“Is old Danny? No. But he is alive and we will do what we can,” said his father, Tom Sanduli. Now back home in Eden Prairie, Danny Santulli is being cared for by his mother, Mary Pat, who quit her banking job to be with him full time, while the family continues to struggle to hold the fraternity accountable. After settling 23 civil lawsuits, two more members of the Mizzou fraternity sued in a case that caught the country’s attention on Thursday, when Santulli’s story was reported on “Good Morning America”. “This is the most horrific blur case of all time,” said David Bianchi, a Miami-based family lawyer who has specialized in blur cases across the country for 30 years. The latest lawsuit states that last fall, Santulli was forced to drink an entire bottle of vodka, then beer through a tube and funnel during his initiation into the Phi Gamma Delta, known as Fiji. Its blood alcohol content skyrocketed to an almost lethal level of 0.468%. There is a mountain of evidence of confiscated cell phones and surveillance cameras throughout the house, Bianchi said, showing Santulli being left unattended and unconscious on a couch where he stopped breathing. “You can not imagine how it could be even worse and still be alive,” Bianchi said, adding that his company has counted at least 50 blur deaths since 2000 in U.S. colleges and universities. The cases of almost …