Create a free Diverse: Issues In Higher Education account to continue reading

Video Shows Penn State Frat Pledge in Agony After Fall

BELLEFONTE, Pa. — Security camera footage played Monday at a hearing for Penn State fraternity members shows a pledge in apparent agony in the hours after falling down basement steps — and members of the fraternity he had just joined trying to physically restrain him.

Selections from the grainy footage began with 19-year-old Tim Piazza joining other pledges as they went from station to station in a drinking “gantlet,” and Piazza soon appeared to become shaky on his feet. The video included him stumbling through the house before he was found, hours later, in the basement. By the time help was called the next day, a police official said he had the look of a “corpse.”

Piazza died days later.

The preliminary hearing will determine if there is enough evidence to send the case to county court for trial. Eighteen members of the Beta Theta Pi fraternity, which has since been banned by Penn State, face a variety of charges, with some accused of involuntary manslaughter and aggravated assault, while others less serious offenses. The fraternity also is accused in the death.

Members of the fraternity spent long periods sitting on his legs and taking other measures designed to limit his movement, while Piazza, of Lebanon, New Jersey, struggled to change position or get off the “great room” couch where he was taken unconscious after the Feb. 2 fall.

“He looked dead, he looked like a corpse” by the time he was found the next morning from what may have been a second fall, said State College Police Detective David Scicchitano.

Fraternity brothers and pledges hovered around Piazza, at one point strapping a bag filled with books to keep him from turning over and choking on his own vomit, and at another stage bringing in a bucket to clean up when he did vomit. Individuals poured liquid on him, slapped him and even threw his own shoes on him, Scicchitano told the judge.
Meanwhile, the party appeared to go on, as people came and went, some looking concerned about his condition while others seemed to take no notice.

A New Track: Fostering Diversity and Equity in Athletics
American sport has always served as a platform for resistance and has been measured and critiqued by how it responds in critical moments of racial and social crises.
Read More
A New Track: Fostering Diversity and Equity in Athletics