcohol-related hazing.
- Sigma Alpha Epsilon Incident (2024): An Australian exchange student sued the local SAE chapter after an alleged assault at a party left him with a dislocated leg, broken nose, and fractures. The chapter was already under suspension for prior violations.
- Legal Venue: Cases typically fall under the jurisdiction of UTPD, Austin PD, and Travis County courts. The public violation log provides powerful evidence of prior notice to the university.
Southern Methodist University (SMU) & Baylor University
These private, prominent universities have their own complex histories.
- SMU: As a private school with affluent students and strong Greek life, hazing often goes unreported. A Kappa Alpha Order chapter was suspended in 2017 for paddling, forced drinking, and sleep deprivation.
- Baylor: Following its high-profile athletic scandals, Baylor faces scrutiny over all forms of institutional misconduct. The baseball team saw 14 players suspended in 2020 following a hazing investigation.
The Greek Organizational Backbone: Public Records & National Histories
When we take a hazing case, our investigation starts with data. We have built a Texas Hazing Intelligence Engine from public records to map the financial and organizational structures behind every fraternity and sorority. This is not theoretical; it’s how we identify every potentially liable entity.
Public Records Directory: The Organizations Behind the Letters
For Waller families, it’s critical to know that a fraternity is more than a house on campus. It’s a network of legally registered entities. Using IRS B83 data and commercial intelligence, we track them. For example, entities operating in the Houston-The Woodlands-Sugar Land metro (which includes Waller) include:
- Texas District of Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity – Houston, TX (Alumni/house corp.)
- Delta Sigma Theta Sorority – Houston Alumnae – Houston, TX
- Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority – Alpha Kappa Omega – Houston, TX (Graduate chapter)
- Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority – Beta Sigma Chapter – Houston, TX
- EIN 746064445 – Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity – Nederland, TX 77627 (Epsilon Kappa Chapter alumni foundation)
Statewide, we track over 1,423 Greek-related organizations across 25 Texas metros, from house corporations and alumni chapters to honor societies. This directory allows us to immediately identify insurance carriers, national headquarters, and local property owners when a hazing incident occurs.
Why National Histories Create Liability
National fraternities and sororities are not passive bystanders. They collect dues, provide charters, set policies, and are acutely aware of their own dangerous traditions. When a local chapter repeats a fatal pattern, the national organization can be held liable for negligent supervision. For instance:
- Pi Kappa Alpha (ΠΚΑ): The national organization had been warned repeatedly about “Big/Little” alcohol hazing before Stone Foltz’s death. That prior knowledge is directly relevant to any Texas PiKA hazing case.
- Sigma Alpha Epsilon (ΣΑΕ): Once known as the “deadliest fraternity,” SAE has a national history of alcohol-related deaths and injuries, including cases at Texas A&M and UT Austin.
- Pi Kappa Phi (ΠΚΦ): Andrew Coffey’s death at Florida State put the national organization on clear notice of the lethal risks in its pledge programs—knowledge central to our lawsuit against them in the Bermudez case.
We use this national pattern evidence to defeat the common defense: “This was a rogue chapter; we didn’t know.”
Building a Hazing Case: Evidence, Strategy, and Damages with Attorney911
Pursuing a hazing case against a university and a national fraternity is complex litigation. It requires a specific skill set: part investigator, part insurance negotiator, part trial attorney. Here is how we build these cases for Texas families.
The Evidence That Wins Cases
Modern hazing is documented digitally. Preserving this evidence is the single most important step.
- Digital Communications: GroupMe, WhatsApp, iMessage, Instagram DMs, Snapchat. We use digital forensics to recover deleted messages that show planning, participation, and cover-ups.
- Photos & Videos: Content filmed by members themselves is devastating evidence. We also seek security footage from houses and surrounding businesses.
- Internal Documents: Pledge manuals, “tradition” lists, emails between chapter officers and national advisors.
- University Records: Through discovery, we obtain prior conduct reports, warning letters, and internal investigations about the same chapter—proving the university knew of the risk.
- Medical & Psychological Records: Documenting the full extent of physical injury (e.g., lab reports showing critically high creatine kinase from rhabdomyolysis) and psychological trauma (PTSD, anxiety, depression diagnoses) is crucial.
We have a detailed video guide on using your phone to document evidence.
Overcoming Institutional Defenses
We anticipate and dismantle the standard defenses:
- “They Consented”: Texas law explicitly voids this defense. We demonstrate the coercive environment.
- “It Was Off-Campus”: Liability is based on control and foreseeability, not just property lines.
- “We Have a Policy”: We show the gap between paper policies and actual enforcement, using prior unpunished violations as proof.
- “Sovereign Immunity” (Public Universities): We argue exceptions for gross negligence or sue individual employees in their personal capacity. Universities often settle to avoid the discovery process.
The Damages Families Can Recover
A civil lawsuit seeks to make the victim whole and hold defendants accountable. Recoverable damages include:
- Economic Damages: All past and future medical expenses, lost wages, lost earning capacity if injuries are permanent, and educational costs (missed semesters, transferred schools).
- Non-Economic Damages: Compensation for physical pain, emotional distress, trauma, humiliation, and loss of enjoyment of life.
- Wrongful Death Damages (for families): Funeral costs, loss of financial support, and the profound loss of companionship, love, and guidance.
- Punitive Damages: In egregious cases, to punish particularly reckless or malicious conduct and deter future hazing.
Our approach is thorough. We work with life-care planners, economists, and medical experts to build a complete picture of the harm, ensuring settlements or verdicts reflect the true, lifelong impact.
Practical Guides for Waller Parents, Students, and Witnesses
For Parents: A Step-by-Step Action Plan
- Recognize the Signs: Unexplained injuries, extreme fatigue, personality changes, sudden secrecy about activities, constant anxiety over group chat messages, declining grades.
- Talk to Your Child: Use open, non-judgmental questions. “Has anything made you uncomfortable during pledging?” “Are you able to say no if you feel unsafe?”
- In a Crisis: Prioritize safety. Call 911 for medical help. Then, preserve evidence. Screenshot everything before it’s deleted.
- Navigate the University: Document all communications. Be wary of internal “resolutions” that ask you to sign away legal rights. Remember, the university’s interest is often in limiting its own liability.
- Consult a Lawyer Early: Do not wait. As we outline in our video on client mistakes that ruin a case, early legal guidance prevents critical errors. The statute of limitations is ticking; learn more in our video on Texas filing deadlines.
For Students: Your Safety and Rights
- Know That “Consent” Isn’t a Defense: You have the right to be safe, regardless of what you “agreed” to under pressure.
- Exit Safely: If you feel endangered, leave. Text a friend or family member your location. Your membership is not worth your life or health.
- Report Anonymously: Use campus hotlines, the National Anti-Hazing Hotline (1-888-NOT-HAZE), or confidential reporting tools.
- Preserve Evidence: Take screenshots. Write down names, dates, and details. You have the power to protect yourself and others.
Critical Mistakes That Can Destroy a Hazing Case
- Deleting Evidence: “Cleaning up” group chats is obstruction of justice. Save everything.
- Confronting the Chapter Directly: This triggers their defense lawyers and leads to evidence destruction.
- Signing University Paperwork: Do not sign any “resolution,” waiver, or settlement offer without an attorney’s review.
- Posting on Social Media: Defense investigators monitor everything. Inconsistencies can be used against you.
- Waiting Too Long: Texas generally has a two-year statute of limitations for personal injury, but evidence and witness memories fade fast. Act now.
Why Attorney911 is the Right Firm for Texas Hazing Cases
When your family is in crisis, you need advocates who are not intimidated by powerful institutions and who understand the exact mechanics of these cases. The Manginello Law Firm, PLLC (Attorney911) brings a unique combination of insider knowledge, investigative firepower, and a proven record of success in the most complex litigation.
Our Unmatched Texas Hazing Intelligence
We don’t start from scratch. We maintain the Texas Hazing Intelligence Engine—a proprietary database built from public IRS records, university filings, and national fraternity data. When you call us about an incident at UH, Texas A&M, or any Texas campus, we already know:
- The legal names, EINs, and addresses of the housing corporations and alumni chapters behind the fraternity.
- The national organization’s history of hazing incidents and settlements across the country.
- The university’s prior disciplinary record with that specific chapter.
This data-driven approach turns immediate leverage into higher accountability and better outcomes for your family.
Insider Experience: We Know How the Defense Thinks
- Mr. Lupe Peña’s Insurance Defense Background: Before fighting for victims, Mr. Peña (he/him) worked for a national defense firm where he learned exactly how insurance companies for fraternities and universities value claims, deny coverage, and drag out cases. We know their playbook because we used to run it. This insider knowledge is invaluable in negotiating maximum settlements. Learn more about Mr. Peña’s background at https://attorney911.com/attorneys/lupe-pena/.
- Ralph Manginello’s Complex Institutional Litigation Experience: Mr. Manginello was one of the few plaintiff attorneys involved in the BP Texas City explosion litigation, taking on a billion-dollar corporate defendant. That same tenacity and skill applies directly to suing national fraternities and large university systems. His federal court experience and membership in the Harris County Criminal Lawyers Association (HCCLA) mean we are equipped for both the civil and potential criminal aspects of hazing cases. See his full profile at https://attorney911.com/attorneys/ralph-manginello/.
A Full-Service Approach to Catastrophic Injury
Hazing cases often involve severe, lifelong injuries. Our firm’s deep experience in wrongful death and catastrophic injury (https://attorney911.com/law-practice-areas/wrongful-death-claim-lawyer/) means we know how to work with economists, life-care planners, and medical experts to fully document the lifetime impact of an injury, whether it’s traumatic brain damage, permanent kidney impairment, or severe PTSD.
We Are Committed to Your Family
We take a limited number of serious hazing cases so we can give each one the focus it deserves. We communicate with you regularly, fight aggressively, and are fully prepared to take your case to trial if a fair settlement cannot be reached. Our fee is contingency-based—we only get paid if we recover money for you. Learn how this works in our video on contingency fees.
Call to Action for Waller and Harris County Families
If hazing has hurt your child, you are facing grief, anger, and confusion. The university may be offering meetings and promises. The fraternity may be circling the wagons. You need a guide who has been here before, who knows the terrain, and who will fight relentlessly for your family’s right to justice and recovery.
We are actively litigating the Leonel Bermudez case against the University of Houston and Pi Kappa Phi right now. We are not theorizing about hazing law; we are in the trenches, using every tool in our arsenal to hold powerful institutions accountable.
Contact us today for a free, completely confidential case evaluation. We will listen to your story, explain your legal options in clear terms, and help you make the best decision for your family’s future. You don’t have to navigate this alone.
Call Attorney911 at 1-888-ATTY-911 (1-888-288-9911).
Direct Line: (713) 528-9070 | Cell: (713) 443-4781
Website: https://attorney911.com
Se habla Español: Contact Mr. Lupe Peña at lupe@atty911.com
Plain Text Links to Key Resources
For easy reference, here are essential resources discussed in this guide:
News Coverage of the UH Pi Kappa Phi Case:
- Click2Houston (KPRC 2) 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 (KTRK) 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 Phone to Document Evidence:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LLbpzrmogTs - Texas Statutes of Limitations:
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
Firm Website & Profiles:
- Main Website & Contact:
https://attorney911.com - Wrongful Death Practice Area:
https://attorney911.com/law-practice-areas/wrongful-death-claim-lawyer/ - Ralph Manginello Attorney Profile:
https://attorney911.com/attorneys/ralph-manginello/ - Lupe Peña Attorney Profile:
https://attorney911.com/attorneys/lupe-pena/
Legal Disclaimer
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Reading this does not create an attorney-client relationship. The outcome of any legal matter depends on the specific facts and applicable law. If you have been affected by hazing, please contact an attorney immediately to discuss your case. All trademarks and organization names are the property of their respective owners.