HomeCrime'High crime area' doesn't mean college has 'duty to warn'

‘High crime area’ doesn’t mean college has ‘duty to warn’

Scenes from a vigil for slain student Chase Meola, YouTube screen grab from Ohio CBS affiliate WBNS.

Scenes from a vigil for slain student Chase Meola (YouTube screengrab from Ohio CBS affiliate WBNS).

Though a federal judge deemed the shooting death of college student Chase Meola outside of a student party “tragic,” his family’s quest to hold a university and fraternity in Ohio liable for his slaying was nevertheless rejected this week.

Chief U.S. District Judge Algenon Marbley, an appointee of former President Bill Clinton, dismissed the civil wrongful death case first brought by Chase Meola’s father, Paul Meola, in 2022, against Ohio State University and the unsanctioned, off-campus Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity Inc.

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