A grand jury has recommended charges against three dozen members of a New York City college fraternity in connection with the death of a freshman who was killed during a “brutal” hazing ritual, police said on Monday.
Five of the young men face third-degree murder charges. Police and prosecutors are expected to announce details at a Tuesday morning press conference.
The victim, Michael Deng, went on a weekend retreat to Pennsylvania’s Pocono Mountains with the Baruch College chapter of Pi Delta Psi in December 2013 and never came home.
He and other pledges were were blindfolded and ordered to carry a backpack filled with sand across a snow-covered field while fraternity brothers charged and tackled them, according to police reports.
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“The ritual was brutal,” police said in a statement on Monday.
“Deng was subjected to repeated blunt force trauma which was applied to three different organ systems of the body to include the head, torso and thighs.”
After Deng blacked out from a head injury, other frat members delayed taking him to the hospital, instead calling the fraternity’s national president, Andy Meng, who allegedly advised them to hide Pi Delta Psi regalia.
The medical examiner concluded that the delay “significantly contributed” to Deng’s death, police said.
In total, a grand jury convened last year recommended charges against 37 people and the fraternity itself.
Five face the top charges of murder, involuntary manslaughter and aggravated assault — while others face lesser charges that could include hindering apprehension, hazing and criminal conspiracy.
A lawyer for Meng, who faces the less serious counts, said his client was not in Pennsylvania at the time of the hazing and “had no role in his medical treatment and did not impede or obstruct the investigation into his death.”









