The University of Chicago’s Independent Student Newspaper since 1892

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The University of Chicago’s Independent Student Newspaper since 1892

Chicago Maroon

The University of Chicago’s Independent Student Newspaper since 1892

Chicago Maroon

Sororities Suspend Events with Sigma Chi, Citing Reports of “Date-Rape Drugs”

A letter from UChicago Panhellenic Council cites a “concerning pattern of misconduct in the fraternity.”
The+Sigma+Chi+fraternity+house%2C+inside+Maclean+House.
The Sigma Chi fraternity house, inside Maclean House.

The University of Chicago Panhellenic Council has decided to suspend all events with Sigma Chi following reports of several incidents—including “several dangerous instances involving date-rape drugs”—alleged to have occurred at the fraternity’s O-Week parties, according to an internal document distributed to sorority members.

The Panhellenic Council (Panhel) is comprised of the sororities Alpha Omicron Pi, Delta Gamma, Kappa Alpha Theta, and Pi Beta Phi.

The Panhel letter states that “this string of events highlights a concerning pattern of misconduct in the fraternity.”

“Coupled with previous misconducts, these events indicate a larger issue of the fraternity not taking safety concerns seriously. These instances have brought to light glaring inadequacies in proper alcohol, safety, and risk management trainings and policies that Sigma Chi should have in place,” the letter reads.

In a written response to Panhel, obtained by The Maroon, Sigma Chi leadership addressed Panhel’s decision to suspend events with the fraternity. Sigma Chi leadership said that the fraternity had “hosted two events where our guests’ safety was at risk.” The response did not directly address alleged drugging incidents.

In a separate statement to The Maroon on Monday, addressing the exchange with Panhel, Sigma Chi said that “no individual member of our chapter has been accused or suspected at this time.”

The fraternity said in the statement that it is conducting an internal investigation, and that the incident has been communicated to the organization’s national headquarters. The fraternity made no mention of any external investigation by the University of Chicago administration or law enforcement.

Current University policy does not recognize fraternities as school-affiliated organizations. As such, the University administration does not play any role in regulating or overseeing fraternity activities.

Under Illinois law, “a person who knowingly puts any substance capable of causing death or great bodily harm to a human being into any food, drug or cosmetic offered for sale or consumption” commits the crime of tampering with food, drugs, or cosmetics, a Class II felony. In other cases, drugging can be charged as a misdemeanor battery.

Sigma Chi is a signatory of Fraternities Committed to Safety (FCS), a document intended to regulate prevention and response to potential misconduct.

The agreement’s response section is dedicated to governing how fraternities respond to allegations of sexual assault amongst their own members. It does not specify a framework for adjudicating misconduct that does not involve sexual assault, or cases where the accused is not a member of an undersigning fraternity.

In their statement to The Maroon, Sigma Chi officials stated that they, in conjunction with their national organization and campus sororities, would work to promote, “among others, a recommendation that the framework for responding to serious safety concerns at events be significantly expanded.”

The fraternity also wrote that it “accept[ed] and is completely supportive of the decisions made by the Panhellenic Council and the individual member sororities to cancel social events with our Organization.”

Sigma Chi has also chosen to “not hold open parties until we believe that our Risk Management Plan is to a more satisfactory standard.”

Further, the fraternity stated it is “committed to enhancing how risk management is approached, both within our chapter and across the UChicago Greek Life.”

Panhel did not respond for comment at the time this article was published.

The full letters mentioned in this article are reproduced below.

 

 

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