From Execution Chamber to Fraternity Basement

When you think of fraternity hazing, the first example that likely will come to mind is excess alcohol consumption or perhaps streaking through campus. Some fraternities, though, may take hazing to an extreme.  On October 15, 2025, a fraternity at New Jersey’s state university Rutgers did just so: a 19-year-old student was electrocuted during fraternity hazing activities involving water, suffering serious electrical burns and lost consciousness. A second student was shocked while attempting to rescue him. (This fraternity has now been closed at the school.)

In 2019, at the University of New Hampshire, 46 students were arrested in 2019 for a “talent show” involving stun guns. Washington and Lee University suspended Phi Kappa Psi for three years in March 2015 after a member used a Taser on a pledge during initiation. Washington and Lee University President Kenneth Ruscio called it “clear physical abuse, harmful enough as it was, but under the circumstances potentially even more dangerous.”

While electrocution consequences may be first thought to be physical, the cognitive impairments from electrical injury can be more disabling.

According to the NCBI, this process disrupts the semi permeability essential to neuronal function, causing ATP depletion, mitochondrial damage, and loss of electrical charge. As with many traumatic brain injury cases, survivors experience impaired episodic memory, struggling to form new memories or recall recent events. Research into 26 electrical injury survivors found 62% showed processing speed deficits—the most common impairment. Another 62% demonstrated auditory memory and working memory dysfunction. Verbal learning suffered in 54%, while 46% had concentration and attention problems, and 35% showed visual memory deficits.

Brain injury occurs even when current doesn’t directly traverse the skull, transmitted via spinal cord myelinated axons and systemic hormonal stress responses. However, with comprehensive neuropsychological testing, psychiatric support, and occupational rehabilitation, the NIH acknowledges that functional improvement remains possible.

HISTORY & LEGISLATION:

As to how electrocution became a known means of torture, it may be good to look though America’s past: electrocution emerged as a death penalty method in 1888, when New York adopted the electric chair as supposedly more humane than hanging. Currently authorized in nine U.S. states including Alabama, Florida, and South Carolina, it has been used in approximately 4,251 executions since 1890. North Carolina Governor Josh Stein called execution by electrocution “barbaric” in October 2025, while Representative Pricey Harrison described it as “gruesome” in September 2025, noting victims are “literally cooked to death.”

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