Anyone convicted of hazing a college student in Georgia could serve up to five years in prison under legislation introduced this week by more than a dozen state senators.
The bill’s main sponsor, Sen. John Albers, R-Roswell, introduced legislation last year with similar sentencing guidelines. The bill was named after Max Gruver, a Roswell teen who died in 2017 from fraternity hazing at Louisiana State University. The legislation, Senate Bill 85, was signed into law last year, but the criminal penalties provisions were removed in the House of Representatives.
“This bill would simply bring back the protections passed by the Senate,” Albers said in an interview Thursday.
Albers said Gruver’s parents support the legislation.
Hazing is a criminal misdemeanor under Georgia law, punishable by up to 12 months in jail and a maximum $5,000 fine.
About 5% of college students say they’ve been hazed, according to some statistics. Most hazing incidents consist of students pressuring classmates — particularly those hoping to join a fraternity or sorority or on an athletics team — into excessive drinking or submitting themselves to physical abuse.
Gruver, who was seeking to join a campus fraternity, consumed 32 ounces of 190-proof alcohol as part of a drinking game conducted by some fraternity members. None of the fraternity members aided Gruver when he fell ill or called 911. One fraternity member was convicted of negligent homicide, and two others pleaded no contest to misdemeanor hazing.