COLUMBIA â Unfettered peer pressure and a Mizzou fraternityâs âculture of silenceâ contributed to the 2021 hazing incident that left a student with a severe brain injury, his family said Friday.
Danny Santulliâs parents, siblings and extended family members spoke at a hearing Friday in which a Boone County judge sentenced Santulliâs fraternity âpledge dad,â Ryan Delanty, to six months in jail followed by six months of house arrest for two misdemeanor charges.
âI lost my best friend,â said Santulliâs sister, Meredith Santulli. âYou are to blame for this.â

Daniel Santulli, 19, was left brain damaged after a hazing incident at the University of Missouri-Columbia in October 2021.
Delanty was one of nearly a dozen fraternity members charged in connection with a October 2021 Phi Gamma Delta âpledge dad revealâ party at which Danny was pressured to drink a liter of vodka and then left unconscious with a blood alcohol level nearly six times Missouriâs legal driving limit.
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The story garnered national attention and shined a spotlight on fraternity practices that force âpledgesâ who are not yet members to endure hazing on the path to induction into the organization. scores of people have suffered injuries or been killed after drinking or attempting other tasks while trying to join fraternities or sororities.
Delanty did not speak in court on Friday. But his attorney, Stephanie Fortus, said her client has expressed ânothing but remorse.â
âHe has been devastated by what happened that night, and his family has been devastated,â she said. âThe suffering is universal.â

Meredith Santulli delivers her victim statement to the court on Friday, May 24, 2024, at Boone County Courthouse in Columbia, Mo. Several other Phi Gamma Delta members involved with the case took plea deals.
Dannyâs older sister, Meredith Santulli, said she dropped her brother off at the frat chapter house on campus in October 2021 for his pledge dad reveal event, not knowing it would be the last time she saw him walk away.
She said she had watched her brother change in the months after he started school at Mizzou: A once positive, happy person began to suffer mentally. She didnât realize at the time, she said, but the fraternity pledge process was taking its toll.
Members ordered him around and belittled him. They forced him to drink and âbrainwashed him into thinking this is what (a fraternity) should be,â said Dannyâs brother, Nick Santulli.
During the reveal party, Delanty handed Danny a liter of Titoâs vodka and told him to drink it, according to a lawsuit filed by the Santullis against the fraternity and several members in 2022. Another member poured beer into his mouth with a funnel and a tube.
Members then left Danny sitting on a couch with a blood-alcohol level of .468%. He eventually slid off the couch, and his face was on the floor. His skin was pale and lips blue, the lawsuit says.
Fraternity brothers drove him to the hospital, but by then, Dannyâs heart had stopped. He survived, with major brain damage.
The fraternity was expelled from campus, and Dannyâs family filed a civil lawsuit against the fraternity and 23 members, which was settled out of court for an unspecified amount.
Nearly a dozen fraternity members were later charged in the incident, including Delanty and Thomas Shultz, of Chesterfield.
Meanwhile, Danny Santulli spent several months in Denver, Colorado, undergoing further treatment. It was there doctors told his family he would likely never walk or speak again, said Dannyâs mother, Mary Pat Santulli.

Mary Pat Santulli wipes a tear while delivering her statement on Friday, May 24, 2024, at Boone County Courthouse in Columbia, Mo. The familyâs statements, all addressed Ryan Delanty, lasted around an hour.
âSo much was taken from my son,â she said. Still, she said, Dannyâs spirit remains. She is now his full-time caregiver, managing medications, doctors appointments and therapies.
Since the incident, few members of the fraternity reached out to offer an apology, which Dannyâs father, Tom Santulli, said was part of the organizationâs âcode of silence.â
Phi Gamma Delta even sent Danny an invoice for overdue unpaid dues, Tom Santulli said.
Schultz pleaded guilty in April to supplying liquor to a minor and was sentenced to two years of probation, which included 30 days in jail, 100 hours of required community service and the completion of a drug and alcohol education program.
Other fraternity members have pleaded guilty to misdemeanors, and some cases are still pending.
Delanty was set to face trial earlier this month on two charges, including felony hazing, but he pleaded guilty to a reduced charge of misdemeanor hazing and misdemeanor supplying alcohol to a minor in exchange for a recommendation of six months in jail followed by six months of house arrest.
Prosecutor Nick Komoroski said he tried to balance fairness with punishment. He said he hoped the jail time served as a deterrent for others who may be considering similar hazing.
âI wanted him to be held accountable for his actions,â he said.
Delantyâs attorney, Fortus, said in court that her client has gone to therapy, taken medications and has tried his best to reckon with the impact of his actions.
âKnow that Mr. Delanty will live with this the rest of his life,â she said.
Judge Kevin Crane then pronounced his sentence. Delanty was led away in handcuffs.

Ryan Delanty, left, and defense attorney Stephanie Fortus sit at the Defendantâs table on Friday, May 24, 2024, at Boone County Courthouse in Columbia, Mo. Delanty was Danny Santulliâs âpledge dadâ the night Santulli went to the ICU.

Tom Santulli makes a statement on Friday, May 24, 2024, at Boone County Courthouse in Columbia, Mo. Six family members including Dannyâs brother and sister, Nick and Meredith Santulli, made statements.

Nick Santulli, brother of Danny Santulli, glances at Ryan Delanty while delivering his victim statement on Friday, May 24, 2024, at Boone County Courthouse in Columbia, Mo. Danny Santulli suffered a traumatic brain injury the night of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity party in October 2021, leaving him unable to walk, speak or see.
The family of a student who died from alcohol poisoning while pledging a fraternity will receive nearly $3 million from Bowling Green State University to settle its hazing-related lawsuit, according to an agreement announced Monday. As part of the settlement, the family of Stone Foltz and the university both said they will work to address and eliminate hazing on college campuses. Foltz's parents have started a foundation focused on hazing education and have spoke to students at other universities about its dangers.