Infamous Arizona State ΣAE Chapter Removed From Campus

It always sucks to see a fraternity get kicked off campus. Years of history and tradition are essentially erased from the campus when a house shuts down. People from headquarters come down and take the physical charter, composites are either kept by alumni or given to sororities, and what once was the iconic home of a campus powerhouse becomes the dwelling of some bottom tier losers.

Another chapter has lost its charter. The Sigma Alpha Epsilon chapter at Arizona State University has had its status as an officially sanctioned organization removed by the university.

According to Julie Newberg, an ASU spokeswoman, SAE had its status revoked as a result of continued misconduct, disregard for university policies, and actions that are in conflict with the values of both the school and the fraternity.

If you didn’t know, this particular chapter has been in the news for several incidents that don’t really put the chapter in the best light. This past December, a rushee was found dead in a nearby river as a result of drowning after a drinking heavily at an SAE event at Cadillac Ranch, a local bar.

If the school had decided to kick SAE off campus after someone died, I’d understand. I’d argue that since the event was held at a third party vendor, the fraternity wasn’t wholly responsible, but like I said, I’d understand. As an academic institution, you really can’t be letting that kind of stuff fly. I get that.

However, ASU did not decide to kick the SAE chapter off until mid-June. What on earth could have transpired between the death in December and now? Whatever it was, it surely must have been something horrific. After all, what could possibly be worse than the death of a young undergraduate?

As I’m sure you’ve heard, in May, a heavily intoxicated member of the chapter was dropped off at a local hospital with a Post-It note attached to him, explaining his situation. While the underage student did drink enough that his brothers thought he needed medical attention, he did not die.

Is a drunken student being dropped off at the ER worse than a death? Obviously, it isn’t. Why did the school decide that the events of the Post-It story were reason enough to remove that chapter from campus? I’m afraid I can’t give a definitive answer on that one. Perhaps the straw-camel’s back situation applies here.

Honestly, I think the school was fed up with bad PR. The Post-It story was covered in many major newspapers and online media outlets, both domestically and abroad. Personally, I think the school didn’t want to be associated with the image the story created, and thus decided to remove the chapter from campus.

No matter the specific reason, SAE at ASU was removed because the school thought they fucked up. What’s the moral of the story here? Don’t fuck up.

[via My Fox Phoenix ]

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    1. wayfarersandcroakies

      Their alumni board own a hotel that was going to be converted to a fraternity house before the incident at Cadillac Ranch occurred.

      11 years ago at 12:08 pm
  1. OffTheHookASP

    Is SAE like this all across the nation? The chapter in my school seems as stupid as that post-it story. Still a shame though

    11 years ago at 10:38 am
    1. TheTurtle

      being one of the largest fraternities in the nation, there are bound to be some fuck ups. the same goes for all fraternities.

      11 years ago at 10:44 am
  2. jonstan

    It’s just the bureaucracy of the school and National HQ to sort everything out to officially remove them from campus.

    11 years ago at 10:40 am
    1. mosthonorableactive

      They’ve been a solid middle-tier house for a long time. I just wish DKE, Kappa Sig, or one of those other “fraternities” without loyalty to their letters would get kicked off instead

      11 years ago at 1:44 pm
  3. Ihateauburn

    3 big no-no’s:
    1. Dont kill/ permanently or seriously injure someone
    2. Make sure no one spikes a girls drink
    3. Dont run a large drug/prostitution ring

    11 years ago at 10:50 am
    1. BoozinCruizin

      4. Don’t take pictures and videos, let alone share, and especially not online.

      11 years ago at 11:32 am
    2. Beowolf

      Or just don’t post the inappropriate ones, i.e. underage, illegal drugs, questionable actions. Posting almost anything is a great way to get fucked.

      11 years ago at 9:01 pm
    3. Fraternity Lifestyle

      Please note that he said “Large” drug/prostitution ring. Keep it around four to six and you’ll be okay.

      11 years ago at 12:39 am
    4. OXinyourBox

      Crazy story. There’s a difference between a “boys will be boys” mentality versus a blatant disregard for risk management. They got what they deserve and probably will have to face legal charges on top of it.

      11 years ago at 1:24 am
    5. fratapiller

      You said they will have legal troubles. Sae could sue for liable slander. Because of the bullshit accusations. Every media outlet that did a story on them without getting real viable information. Instead they slandered there nane

      11 years ago at 6:06 pm
  4. Wheres the pledge

    I’m pretty sure pressure from parents didn’t help the situation either, but finally kicking them off after the kid survived… Gotta love administrators.

    11 years ago at 10:50 am
  5. Broklahoma Mu

    I would guess it showed the school that the lesson they learned was get people to the hospital before they die. That wasn’t the lesson the school was aiming for.

    11 years ago at 10:52 am
  6. XIorDieSPE

    ASU definitely didn’t think the Post-It debacle was worse than the death. However, it did show SAE’s blatant disregard for the second chance ASU gave them. Fraternities at ASU have been at war with the university for the past year, and the stunts that SAE pulled this year don’t help alleviate the situation.

    11 years ago at 11:07 am
    1. cleavage

      It’s been much longer than a year, champ. It started when they first started knocking down the row 5-6 years ago.

      11 years ago at 7:33 pm