FAMU Kappas’ First To Face Felony Hazing
Charges Under New Florida Law
By Paul Ruffins
A Florida hazing trial that had profound implications for the future of fraternities, pledges and universities, ended in mistrial last month after the jury deadlocked over whether pledge Marcus Jones’s injuries constituted serious bodily harm.
The criminal trial of five members of Florida A&M University’s Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity was the first hazing case prosecuted under a 2005 Florida law that made hazing a third-class felony if it resulted in death or “serious bodily injury.”
The defendants, expected to be retried in December, face up to five years in prison. But the increased penalties are possibly not the most noteworthy feature of the new statute. Under the law, individuals facing hazing charges can no longer turn to the long-accepted argument that hazing does not constitute a criminal assault because the victim is a willing participant.
While the higher stakes of felony charges make the legal aspects of the case groundbreaking, the details of the hazing are identical to numerous other incidents involving Blacks fraternities and sororities.
In late February 2005, FAMU’s Alpha Xi Chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi began an underground hazing process for initiating 26 pledges. According to police reports, “the pledges … participated in several rituals where the line got hit with canes, and each person got three licks each time it was their turn to get hit.” Over four nights, the pledges were also punched and beaten with two-by-fours.