totallygeeked -> totallygeeked general -> EIGHTEEN members of Penn State fraternity charged in death of pledge who fell down a flight of stairs at his alcohol-fue
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TOPIC: EIGHTEEN members of Penn State fraternity charged in death of pledge who fell down a flight of stairs at his alcohol-fue
EIGHTEEN members of Penn State fraternity charged in death of pledge who fell down a flight of stairs at his alcohol-fueled initiation ceremony - and help wasn't called for 12 HOURS
Timothy Piazza, 19, was a sophomore engineering student at Penn State
On February 2, he attended a Beta Theta Pi party at the private chapter house
Piazza was fatally injured in a fall during an alcohol-fueled pledge night
He was found unconscious on a couch when paramedics arrived 12 hours later
Piazza was pronounced dead at a local hospital two days later
On March 30, Penn State permanently banned Beta Theta Pi
Authorities have charged 18 people linked to the fraternity
Eight of the frat brothers face charges of involuntary manslaughter
Eighteen members of a now-shuttered fraternity at Penn State University and the frat itself are facing criminal charges in the death of a student who was fatally injured in a fall during an alcohol-fueled pledge night.
Eight frat brothers at Beta Theta Pi and the frat are accused of involuntary manslaughter.
The other charges range from evidence tampering to furnishing alcohol to minors.
Police had said hazing and excessive drinking at the private chapter house on February 2 contributed to the death of Timothy Piazza, 19, a sophomore engineering student from Lebanon, New Jersey.
Penn State permanently banned Beta Theta Pi on March 30, accusing it of a 'persistent pattern' of excessive drinking, drug use and hazing.
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Police had said hazing and excessive drinking at the private chapter house on February 2 contributed to the death of Timothy Piazza (seen left and right with his girlfriend), 19, a sophomore engineering student from Lebanon, New Jersey
Help for Piazza apparently wasn't summoned until about 12 hours after he was injured during events surrounding a pledge acceptance ceremony.
Piazza was found unconscious on a couch on the main floor when paramedics arrived after a call for help.
He died two days later at a hospital.
The coroner determined that Piazza died as a result of multiple traumatic injuries sustained from the fall. The death was ruled an accident that was entirely preventable, according to Daily Collegian.
Penn State frat members charged in the death of Timothy Piazza
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Fraternity members turned over security camera footage to police but later asked the court to return it.
Since Piazza's death, chapter alumnus Donald Abbey, a California real estate magnate, has sued the fraternity.
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Jim and Evelyn Piazza (right) stand by as Centre County District Attorney Stacy Parks Miller (left) announces the results of an investigation into the death of their son Timothy Piazza in Bellefonte, Pennsylvania, on Friday
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Parks Miller embraces Evelyn Piazza (left) as Jim Piazza stands near an enlarged photo of his late son
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Eight frat brothers at Beta Theta Pi (among them Joe Sala, left, and Nicholas Kubera, right) and the frat are accused of involuntary manslaughter
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Luke Visser (left) and Jonah Neuman (right) were also among the eight frat members charged with involuntary manslaughter
He wants more than $10million he says he loaned the chapter to fix up the house and shore up its finances.
The charges against the 18 fraternity pledges were announced during a news conference held Friday by Centre County District Attorney Stacy Parks Miller and her special deputy in the case, prosecutor Bruce Castor, according to PennLive.com.
'This has been a very intense investigation,' she said.
'I am not sure we have charged as many people at one time in one case.'
The news conference was attended by Piazza's parents, who made the 200-mile drive from their home in New Jersey to Bellefonte.
'We are devastated,' said Piazza's father, Jim.
'He was an incredible young man and an excellent student. He was an amazing son, brother, boyfriend and friend. We are going to miss him terribly. He just wanted to make people laugh and be a good friend.'
So much of this story is about the charges, and so little of this tells what exactly happened. All I got was that he fell. But how? Down stairs? Out the window? Off a trampoline? I mean really?
So much of this story is about the charges, and so little of this tells what exactly happened. All I got was that he fell. But how? Down stairs? Out the window? Off a trampoline? I mean really?
My thoughts exactly. Very poor journalism.
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America guarantees equal opportunity, not equal outcome...
He fell down the basement stairs. The brothers tried to cover it up. Wouldn't let someone call for help
Twice, once the night before and once the next morning. Several comments were made that he needed help, due to the fall and the amount of alcohol he consumed, but were ignored. They noticed a large bruise on his abdomen the night before and ignored it. When they found him the next morning at the bottom of the stairs they carried him up and waited almost an hour before calling an ambulance- text history proves during that time they were Google searching his symptoms. When they made the call they didn't mention the falls at all- so paramedics didn't know what to look for.
Text history also shows them covering their butts and talking about what kind of trouble they could get into.
They were all probably as drunk as he was. However, I don't think there is a legal duty to help someone. One would hope that they would remember they are human beings and render aid. And, they could probably find the person who purchased the alcohol and charge him.
They were all probably as drunk as he was. However, I don't think there is a legal duty to help someone. One would hope that they would remember they are human beings and render aid. And, they could probably find the person who purchased the alcohol and charge him.
But there is...in certain circumstances:
The Legal Duty to Rescue Someone Else
In general, there is no legal requirement in the United States to help and rescue someone else who is in danger. This would typically apply even in extreme situations where a bystander sees a small child who has wandered into the street or a man who has fallen onto the train tracks. There are some exceptions to this rule. Ten states have limited rules that may require you to help a crime victim if you can do so without danger or peril to yourself or to others (California, Florida, Massachusetts, Hawaii, Minnesota, Ohio, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington and Wisconsin.) In certain scenarios, the law may impose a duty upon you to help rescues someone else who is in danger. Those situations are generally as follows:
Special Relationships and Circumstances
You may have a duty to rescue someone as a result of a special relationship that exists between you and the person in danger, such as between a teacher and a student.
You Created the Danger
If your own negligence creates a danger to another person and causes that person to require rescuing, you will usually be found to have a legal duty to rescue the person in danger.
You Began to Rescue
If you begin to rescue a person in peril, you may have a legal duty to finish your attempt. The court usually applies a reasonableness standard. If you began a rescue and then stopped, the court may find that you may have a duty to continue if a reasonable person would have done so under the circumstances.
I would say that the second example applies here. They CREATED the danger. They had a legal duty to rescue him. Not to mention they lied and withheld information to the paramedics, information that could have saved his life...
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America guarantees equal opportunity, not equal outcome...
These stories make me sad, too. Haven't college kids learned anything, from similar accidental deaths in the past?
I think it's terrible that there are still some kids, that think drinking yourself stupid is a good time.
I also think it's awful, that no one called for help after he fell.
And I really have to wonder...when did personal responsibility go out the window? No one forced those drinks down his throat. Why didn't he have the good sense to stop after a couple of beers? IMHO, he was just as responsible for his own death, as those other young man who were charged. Sadly, he's dead. What a harsh punishment for being stupid.
He fell down the basement stairs. The brothers tried to cover it up. Wouldn't let someone call for help
Twice, once the night before and once the next morning. Several comments were made that he needed help, due to the fall and the amount of alcohol he consumed, but were ignored. They noticed a large bruise on his abdomen the night before and ignored it. When they found him the next morning at the bottom of the stairs they carried him up and waited almost an hour before calling an ambulance- text history proves during that time they were Google searching his symptoms. When they made the call they didn't mention the falls at all- so paramedics didn't know what to look for.
Text history also shows them covering their butts and talking about what kind of trouble they could get into.
This is what is going to get them. The cover up. They were caught googling his symptoms and then they took him and put him in bed and didn't call anyone. They obviously knew something was wrong but began texting about how they couldn't do anything or they'd get in trouble. Now they're in bigger trouble. If they honestly hadn't known he needed help they probably would be okay. But that is not what went on. And if they knowingly did not seek help that's another story. The whole thing is really sad.
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“You may shoot me with your words, you may cut me with your eyes, you may kill me with your hatefulness, but still, like air, I'll rise!” ― Maya Angelou
At some point, they recognized he needed help. Call 911. Yeah nobody wants to get in trouble for the booze party but in the scheme of life, that is nothing.
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