BELLEFONTE, Pa. — Members of a shuttered Penn State fraternity accused of crimes related to the death of a pledge were back in a Pennsylvania courtroom Thursday as a hearing resumed into whether there is enough evidence to send the case to trial.
In its fourth day, the preliminary hearing for 16 young men who belonged to Beta Theta Pi involves charges that for some include involuntary manslaughter and aggravated assault in the February death of engineering student Tim Piazza. Others face less serious charges that include evidence tampering, hazing, reckless endangerment and alcohol offenses.
Piazza, 19, a sophomore from Lebanon, New Jersey, fell several times during a night of drinking that followed his participation in a pledge acceptance ceremony. Security camera footage inside the house recorded the response of fraternity leaders and other members as they dealt with the injured and intoxicated new fraternity brother with a series of ineffectual and even counterproductive efforts.
Excerpts from the footage, narrated by the lead detective during a previous court session, showed fraternity members holding down Piazza, strapping him to a loaded backpack to keep him from turning over and choking, pouring liquids on him and trying to get him to stand so they could dress him, even though he appeared to be unconscious.