(CNN) -- Twelve people now face manslaughter charges in the November 2011 hazing death of Florida A&M University drum major Robert Champion Jr., attorneys familiar with the case said Monday.
Ten of them were previously charged with felony hazing resulting in death. They and two new defendants will now also be charged with manslaughter, said Craig Brown, the attorney for one of the students.
State Attorney Jeff Ashton "thought the proper charges in the case would be manslaughter and hazing with death," explained assistant state attorney Nicole Pegues in an e-mail sent to the defendants' attorneys.
Brown's client, Aaron Golson, was among those charged with third-degree felony hazing. He now also faces a manslaughter charge, according to Brown.
"I really find this to be a tactic by the state to pressure all of the defendants into some sort of prison time," Brown told CNN. "Clearly a manslaughter charge could have been brought about initially."
The defendants face a maximum of 15 years in prison with the charge, Brown said. He expects the next hearing to be in September.
Champion, 26, died after a band hazing ritual in which he was beaten aboard a school bus after a football game in Orlando, Florida.
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