Hazing and alcohol related deaths and injuries Sigma Alpha Epsilon has had nine deaths linked to drinking, drugs and
hazing since 2006, more than any other Greek organization, according to data compiled by
Bloomberg in 2013. More than 100 chapters have been disciplined since 2007, with at least fifteen suspended or closed since 2010. A potential initiate to the SAE chapter at
Salisbury University in
Maryland alleged that Justin Stuart was beaten with a paddle, forced to drink alcohol to the point of
losing consciousness and confined in a basement for nine hours without access to food, water or a bathroom while being subjected to
music torture, an experience described as being "almost like
Guantanamo Bay". The allegations were verified by a university investigation that led to the suspension of the chapter on the grounds that it had violated Salisbury policies on alcohol, hazing, and threats or acts of violence. In 2017, the University of Nevada, Reno suspended the Reno chapter of SAE due to allegations of hazing and underage drinking. The university ultimately voted to remove SAE's recognition for four years. As of 2023, the University of Nevada, Reno still does not recognize SAE, with that chapter still working towards recognition. As a result of these incidents, student members pay among the highest rates for
liability insurance of any fraternity. In January 2019, a newly-initiated freshman member of the chapter at the
University of California, Irvine died from alcohol poisoning with allegations of fraternity hazing rituals still under investigation. In 2012, the national fraternity organization responded to hazing allegations, stating that it has "zero tolerance for hazing", and that the reported infractions represent a low percentage of its more than 219 chapters and 15,000 college members. In March 2014 the fraternity revised its membership process to replace the term "pledge" with "new member" and require that initiation be completed within 96 hours of new members receiving bids. The SAE national president cited efforts to combat hazing, treat all members of the fraternity equally, and to protect the reputation of the fraternity as primary reasons for the change. In 2014, a rape allegedly took place at an SAE party at
Loyola Marymount University. The national organization reacted by closing the chapter. In December 2014,
Stanford University announced a two-year suspension of SAE housing due to reports of sexual harassment. After a second university investigation found that members had deterred a student from filing a
Title IX concern and had intimidated and harassed another student believed to have filed a Title IX complaint, the chapter's housing was "indefinitely" revoked in May 2015. In January 2015, a victim was hospitalized following allegations of sexual assault at a party at a SAE
Iowa State University party. The incident was investigated by police and the chapter suspended the member suspected of the assault. In March 2015,
Johns Hopkins University suspended the local SAE chapter until Spring 2016 after an alleged sexual assault at one of their parties. The
Yale University chapter was temporarily banned from using the university email and bulletin board system as well as association of the fraternity name and the university following "inappropriate comments" made by SAE members. In August 2018, the SAE National Fraternity and the chapter at the
University of California, Los Angeles were sued for negligence after a member of the
Zeta Beta Tau (ZBT) Fraternity assaulted a woman at an SAE event. The lawsuit also encompassed the ZBT fraternity as well as UCLA. In August 2020, the SAE chapter at
West Virginia University was suspended for sexual assault.
Alcohol, drug, and safety violations The founding chapter at the University of Alabama was suspended in 1988 on cocaine-trafficking charges and for violating the university's code against drug use and trafficking. The suspension was lifted in 1990, but with a checklist of improvement goals that the chapter was required to fulfill; in 1992, the chapter was suspended again for failing to meet the outlined goals. In the fall of 1991, the University of Houston chapter was suspended when the fraternity's president bit off a finger of a female guest's hand during an altercation with her boyfriend at a party held at the fraternity house. In 1997, the
Louisiana State University chapter was suspended after one member died from alcohol poisoning. Another member was praised for rescuing more than a dozen of his passed out brothers from death by ferrying them to the nearest hospital single-handedly. The chapter at
Southern Methodist University was placed on "deferred suspension" following a drug-related death in 2006, and then again for abuse and hazing that occurred in 2017. In spring 2012, the
Miami University chapter of SAE was suspended after an early morning "fireworks battle" with the neighboring
Phi Kappa Tau house led to Oxford police seizing considerable amounts of drug paraphernalia from both houses. Since the groups were temporarily unrecognized while on suspension, sophomores who were living there under fraternity exemption from Miami's two-year campus housing policy were required to vacate the houses and move on campus. As a result, SAE's national organization sued Miami for $10 million, claiming "severe emotional distress" and "substantial lost income and reputation" for the exiled students. In November 2015, the Miami SAE chapter was allowed to recolonize by Miami's Interfraternity Council. In 2013, the chapter at
Arizona State University was banned from campus due to repeated hazing and alcohol violations and questionable behavior. Jack Culolias, an ASU freshman and SAE pledge, was kicked out of a bar one night then later found dead in a ditch. The chapter also faced heavy scrutiny when a member nearly died after participating in a tequila drinking contest. In July 2015, the
University of Richmond (Virginia) chapter was suspended indefinitely "based on repeated incidents that violated the University's policies and risk management procedures." An investigation had been opened in April, when the national organization suspended the chapter after two women were hurt falling from a balcony during a ski trip. In April 2016, the
UMBC chapter was suspended after allegations of alcohol policy violations, property theft and damage, and failure to comply with previous sanctions (also handed for underage drinking, in a party that resulted in 55 police citations). The University's Student Judicial Board determined that the claims were substantiated, and suspended the chapter for four years. In November 2017, the SAE chapter at the
University of Texas at Austin was suspended for hazing violations. Two years prior, several members from the chapter were accused of beating up a male neighbor complaining about loud music that was playing at their fraternity house during a recruitment event. Only two members were identified and charged with physical assault for the incident. This prompted the chapter to disaffiliate from SAE. The chapter retained the fraternity house and is regulated by its alumni board. In January 2019, the SAE chapter at the
University of California, Irvine was suspended after the death of a freshman newly initiated member of the fraternity. In December 2021, eight members of the fraternity at
Georgia College and State University were arrested for providing alcohol to minors and one member for hazing. The arrests happened after a SAE pledge was hospitalized due to an alcohol related hazing incident. In June 2022, the SAE chapter at the
University of New Hampshire was suspended pending an investigation into a hazing incident that occurred in April. Arrest warrants were issued for 46 members of the chapter, as well as a warrant charging the chapter itself with student hazing. The chapter was taken off of social probation in May 2024. In January 2024, Texas Rho, the SAE chapter at the
University of Texas at Austin, was sued by an Australian exchange student over injuries he sustained from an assault by fraternity members at a party the previous year. The student suffered significant injuries during the attack, including a dislocated leg, broken ligaments, fractured tibia and broken nose, according to the suit. He is suing the fraternity for more than $1 million. The SAE chapter was already suspended at the time of his assault due to previous hazing and safety violations. In February 2025, the SAE chapter at
Miami University was suspended after a report indicated several "inhumane" activities took place at an off-campus property owned by the fraternity involving pledges. One pledge was allegedly coerced and forced into the pledge process, where "he [was] hazed for multiple days and was forced to cut communication with all others." Among the alleged hazing incidents, the pledge was required to ingest an entire can of chewing tobacco and then do a handstand. He vomited as a result and was forced to then consume the vomit. When the pledge reported the incident to another student, he received a text message from an active member threatening to put a "12-gauge down his throat and watch his brain splatter." On February 24, the fraternity chapter was suspended and was under investigation by Miami University officials.
Discriminatory incidents In 1982, SAE members at the
University of Cincinnati were suspended for a racially insensitive party corresponding with
Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday. In 2002,
Syracuse University officials suspended the chapter there after a member appeared in
blackface. The member was expelled from the university. The chapter returned after the suspension and in 2006 was found guilty of hazing a new member by the University's Office of Fraternity and Sorority Affairs. In 2014, the chapter at
Clemson University hosted a "Cripmas" party in reference to the Southern California-based black American
Crips gang. The chapter "suspended all activity indefinitely", according to the SAE national office. Also, in 2014, SAE members at the
University of Arizona were suspended for attacking
Alpha Epsilon Pi, a Jewish fraternity. In March 2015, the national organization of Sigma Alpha Epsilon closed the
University of Oklahoma chapter after a
video surfaced showing members chanting a song which featured the racial slur, "
nigger," and made references to
lynching and
racial segregation. The chant, set to
melody of the popular
children's song, "
If You're Happy and You Know It", declares, "There will never be a nigger at SAE / There will never be a nigger at SAE / You can hang him from a tree, but he'll never sign with me / There will never be a nigger at SAE." Sigma Alpha Epsilon closed the charter of the involved chapter and suspended its members on March 8, 2015. giving members two days to vacate the fraternity's campus dwellings. ==See also==