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Family Says Penn State Altoona Student Jumped to Death After Hazing

Suit alleges hazing led to university student's suicide

The family of a Penn State-Altoona student who jumped to his death off the roof of a New York hotel sued the university and a suspended fraternity alleging that he killed himself because of hazing.

The suit alleges that Marquise Braham "had been hazed for months" by members of the Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity before he died in March 2014.

A Penn State spokeswoman declined comment, citing the pending litigation, but officials said the chapter was suspended for six years following Braham's death and is barred from using university facilities or participating in campus events. A representative at the fraternity's national headquarters in Indianapolis did not immediately return a call seeking comment.

The freshman was forced to "consume gross amounts of alcohol" and mouthwash, swallow live fish, and kill, gut and skin animals, the suit alleges. The suit also claims he was made to fight fellow pledges, was burned with candle wax, was deprived of sleep for 89 hours and had a gun held to his head as part of the hazing activities.

After he was accepted as a member of the fraternity, Braham had to be present for hazing the next class of pledges, and later texted a friend that some of the hazing activities were "hard to watch," the suit said.

"He struggled deeply with having to witness and participate in the hazing of others," and he killed himself the day before he was to return to the fraternity, the suit said.

University staff knew that he was "suffering physically, psychologically and academically" but disregarded the information, the suit alleges.

"In my family's opinion, both Penn State and Phi Sigma Kappa severely damaged our son, both physically and mentally, with hazing activities and even worse, sought to allegedly cover it up by destroying evidence," his father, Richard Braham, said in a statement.


SUICIDE PREVENTION: If you or someone you know needs help, call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-8255.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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