Other Sigma Alpha Epsilon Chapters Now Investigated for Rumored Racist Chants
Two separate investigations are underway into the alleged use of racist chants at other chapters of a national fraternity after an uproar over the University of Oklahoma chapter’s use of the offensive language.
The president of the University of Texas
at Austin confirmed it is looking into “rumors” that the Sigma Alpha
Epsilon chapter there used the same song that led to the closure of the
fraternity’s chapter at the University of Oklahoma.
Additionally, at least one other investigation is taking place in
relation to another chapter of the fraternity and its members’ alleged
use of the same chant, according to the fraternity’s national office.
Spokesman Brandon Weghorst would not identify the chapter except to say it is outside Texas.
The investigations come after the University of Oklahoma chapter of SAE
was closed and two students were expelled from the school when a video
surfaced of the members singing the racist chant on a party bus.
Now, Bill Powers, the president of UT-Austin, said the school is looking into the matter on his campus.
"Rumors that a chant similar to the one at OU has been traditional in
the UT chapter of SAE," he wrote in the statement. "Our dean of students
is looking into this matter."
Powers' statement also detailed previous "hurtful" incidents at a
different, off-campus fraternity where some party guests dressed up "in
costumes expressing racial stereotypes." It led to cultural education
work and a day of community service with Latino groups.
Weghorst, the fraternity’s national spokesman, explained that the
investigation at UT-Austin was prompted by a tweet from someone who said
they attended “a university in Texas” from 2000 to 2004 and they sang
the same chant at the time. The twitter user, who has now removed the tweet, did not specify which university he attended.
The UT-Austin SAE chapter president, Luke Cone, put out a statement denying that they ever used the chant.
“First and foremost, I would like to clarify that we do not perform this
chant or anything remotely close to it for that matter, nor had I, or
any active member in our entire chapter, heard of the chant preceding
the release of the video containing racial slurs,” Cone said in a
statement provided to ABC News.
For their part, Weghorst said national SAE officials consider their
UT-Austin investigation nearly finished and their primary concern is the
other remaining active investigation at the as-yet unnamed school.
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