family Students at the University of Missouri He died on a trip to Nashville, and he filed a lawsuit against his former brotherhood for illegal death, nearly a year after his death.
Riley Strain, 22, died on the Cumberland River after disappearing from Nashville on March 8, 2024.
The lawsuit was filed by the Laolao family on March 21 Boone County, Missouri, The University of Missouri chapter in opposition to the Delta as his family is working to hold his fraternity accountable for his death.
According to the lawsuit First obtained by WZTV.
Nashville police say Riley Strain has drinks 12-15 times before college student dies: Report

On the evening of March 8, Riley Strain met with friends on Broadway Street in Nashville for the last time. (Family Handout)
“After Riley was abandoned, but before his death, he experienced conscious pain and pain,” the lawsuit reads. “As the direct and proximal result of the defendant’s negligence, Riley was severely injured, which ultimately led to his death on March 22, 2024.”
The lawsuit added that the stress suffered “extreme physical and emotional harm, as well as the pain and pain before his death.”
According to the lawsuit, Laurin even initially refused to attend the fraternity’s official trip to Nashville in 2024, but decided “after his brothers were under constant pressure from their peers.”
The 36-page lawsuit lists 32 people, including the Delta Chapter President, the Recruitment Chair, and numerous fraternity leaders and brothers.

Mizzou student Riley Strain, 22, has disappeared since March 8 since March 8. (Metropolitan Nashville Police Department)
Strain’s family believes that the Delta Brotherhood and its members are taking appropriate precautions to ensure that all fraternity members are safe And no intervention When strain is significantly damaged.
The document continues to accuse brotherhood of multiple negligence, including the failure to take appropriate safety measures for the event, despite the delivery of fraternal policies to overdose on rented buses in Nashville, and while such behavior and other defendants could have been prohibited, fraternal policies also allow for fraternal policies.
According to the lawsuit, several fraternity members noticed that the pulling force exhibited abnormal behavior and pointed out that he worked hard to speak, walk and interact with others.
According to the lawsuit, the pull was described as “actually incoherent” and when the group arrived at the last bar of the night, it was called “backing against the wall, staying up and down the steps, completely unable to speak or communicate, and need help.”
Riley Laureate death: drowning, ethanol poisoning kills college students at night

Riley Strain last met at the Luke Bryan bar in downtown Nashville, after Friday, March 8, 1024 at 10 p.m. (Google Maps/Silent Sound)
“When the bar kicked out of Riley, Riley’s brothers had two options: 1) go with Riley, keep him safe and take care of him; or 2) keep going to the party. Riley’s Delta Chi brothers chose to continue the party,” the lawsuit reads. ”
The lawsuit continues and says he lost his footsteps after tightening the pull, without help, stumbled in the wrong direction of the Cumberland River, just a four-minute walk from his brothers’ bar.
“Riley was abandoned without the support of his brother,” the complaint said.
The lawsuit continues that his roommate saw “Riley was not in the room and did nothing.”
“No search, no panic, and no one called 911 to report that Riley failed to return a twelve (12) minute walk back to the hotel in more than three hours. The brothers didn’t even think of the parents who called Riley, they were just ready to go to bed and go to bed.” The lawsuit. ”

A report released by TABC has released the Nashville Bar’s wrongdoing after college student Riley Strain disappeared on the evening of March 8. (Getty Images, AP)
Clin’s family is seeking trials from a jury and seeking medical treatment, funerals and funeral losses, and compensation for the pain and pain before his death.
On March 22, about two weeks after the laborer disappeared, a worker at a Cumberland River-based company reported a body to police and they were later able to identify the strain.
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A medical examiner believes that at the time of his death, the strain’s blood alcohol level was .228, more than twice the legal limit – Delta 9 was also found in his system.
In addition to high alcohol content, evidence of caffeine, nicotine and marijuana was found in the blood of the strain.
The cause of death of the strain was classified as drowning and ethanol poisoning, and his way of death was considered accidental.
Fox News Digital’s Audrey Conklin contributed to the report.
Stepheny Price is a writer at Fox News Digital and Fox Business. She covers topics including missing persons, homicides, state crime cases, illegal immigration and more. Story tips and ideas can be sent to stepheny.price@fox.com