By Jack Brook and Sara Cline
The Associated Press

BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) โ€” One arrest has been made and at least two more are expected in connection with the death of a 20-year-old Southern University student after an off-campus fraternity hazing ritual, Baton Rouge authorities announced March 7.

Father Corey Wilson, right, mourns alongside other grieving family members during a vigil for his son, Caleb Wilson, outside of Southern Universityโ€™s Smith-Brown Student Union on March 5, 2025, in Baton Rouge, La. (Javier Gallegos/The Advocate via AP)

โ€œCaleb Wilson died as a direct result of a hazing incident where he was punched in the chest multiple times while pledging to Omega Psi Phi fraternity,โ€ Baton Rouge Police Department Chief Thomas Morse Jr. told reporters.

Fraternity member Caleb McCray, 23, was arrested the evening of March 6 and faces charges of manslaughter and felony criminal hazing in the death of Wilson, a mechanical engineering junior at the school who died in late February.

Wilson and eight others pledging the fraternity were punched by McCray and at least two other individuals wearing boxing gloves, according to a police arrest warrant affidavit reviewed by The Associated Press.

After McCray punched Wilson four times in the chest, Wilson โ€œcollapsed to the floor, becoming unresponsive,โ€ the affidavit states. โ€œWilson appeared to suffer a seizure and lose control of his bodily function.โ€ No signs of trauma were found on Wilsonโ€™s body except for a โ€œsmall bruiseโ€ on the right side of his chest.

The East Baton Rouge Parish Coronerโ€™s Office was awaiting the results of additional testing but didnโ€™t know when those would be complete, Chief of Investigations Shane Tindall said.

McCray had no intention to โ€œcause death or great bodily harmโ€ to Wilson, the police affidavit states.

McCrayโ€™s attorney, Phillip Robinson, said his client deserved due process.

โ€œI maintain my clientโ€™s innocence and urge the public to withhold rushing to judgment until all the evidence is heard,โ€ Robinson said in an emailed statement.

McCray and his family declined to comment, Robinson added.

Southern University suspends fraternity and pledging

Wilson was initially brought to a hospital by a group of men who falsely said that he had โ€œcollapsed while playing basketball at a parkโ€ but in fact had suffered injuries at a flooring company warehouse, Morse said.

The group left before police arrived at the hospital and no one contacted 911 at any point, Morse added. They changed Wilsonโ€™s clothing before bringing him to the hospital, the affidavit states.

In Louisiana, hazing can be a felony under the Max Gruver Act, which passed in 2018 and was named after a Louisiana State University student who died of alcohol poisoning after hazing at the Phi Delta Theta fraternity house.

Under the act, if a person being hazed dies or is seriously injured, violators face up to a $10,000 fine and five years in prison. Organizations, representatives and officers of an organization, and educational institutions can also face penalties.

Omega Psi Phi could face civil penalties under the act, East Baton Rouge District Attorney Hillar Moore said.

The fraternityโ€™s campus chapter has been ordered to โ€œcease all activitiesโ€ and students involved in Wilsonโ€™s death could face expulsion, Southern University President Dennis Shields told reporters.

All campus Greek life organizations are barred from taking on any additional members through the remainder of the academic year, he added.

Omega Psi Phi did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Large vigil for victim

Hundreds of Southern University students, alumni, staff and state leaders gathered for a vigil March 5 in honor of Wilson.

Friends and family took turns telling stories about Wilson, who by a number of accounts was joyous, bright, talented and driven.

โ€œHe walked this campus with a purpose,โ€ Chaselynn Grant, a longtime friend of Wilsonโ€™s, told The Advocate. โ€œI know he is smiling down.โ€

Among Wilsonโ€™s passions was music. He played trumpet for the universityโ€™s famous marching band, known as the โ€œHuman Jukebox,โ€ which recently performed at the Super Bowl in New Orleans.

In a post on Facebook, the band wrote that members carried Wilsonโ€™s spirit โ€œwith every step and every note.โ€

โ€œThis was more than just a performance,โ€ the post read. โ€œIt was a tribute, a farewell and a promise that Calebโ€™s legacy will live on.โ€

___

Brook reported from New Orleans.