[ad_1]
The family of a 19-year-old who died after he was forced to drink a whole bottle of Jack Daniels during a hazing incident last year is launching a campaign to bring awareness to the dangers of hazing – after two other college students also died.
Eric Oakes, the father of late Virginia Commonwealth University student Adam Oakes, has launched the Love Like Adam Foundation to ‘create an awareness of potential dangers students face on college campuses,’ according to its website.
The organization offers high school parents and caregivers information sessions to educate them on ‘how to support their student in making important and safe decisions’ and holds interactive presentations to engage high school seniors.
‘We need to start reaching out to [students] in middle school and then carry on the messaging into high school and then into college,’ Eric told host Rachel Campos-Duffy on Fox and Friends Weekend Sunday morning.
‘Hopefully, with the awareness that it will bring, they’ll have skills with them, and they’ll be able to see how to get somebody help if they see somebody in jeopardy,’ he said.
‘Knowledge is power,’ Eric continued, adding that students should also recognize when they are going to be hazed and consider ways to get themselves out of dangerous situations.
The organization has already created a team of educators to create a curriculum for middle school, high school and college students, according to President Courtney White, Adam’s cousin, and ‘one of the targets is that bystander intervention.’
‘If any one person had called for help that night, Adam would still be with us,’ she claimed.
Adam died in February 2021 after allegedly being ordered to drink a large bottle of whiskey during a rush party for the Delta Chi fraternity at Virginia Commonwealth University.
His was one of more than 280 hazing deaths across America over the last 150 years and countless more incidents in which kids have ended up hospitalized.
Eric Oakes, the father of Adam Oakes, right, launched the Love Like Adam Foundation to raise awareness about the dangers of hazing. The organization has already developed a curriculum for middle school through college students, according to Courtney White, right, Adam’s cousin, who serves as the president of the organization
Adam Oakes, 19, died in February 2021 after allegedly being ordered to drink a large bottle of whiskey during a rush party for the Delta Chi fraternity at Virginia Commonwealth University
His death was one of more than 280 hazing-related fatalities across America over the last 150 years. Some of the most recent incidents – dating back to 2011 – are shown above
Adam was just a freshman at Virginia Commonwealth University when he received a bid to the Delta Chi fraternity and attended a party on February 26, 2021 where he would receive his ‘big brother.’
There, his family claims, he was told to drink a large bottle of whiskey and later passed out on a couch at an off-campus residence.
He was found dead the next morning, and the office of the chief medical examiner ruled that his death was caused by alcohol poisoning.
chapter was suspended by the university and the fraternity´s national headquarters and in June VCU expelled the fraternity.
In the aftermath, eight students were charged with unlawful hazing of a student, and four of them were also charged with buying and giving alcohol to a minor.
Seven were held without bond at the Richmond Justice Center. The eighth was arrested in Prince William County and released on bond.
Three more people had also been indicted over the death, and 11 witnesses to his death were charged with a Class 1 misdemeanor, according to Northern Virginia Magazine.
Those 11 individuals could have faced one year in jail, and $2,500 fines each, but were instead ordered to do community service – making presentations at other schools about the dangers of hazing, discussing what happened to Adam and working directly with the Oakes family to explain what they did was wrong.
Meanwhile, the university announced that it would ban alcohol at fraternity and sorority events, publish misconduct instances online and pause new member recruitment.
Family members claim Adam was told to drink a large bottle of whiskey and later passed out on a couch at an off-campus residence, where he was found dead the next day. Adam is pictured here with his mother
Eight students were later charged with unlawful hazing of a student in connection with Adam’s untimely death in February 2021
But just nine months after Adam died, Phat Nguyen, 21, also passed away after a brutal night of drinking at the Pi Alpha Phi off-campus fraternity house in East Lansing, Michigan.
He was found passed out in his frat house at Michigan State University covered in vomit and urine along with three other victims who were pledges with Nguyen who were taken to a local hospital but survived.
An autopsy later confirmed that Nguyen died of alcohol intoxication, The State News reports, and the fraternity was suspended from the school.
Just last week, three students had been charged in Nguyen’s death.
Ethan Cao, Hoang Pham, and Andrew Nguyen were all charged with one count each of felony hazing resulting in death, and three misdemeanor counts of hazing resulting in physical injury for the three other boys who were also taken to the hospital on the night of the incident but who survived.
Witnesses say they found Phat in a ‘dirty’ basement room, ‘stripped to his shorts’ with writing on his back.
He was one of four pledges who passed out and had to be taken to the hospital that night – the other three survived despite being found with blood dripping from their noses, and ‘convulsing’.
‘We started walking into the basement and before we were down the stairs all the way, the smell of urine hit me. It was really, really strong. The air got really thick,’ an unidentified witness said.
‘It was really gross like you could smell something, and it wasn’t even just urine, it was a mix of something just kind of like vomit.
‘It was a really dirty old room, no furniture, nothing.
‘The room looked like it was rotting and there were a couple of mattresses on the ground, super dirty.’
The unnamed person said multiple people knew what was happening and that kids would take turns going down into the basement to look at the unconscious pledges and laugh at them.
They had the word ‘simp’ written on their backs.
All three suspects are now due back in court on June 23, after being released on bond.
Phat Nguyen, 21, a Michigan State University student also passed away after a brutal night of drinking at the Pi Alpha Phi off-campus fraternity house in East Lansing, Michigan last November
Danny Santulli, 19, also suffered from brain damage caused when he stopped breathing after downing vodka and beer, and then passing out on a couch in his fraternity house.
Last week, horrifying surveillance footage emerged of the University of Missouri student being ordered to down a 1.75 liter bottle of Tito’s vodka and being force-fed beer through a tube during a ‘Pledge Dad Reveal Night’ in October 2021.
Surveillance footage obtained by Good Morning America shows Danny and the other pledges being led shirtless and blindfolded down a staircase in the frat house.
Later, he is force-fed beer through a tube and then he is seen falling backwards, passing out on a table and then slumped on a couch.
The footage also shows his panicked frat brothers trying to carry him into a car to take him to the hospital once they realized how severe his condition was.
By the time he got to hospital, he had stopped breathing for long enough to cause severe brain damage – and he is now blind, unable to walk and unable to speak.
His family previously sued 23 people, including the fraternity, and won their case with an undisclosed settlement but they are now suing two individual frat boys; Sam Gandhi and Alec Wetzler.
They are also demanding felony charges be brought against the pair.
Wetzler has been charged with misdemeanor providing alcohol to a minor and he is no longer enrolled at the school, but Gandhi has not been charged and he remains a student.
According to the family’s lawsuit, Gandhi saw the dire state Danny was in but did nothing to help until it was too late.
In October, Danny Santulli, 19, suffered from brain damage when he stopped breathing after downing vodka and beer, and then passing out on a couch in his fraternity house at the University of Missouri
Video footage showed Danny slumped half-off of the couch inside the frat house after passing out in October 2021
Samuel Gandhi (left) and Alec Wetzler (right) have been named as defendants now by the family of Danny Santulli, a teenager whose family say was forced to drink until his heart stopped last October during pledge month at Phi Gamma Delta
Lawmakers in Congress are now mulling legislation that would require any college that receives federal student aid money to collect information and publicly report twice a year about hazing-related misconduct.
The reports must include descriptions of what happened, and any sanctions placed on the organization.
Additionally, the schools must report to campus police and law enforcement authorities within 72 hours of becoming aware of any allegations of hazing that causes serious bodily injury – or could cause serious bodily injury – under the bill.
Hazing is already a felony crime in 13 states if it causes serious harm or death.
Those states are Florida, Texas, California, Utah, Wisconsin, Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, Missouri, West Virginia, Pennsylvania, Louisiana, and New Jersey.
Alaska, Hawaii, New Mexico, South Dakota, Wyoming and Montana do not have any specific hazing laws.
[ad_2]
Source link