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Texas A&M Beats Bonfire Cases

By Barry Barnett on April 25, 2007

Yesterday, the Fifth Circuit affirmed summary judgment in cases arising out of the November 18, 1999, collapse of the “bonfire stack” that Texas A&M students traditionally built the week before the football game against the University of Texas.  The plaintiffs — estates of Aggies who died, students who suffered injuries, and relatives — alleged that Texas A&M and A&M officials deprived the victims of substantive due process by recklessly exposing them to dangers that the state institution itself created.  The court held that the “state-created danger” doctrine didn’t “clearly” exist in 1999 and that, therefore, the plaintiffs couldn’t make out a claim.  Breen v. Texas A&M Univ., No. 04-40712 (5th Cir. Apr. 24, 2007).

Barry Barnett

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    The Contingency
  • Organization:
    Barry Barnett, Esq.
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