A loosely organized off-campus network known as “Nameless” is now at the center of a high-stakes showdown at UNLV, where several students are facing possible suspension or expulsion after university investigators tied them to the group and its alleged role in hazing and underage drinking.
Those students, some of whom are linked on paper to a former Kappa Sigma chapter, insist they are being swept up in a dragnet with little proof. Their lawyers say the outcome of the case could derail academic careers over what they describe as vague associations rather than concrete misconduct. Another round of student-conduct hearings is on the calendar for next week.
Lawyers Say University Is Overreaching
Attorney Chandon Alexander, who is representing four of the students, argues that UNLV is treating mere association with Nameless as if it were a smoking gun and is engaging in what he calls “collective punishment,” according to News 3 Las Vegas. Alexander told the outlet he has not seen evidence that specifically links his clients to acts of hazing or forced drinking and says the proposed penalties are out of proportion. Two of his clients are staring down potential two-year suspensions, he said, while the other two could be expelled outright.
UNLV Records Tie Nameless To Kappa Sigma
Documents from UNLV’s Office of Student Rights & Responsibilities identify a November 2021 “Fight Night” boxing event hosted by Kappa Sigma as the trigger for heightened scrutiny and note that the chapter later appeared under the new label Nameless in fall 2022, according to UNLV’s OSRR. The same record shows Kappa Sigma was suspended after the 2021 event and that the chapter voluntarily disassociated from the campus in July 2022. UNLV’s materials also spell out that the university can step in on off-campus conduct when it determines the behavior has an adverse effect on the campus community.
Background: ‘Fight Night’ And A Student’s Death
The November 2021 fundraiser, a Kappa Sigma boxing event that drew a crowd, ended in tragedy when 20-year-old UNLV student Nathan Tyler Valencia suffered fatal head injuries. The Clark County coroner ruled his death a homicide, and local coverage tied the case to broader questions about event safety, according to the Las Vegas Review-Journal. In the aftermath, Valencia’s death prompted scrutiny from state and local officials and led the Nevada Athletic Commission to adopt emergency safety rules for amateur events. That history continues to loom large over campus debates about off-campus, Greek-affiliated activities.
Legal Context
UNLV’s Student Conduct Code gives the university authority to discipline behavior that occurs away from campus if it “adversely affects the UNLV community,” according to the code posted by UNLV. Separate from campus rules, Nevada’s hazing statute (NRS 200.605) prohibits conduct that endangers a student’s physical health and allows for criminal penalties, as summarized by legal code resource Justia. Together, those frameworks shape how the Office of Student Rights & Responsibilities approaches investigations like the one now wrapped around Nameless…