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-   -   Chico Again: Ice Water, Mud Crawl, etc. Alleged (Beta Theta Pi) (https://greekchat.com/gcforums/showthread.php?t=88599)

exlurker 07-12-2007 04:19 PM

Chico Again: Ice Water, Mud Crawl, etc. Alleged (Beta Theta Pi)
 
More allegations of incidents involving members of a fraternity at California State U - Chico. The article does mention the new California law that's been discussed in another thread in this forum.

Article:
http://www.thecalifornian.com/apps/p...707120327/1050

jon1856 07-12-2007 10:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by exlurker (Post 1484160)
More allegations of incidents involving members of a fraternity at California State U - Chico. The article does mention the new California law that's been discussed in another thread in this forum.

Article:
http://www.thecalifornian.com/apps/p...707120327/1050

A few more news links-this does not look good for anyone:(:mad:
Three fraternity members face hazing charges
By KAREN McINTYRE - Staff Intern
Article Launched: 07/10/2007 12:11:24 AM PDT
Three members of the now-banned Beta Theta Pi fraternity are being charged with misdemeanor violations of Matt's Law for hazing activities that occurred in April.
http://www.chicoer.com/ci_6338203?source=most_emailed

Chico fraternity members may be first charged with hazing
ASSOCIATED PRESS

2:10 p.m. July 11, 2007

OROVILLE – Three Chico fraternity members are being prosecuted under a new anti-hazing law signed last year by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. The members of Beta Theta Pi made pledges to do calisthenics and crawl through mud before being submerged to their necks in freezing water, according to Butte County District Attorney Mike Ramsey.
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/s...icohazing.html

Three face trial in Chico frat hazing
By Bill Lindelof - Bee Staff Writer
Published 12:00 am PDT Wednesday, July 11, 2007

The Butte County district attorney is prosecuting three Chico fraternity members on charges of illegal hazing -- invoking a law passed in the name of a student who died in a similar stunt two years ago.
Beta Theta Pi members allegedly made pledges do calisthenics and crawl through mud, then submerged them up to their necks in freezing water, subjecting them to hypothermia, District Attorney Mike Ramsey said Tuesday.
"The ice bath ritual caught our attention," he said. "If (pledges) didn't answer questions correctly -- and they were designed that you couldn't -- (they) were immersed in a bath of ice water for a substantial period of time."
The three students each will be charged with misdemeanor hazing "in a manner likely to cause serious bodily injury."
http://www.sacbee.com/101/story/266669.html

Rudey 07-12-2007 11:45 PM

Ice water in heat wave Cali? Sounds like torture...

-Rudey

jon1856 07-12-2007 11:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rudey (Post 1484401)
Ice water in heat wave Cali? Sounds like torture...

-Rudey

This could be:"then submerged them up to their necks in freezing water, subjecting them to hypothermia,"

Kevin 07-13-2007 12:26 AM

I think the word "likely" will cause the prosecution a lot of problems here.

It's a poorly written law.

To me, "likely" means at least 50%. Since no pledges became hypothermic, it appears that they were not "likely" to be injured.

exlurker 07-15-2007 07:12 PM

A little more information:

http://www.chicoer.com/ci_6373209?source=most_viewed

Brief excerpt from article:

Just days after three ex-fraternity members were charged with hazing violations, the lawyer for one of them says the case is being exaggerated and the men unfairly charged.

EE-BO 07-16-2007 05:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rudey (Post 1484401)
Ice water in heat wave Cali? Sounds like torture...

-Rudey

Actually, ice water can be very dangerous.

I periodically take ice baths (voluntarily) after doing a lot of working out and/or running on a given day since it is a great relaxer- but I am very careful about the amount of ice in the water and how long I am in there.

2 bags of ice will melt pretty fast in a tub of cold water, but that small amount takes the temp down to around 60- and it is unsafe to be in there more than 20 minutes or so.

A slurry of water so cold that the ice is not melting fairly quickly will be colder still and can have grave consequences within 5 minutes.

I agree with you that it does not sound like a big deal on the face of it- but it is actually pretty serious stuff, especially if the person doing it has a minor heart condition that has never been detected (which is somewhat common and responsible for many past fraternity deaths after forced calisthenics.)

OtterXO 07-16-2007 05:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kevin (Post 1484426)
I think the word "likely" will cause the prosecution a lot of problems here.

It's a poorly written law.

To me, "likely" means at least 50%. Since no pledges became hypothermic, it appears that they were not "likely" to be injured.

I don't know if I agree with that. Using your logic, unless a pledge was actually injured they wouldn't be able to prosecute under that law. It seems like the intent was to be able to prosecute acts that might injure pledges but they wanted a stronger word than "may" or "might" so they picked "likely". That way they can encompass things that would "likely" cause injury even if they didn't cause injury in this particular circumstance.

jon1856 07-16-2007 07:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by EE-BO (Post 1486170)
Actually, ice water can be very dangerous.

I periodically take ice baths (voluntarily) after doing a lot of working out and/or running on a given day since it is a great relaxer- but I am very careful about the amount of ice in the water and how long I am in there.

2 bags of ice will melt pretty fast in a tub of cold water, but that small amount takes the temp down to around 60- and it is unsafe to be in there more than 20 minutes or so.

A slurry of water so cold that the ice is not melting fairly quickly will be colder still and can have grave consequences within 5 minutes.

I agree with you that it does not sound like a big deal on the face of it- but it is actually pretty serious stuff, especially if the person doing it has a minor heart condition that has never been detected (which is somewhat common and responsible for many past fraternity deaths after forced calisthenics.)

BTB-Several of the WWII war criminals in Japan were hung for activities including putting Chinese and Allied POW into ice water.

No, I am not saying that the penalty here should be that.
Just how serious it can be.

Should also point out that the "records and information" that the Japanese obtained in their "experiments" and torture formed the basic for much of the US Navy dive manual.

EE-BO 07-16-2007 09:26 PM

Right on Jon.

And speaking of the Navy, it is worth noting that the immersion tables used by the SEALs in BUDS training provide for maximum immersion times in cold water ranging from 5-20 minutes depending on the water temperature and how long it has been since trainees were last in the water (and there is a decent interval of time in between immersions.)

It is not too hard to imagine an alcohol-induced hazing incident going well beyond those guidelines pretty quickly.

exlurker 09-11-2007 05:20 PM

Update on Chico Hazing Allegations:

The charges may have to be re-worded, according to this article:
http://www.orovillemr.com/news/ci_6856315

jon1856 04-10-2008 01:40 PM

Victims' anonymity at issue in hazing case
 
Victims' anonymity at issue in hazing case

CHICO — A local appeals court has agreed to hear arguments why prosecutors should not be required to identify the purported victims in a Chico fraternity hazing case.

The Butte County District Attorney's Office has been directed to appear in court next month to show cause why it should not be required to name which of 13 pledges to the now-defunct Theta Beta Pi fraternity were criminally hazed during an initiation rite last spring. Prosecutors have taken the position they are not required to do so, contending the entire state of California is the victim under Matt's Law, an anti-hazing statute passed last year in memory of Matthew Carrington, a Chico State University pledge who died during a fraternity initiation ceremony in 2005.
http://www.chicoer.com/news/national/ci_8848135

exlurker 08-26-2009 04:35 PM

Update: "Not Guilty" Verdict in Chico Cold Water Case (Beta Theta Pi)

See article:

http://www.orovillemr.com/news/ci_13205846


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