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Kappa Alphi Psi and hazing
May 20, 2006
http://www.tallahassee.com/apps/pbcs...65/1010/NEWS01 Alleged fraternity hazing victim still being punished, father says Former Kappa Alpha Psi pledge lost scholarship, will not return to FAMU By Daniela Velazquez DEMOCRAT STAFF WRITER The father of a Florida A&M sophomore who was allegedly beaten in a hazing incident involving the Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity in February is still incensed. In a statement released Friday through the Knowles & Randolph law firm, Mark Jones said his son is still being punished for reporting the crime. "Because of that, he is looked at as a traitor, a snitch," Jones said. He has retained the firm in the case. Marcus Jones, of Decatur, Ga., "does not intend on returning (to FAMU) and no longer lives in Tallahassee," said Cecka Green, family spokeswoman. Because he did not complete classes this spring semester, Jones has lost his partial-tuition academic scholarship, Green said. Green said the family is evaluating if they will take legal action against the fraternity regionally or nationally. "I don't know that it's been determined who would be the target of legal litigation," Green said. Jones' father reported the incident in March. Marcus Jones, 19, had surgery March 7 for injuries to his buttocks, and he had a ruptured eardrum, according to a report by the Leon County Sheriff's Office. Senior Michael Morton, 23, senior Brian Bowman, 23, junior Cory Gray, 22, sophomore Marcus B. Hughes, 20, and pharmacy student Jason Harris, 25, were arrested on charges of hazing on April 10. They are the state's first arrests on such charges after a June 2005 law made hazing a third-degree felony. The undergraduate fraternity chapter has been suspended from campus until 2013 . The five students are currently suspended from the university. Four of the five have had school hearings to try and reach an agreement to determine if they will be reinstated, Bill Waters, attorney for the men, said Friday. The final hearing will be at the end of the month. The five students did not take their final exams and have not registered for summer classes, Waters said. If an agreement is reached, the students intend to enroll in the fall. The Sheriff's Office does not anticipate any more hazing arrests, said Capt. Rob Swearingen. "We have exhausted all our leads." Some witnesses interviewed could still face perjury charges. For Jones' case, "that investigation is going to have run its course through the court system," Swearingen said. Copyright ©2006 Tallahassee Democrat. |
^^^^^ I think there may be two threads on this already.
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How sad to see the repercussions of an act of hazing, -permanent injury to the one hazed,and loss of his academic scholarship- liability for those involved, loss of chapter privileges until 2013!:( it's just not worth it in the name of tradition?:mad:
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