Robert Champion’s Parents Blast FAMU’s Response To Hazing Lawsuit

Florida A&M University’s insistence that it is not to blame for a drum major’s death during a hazing ritual shows school officials are not taking responsibility for the safety of students, the band member’s parents said Thursday.

Pam and Robert Champion Sr. said at a news conference in Atlanta that they were disappointed by court documents filed Monday by FAMU in response to their lawsuit against the school. The university said in its filing that 26-year-old Robert Champion, as a top leader in the band, should have refused to participate in the ritual. The school asked a judge to toss the lawsuit or at least to delay action on it until criminal charges against band members are resolved. Twelve former members have pleaded not guilty to charges of felony hazing.

“As a mother, I have to wonder what kind of people are we entrusting our students to,” Pam Champion said. “They clearly didn’t care about my son, who thought the world of this school, who would always promote it and talk it up. Robert did all the right things. The school didn’t do him right.”

Her husband called the school’s response a “slap in the face.”

“This is an opportunity for the school to say we do have problems and we’re going to fix it, but instead they’re in denial, so I say FAMU beware,” he said.

Robert Champion died in November after he was beaten by fellow members of the famed Marching 100 band aboard a charter bus parked outside an Orlando hotel. The school said in its filing that no public university or college has a duty to protect an adult student from what happens as a result of that person’s own decisions to participate in dangerous activities off campus and outside of university-sponsored events.

“FAMU is not `blaming’ anyone for this tragic loss; rather, the university has asked the court to decide the legal question of whether Florida’s taxpayers can be held financially liable to Mr. Champion’s Estate according to the facts of the case as detailed in the pleadings and exhibits of record,” Richard Mitchell, an attorney with the GrayRobinson law firm hired by FAMU, wrote in an email Thursday.

On the same day that the Champions spoke out, FAMU amended its legal filings. The new motion filed with the court removed a statement that taxpayers should not be liable for, referring to Robert Champion, “the ultimate result of his own imprudent, avoidable and tragic decision and death.” However, attorneys with FAMU did also file new evidence that showed Champion took part in a band leadership workshop where it was stressed that hazing would not be tolerated.

Chris Chestnut, a lawyer representing the Champions, said the school is refusing to address the root problem. read more…