KAPPA
ALPHA PSI FRATERNITY SUSPENDED FOR HAZING
Group's Three-Year Sanction Ends in
2007; Four Individual Members Also Face Discipline
CONTACT: Jason Foster, foster@mail.sdsu.edu
SDSU Marketing & Communications
Phone (619) 594-2585 Pager (619) 620-1184
SAN DIEGO, Friday, April 30, 2004 - San Diego State University has
suspended Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity for three years after a campus
investigation determined the organization engaged in hazing during
the fall 2003 semester. Four members also are undergoing disciplinary
procedures and may face sanctions ranging from probation to expulsion.
"The university has zero tolerance for hazing,
and we're particularly concerned with activities that may injure
students or put their health at risk," said Dr. James Kitchen,
vice president for Student Affairs. "We will hold organizations
and individuals accountable for their actions, and this case merits
a strong response."
The fraternity's suspension means it will lose
all on-campus status privileges until the end of the spring 2007
semester, including participation in university or Associated Students-sponsored
events; applying for Associated Students funding or conducting its
own fund-raising activities on campus; free or discounted use of
university or Associated Students facilities; participation in Greek
Week or other social, recreational or recruiting events sponsored
by the National Pan-Hellenic Council (NPHC); the right to vote or
hold office in the NPHC; and chapter participation in intramural
sports leagues.
In addition, the chapter must meet a number of
other conditions prior to reinstatement, such as not allowing members
initiated in spring 2003 or before to participate in chapter-related
activities while suspended (suspended chapters are still permitted
to participate in leadership workshops, community service, and other
activities approved by the SDSU Center for Fraternity and Sorority
Life); sponsoring a hazing workshop during the 2004-05 year for
all NPHC organizations at SDSU, and this workshop must be attended
by all Kappa Alpha Psi active and prospective members, plus 60 percent
of the total undergraduate membership of SDSU's other NPHC organizations;
and having all Kappa Alpha Psi chapter members sign an affidavit
indicating they have read, understood and will comply with SDSU's
Greek Guidelines policy on hazing.
The investigation, by the university's Center for
Student Rights & Responsibilities, concluded the fraternity
violated the campus' hazing policies between September 28, 2003
and October 7, 2003 by subjecting prospective members to several
forms of physical abuse.
The university will review the suspension's length
and terms at the end of the spring 2006 semester.
The fraternity has the right to appeal this decision
to Vice President Kitchen in writing by May 13 if it believes the
investigation's findings or subsequent sanctions are unreasonable.
There is no further level of appeal.
The Kappa Alpha Psi chapter was established in
1951, making it the oldest historically African-American fraternity
at SDSU.
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