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I agree with MYOB in this case too.
The local should have access to college records where they can verify status on potential pledges. If they do not, then it is up to them to find another way to make sure any rules they have about a second affiliation are not violated.
Your intentions are pure, but nothing you do in this situation is going to benefit you or your sorority. And, if you do intervene and this person (or the local chapter) takes offense- then you could have angry people to deal with, and who knows where that could go? Who knows what rumors this person might spread about your GLO that she saw fit to leave.
There is no way to know the motives of someone I have never met, but on the face of it- I find it rather unusual that someone would deactivate from one GLO and then try to join another. There could be very good reasons, and it could be a perfectly acceptable scenario for the local GLO- but all you know is that you are looking from the outside at a very unusual circumstance, and at a situation where you have nothing to gain for yourself or your chapter- but potentially something to lose.
Hope this helps. And FWIW I think it is to your credit that you want to do the right thing by that other organization. Your motives strike me as pure. But in the end, the local needs to do their own research if there is a potential issue.
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