Published September 05. 2018 07:41AM
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — The parents of a Penn State University student who died after a night of hazing and drinking at a fraternity have settled with the fraternity’s national organization.
The attorney for the family of Timothy Piazza, Thomas Kline, said Tuesday his clients had reached a settlement with Beta Theta Pi for an undisclosed sum. Beta Theta Pi has also agreed to a 17-point program that makes local chapters safer and penalizes groups for hazing.
Kline says the reforms will “help establish a baseline for the new norm” of fraternity life.
Beta Theta Pi national leaders say the organization is focused on adopting “accountability measures.”
Nineteen-year-old Timothy Piazza, of New Jersey, died in 2017 of severe head and abdominal injuries. A judge dismissed the most serious charges filed in Piazza’s death.