A Florida prosecutor says 13 people will be charged in the death of Florida A&M university drum major Robert Champion, who died after being beaten during a hazing ritual in November.
The prosecutor announced the charges at a news conference Wednesday. The charges come more than five months after Champion, 26, died aboard a chartered bus parked outside an Orlando hotel.
Champion was found unresponsive aboard the bus after the annual Florida Classic football game in Orlando. Florida A&M’s football team had lost.
"No one would have expected that his college experience would have included being pummeled to death," Orange-Osceola State Attorney Lawson Lamar said during the news conference. “I have come to believe that hazing is a term for bullying, bullying with a tradition.”
Lamar says 11 of the 13 people charged will face felony charges. Most of the charges were third degree felonies for "hazing with death," punishable under Florida law by a maximum of six years in jail, according to Lamar. The others will face misdemeanor charges.
Lamar said he would not release names until all are in custody, according to the Orlando Sentinel.
The medical examiner ruled Champion’s death a homicide in the course of hazing by the university’s celebrated Marching 100 band. Detectives told The Associated Press that he suffered blunt trauma blows and died from shock caused by severe bleeding. Hazing that involves bodily harm is a third-degree felony in Florida.
In a six-minute 911 call obtained by the AP, an unidentified caller asked the dispatcher for an ambulance, saying that Champion had just vomited.
"His eyes are open, but he's not responding," the caller said. Another person took the phone and said, “He is cold.”
Shortly after, the call was disconnected.
Four students were dismissed after the alleged hazing, but Champion’s parents were frustrated that no charges had been filed.
Witnesses have told Champion’s parents that he might have been targeted because he opposed the culture of hazing that they say has long existed in the band. It was also suggested to them that he was targeted because he was gay and a candidate for chief drum major.
But Champion's parents dismissed the notion that his sexual orientation triggered this incident.
"The main reason that we heard is because he was against hazing, and he was totally against it," Champion's father, Robert Champion Sr. told the AP.
His parents have sued the bus company.