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FAMU

The Bus That Ended the Marching 100: FAMU's Hazing-Death Reckoning

FLotheradvisorymedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

Robert Champion, a 26-year-old drum major in Florida A&M University's celebrated Marching 100 band, collapsed and died on November 19, 2011 after a hazing ritual called 'crossing Bus C' aboard a charter bus parked outside the Rosen Plaza hotel in Orlando following the Florida Classic game. The university suspended all band performances within days and President James Ammons convened a task force to examine the band's culture. The communication to the FAMU community was not a real-time emergency notification but an administrative statement, reflecting that the death occurred off campus in another city.

Alerts
2
Response
Killed
1
Injured
0
Institution
Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University
Hbcu · FL
~13,000 students
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

2 messages in sequence

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTEmail
Approximate reconstruction279 chars
FAMU has learned of the death of a member of the Marching 100 following tonight's Florida Classic in Orlando. The university extends its deepest condolences to the student's family. Authorities in Orlando are investigating. Counseling services will be made available to students.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

This first notice is a reconstruction: the death occurred off campus in Orlando, more than 250 miles from the Tallahassee campus, so FAMU's communication was a condolence-and-investigation statement rather than a Clery emergency notification.
Because the band had just performed at the Florida Classic, the news reached the campus community before any official statement, complicating the university's messaging.
FOLLOW-UPEmail
Approximate reconstruction297 chars
Effective immediately, the university is suspending all performances and activities of the Marching 100 pending the outcome of investigations into the death of Robert Champion. The university will not tolerate hazing in any form and is convening a task force to examine band culture and practices.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

The suspension message is reconstructed from contemporaneous reporting that FAMU 'suspended band performances and convoked a task force to determine if there were any unauthorized and questionable activities associated with the culture of the Marching 100.'
This message reframes the death from an individual tragedy to an institutional crisis, which is why it explicitly names hazing and a task force rather than only offering condolences.
Context

Background

Robert Champion died aboard a charter bus parked outside the Rosen Plaza hotel in Orlando on the night of November 19, 2011, after the annual Florida Classic football game against Bethune-Cookman. A medical examiner determined he died of blunt-force trauma and internal bleeding from the 'crossing Bus C' ritual, in which he ran a gauntlet of band members who struck him with fists, drumsticks, and other objects. FAMU President James Ammons suspended all band performances and longtime band director Julian White was placed on leave and later dismissed. Thirteen people were charged in connection with the death; three were convicted of manslaughter in 2015. The case became a national reference point for anti-hazing policy and for how institutions communicate about off-campus deaths tied to campus organizations.
Analysis

Key Findings

Champion's death was an off-campus fatality in Orlando, so FAMU's communications were administrative statements rather than a real-time Clery emergency notification
Within days the university escalated from condolences to suspending the Marching 100, signaling an institutional rather than individual framing of the crisis
The case led to thirteen criminal charges and three manslaughter convictions and reshaped national conversations about hazing in collegiate bands
Outcome
Thirteen people were eventually charged; three were convicted of manslaughter in 2015. Band director Julian White was placed on leave and the Marching 100 was suspended through the 2012-13 academic year.
Provenance

Sources

  1. News
  2. News
  3. News
  4. News
  5. News
Tags
hazingfloridahbcumarching-bandoff-campusstudent-deathadvisory
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion