Post by FatalDST on Jan 27, 2008 1:16:50 GMT -5
I had too! Its and OO classic! ;D
Student leader at SIUE is shocked by allegations of torture with hot cookies
BY MARIA BARAN AND JENNIFER HASAMEAR
News-Democrat
EDWARDSVILLE --
www.bnd.com/news/local/story/172367.html
A fellow student leader said Tuesday he is shocked by allegations that a Southern Illinois University Edwardsville student kidnapped and tortured a man with hot cookies.
Jordan E. Sallis, 20, who lived on campus, was the vice president of the SIUE National Pan-Hellenic Council, the governing body of the eight historically black fraternities and sororities.
Sallis and Rosario A. James, 23, of Edwardsville, both were charged Monday with two counts of aggravated kidnapping and one count of robbery and aggravated battery. They allegedly held and tortured a man, paddled him and burned him with freshly baked cookies, after a drug deal went bad. The house where the alleged crime took place is unofficially known as the Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity house, university officials confirmed.
"It really just shocked me," said Richard Mann, a 22-year-old SIUE senior.
Mann, president of the SIUE National Pan-Hellenic Council and a member of Alpha Phi Alpha, said he has known Sallis for three years and called him a "stand-up guy."
"I hope these are false charges, because this doesn't fit his character," Mann said.
According to Mann, Sallis was elected as vice president of council in April by fraternity members of the eight groups. He had been nominated for the position by his own fraternity, Kappa Alpha Psi.
Police said three men arrived at James' house at 3840 Wanda Road to buy marijuana, but two men grabbed the drugs and fled, leaving the third behind. The suspects held the third person, who is in his late teens, against his will, and told him he needed to find $400 for the drugs, according to police.
Madison County Sheriff's Detective Sgt. Gary Burns said police had been called to the house a few times in the past for loud parties, but nothing more serious.
Four members of the fraternity are listed as the renters of the home, which is owned by Sugarloaf Landscape Nursery, Burns said.
Mann said the case, as well as that of another former fraternity leader who was arrested last summer, damages the groups' reputation.
"This hurts our school name as a whole," Mann said.
In July, 22-year-old Olutosin O. Oduwole was charged with attempting to make a threat against a university and storing a gun on campus after a note was found in the back seat of his car. Oduwole, who was serving as the president of the SIUE fraternity Iota Phi Theta at the time, has pleaded not guilty.
According to the SIUE student newspaper, The Alestle, Sallis was a member of the student senate during the 2006-2007 academic year, but was removed from office in February for missing more than two meetings.
University officials said James had been a member of the fraternity in the past, but they were unsure whether he was still a member.
Contact reporter Maria Baran at mbaran@bnd.com or 659-0985. Contact reporter Jennifer K. Hasamear at jhasamear@bnd.com or 692-1149.
Student leader at SIUE is shocked by allegations of torture with hot cookies
BY MARIA BARAN AND JENNIFER HASAMEAR
News-Democrat
EDWARDSVILLE --
www.bnd.com/news/local/story/172367.html
A fellow student leader said Tuesday he is shocked by allegations that a Southern Illinois University Edwardsville student kidnapped and tortured a man with hot cookies.
Jordan E. Sallis, 20, who lived on campus, was the vice president of the SIUE National Pan-Hellenic Council, the governing body of the eight historically black fraternities and sororities.
Sallis and Rosario A. James, 23, of Edwardsville, both were charged Monday with two counts of aggravated kidnapping and one count of robbery and aggravated battery. They allegedly held and tortured a man, paddled him and burned him with freshly baked cookies, after a drug deal went bad. The house where the alleged crime took place is unofficially known as the Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity house, university officials confirmed.
"It really just shocked me," said Richard Mann, a 22-year-old SIUE senior.
Mann, president of the SIUE National Pan-Hellenic Council and a member of Alpha Phi Alpha, said he has known Sallis for three years and called him a "stand-up guy."
"I hope these are false charges, because this doesn't fit his character," Mann said.
According to Mann, Sallis was elected as vice president of council in April by fraternity members of the eight groups. He had been nominated for the position by his own fraternity, Kappa Alpha Psi.
Police said three men arrived at James' house at 3840 Wanda Road to buy marijuana, but two men grabbed the drugs and fled, leaving the third behind. The suspects held the third person, who is in his late teens, against his will, and told him he needed to find $400 for the drugs, according to police.
Madison County Sheriff's Detective Sgt. Gary Burns said police had been called to the house a few times in the past for loud parties, but nothing more serious.
Four members of the fraternity are listed as the renters of the home, which is owned by Sugarloaf Landscape Nursery, Burns said.
Mann said the case, as well as that of another former fraternity leader who was arrested last summer, damages the groups' reputation.
"This hurts our school name as a whole," Mann said.
In July, 22-year-old Olutosin O. Oduwole was charged with attempting to make a threat against a university and storing a gun on campus after a note was found in the back seat of his car. Oduwole, who was serving as the president of the SIUE fraternity Iota Phi Theta at the time, has pleaded not guilty.
According to the SIUE student newspaper, The Alestle, Sallis was a member of the student senate during the 2006-2007 academic year, but was removed from office in February for missing more than two meetings.
University officials said James had been a member of the fraternity in the past, but they were unsure whether he was still a member.
Contact reporter Maria Baran at mbaran@bnd.com or 659-0985. Contact reporter Jennifer K. Hasamear at jhasamear@bnd.com or 692-1149.