Broken sofas. Missing decorative fruit. Holes in walls. Pizza on the ceiling. A photograph taken from a wall and left in the woods. Missing DVD player. Beer splattered on a front door. Another door torn from its hinges, smashed to pieces and spread throughout the house.

Over the course of one weekend in 2017, the University of Iowa fraternity Sigma Nu caused nearly $108,000 in damage across 28 rental houses in Galena, Illinois.

Photographs and a report provided to the Jo Daviess County Sheriff's Department at the time give a glimpse into what the damage looked like — though only a small glimpse.

Sigma Nu rented out 28 houses on the last full weekend of March 2017. The report lists the clean up costs by house, but is more descriptive in some places than others.

For 25 of the houses, the report details damage that prompted $12,000 in clean up and repair costs.

What happened at the remaining three houses is unavailable. The properties collectively sustained around $94,000 in damage over the course of three days. But next to each of the addresses — where the damage ought to be listed — the rental management company simply wrote, "See Separate Tab."

According to the Jo Daviesss County Sheriff's Department, deputies were not provided with the separate tab of damage. The rental management company also declined to offer additional information about the damage.

Staff at Eagle Ridge, the rental management company, wrote in the report that the cleanup and repairs would be done in three stages due to the extent of the damage.

In a couple units, the company charged for only few additional hours of cleaning at $18/hour. The more expensive charges were for carpet damage and broken furniture.

Photos submitted by staff show what looks like vomit in a bathtub next to a can of beer and cleaning bags full of cans and bottles. The report notes cigarette ashes in the smoke-free rentals and burn marks on a coffee table.

Broken beer bottles were reported at one house, along with beer splattered on a door and decks. Most houses required carpet cleanings.

Pizza was found on a ceiling in one living room. A toilet was described as loose in another house. Holes were patched in walls.

Across the houses, items were reported missing: A DVD player, a Chicago Bears pennant, a fire extinguisher, fake decorative apples, golf balls previously on display, a hanging photograph later found in the nearby woods. A missing blender was found in the garbage with missing parts.

Several items were reported broken including a refrigerator shelf, a futon, an oven, a kitchen table, a TV, photo frames, doors, beds, couches, lamps, and a what the report described as a "family rules wall piece."

The initial Jo Daviess County Sheriff's Office incident report lists the incident as criminal property damage, though no charges were filed against any members of the fraternity.

John Hay, state's attorney for the county, said his office opted to not press charges after the fraternity agreed to pay for all of the damages. The attorney did not receive a copy of the settlement Eagle Ridge reached with the fraternitiy, though Hay was told Eagle Ridge agreed to not ask for charges to be filed.

It's unclear how the student group footed the bill. Drew Logsdon, director of communications for the entire Sigma Nu fraternity, has not provided an answer to how the fraternity paid the bill, though a representative from Eagle Ridge said, "we were very happy with the outcome."

Following the weekend in Galena Territory, the University of Iowa and Sigma Nu's international headquarters suspended all Sigma Nu chapter activities and investigated the the incident.

“Our investigation indicated that a number of individuals were involved in the incident in March of 2017," said Brad Beacham, Executive Director of Sigma Nu Fraternity said in the statement. "We were deeply concerned by this information when we received it and upon completion of our investigation, implemented an appropriate disciplinary response in conjunction with University officials and alumni leaders."

As a result of the investigations, Sigma Nu was put on a two-year sanction and tasked with developing risk-management education opportunities the following May.

The punishment came around the time the university banned out-of-state Greek formal events and activities with alcohol. The move was in response to the death of Kamil Jackowski, a freshman who died while attending a Sigma Chi formal event in Lake of the Ozarks, Missouri.

This semester nine more fraternities have been accused of not seeking university permission to hold parities with alcohol and remain temporarily suspended, pending the outcome of an investigation.

Angie Reams, UI's associate dean of students, laid out why the university had reason to believe that the groups had held parties with alcohol in a letter alerting members of the investigation. Reams referenced reports Iowa City Police received in relation to tailgate parties in September.

According to the letter, police reported calls of overdoses and alcohol poisoning at the parties hosted by suspended chapters. At other parties, police reported concerns of criminal mischief, excessive noise, beer cans being thrown and unconscious individuals.

Prior to March 2017, Jo Daviess Deputy Chief Craig Ketelsen told the Press-Citizen that deputies received calls to properties rented out by University of Iowa fraternities.

Since the weekend Sigma Nu members last rented in the area, Deputy Chief Craig Ketelsen said they have not received any calls regarding UI fraternities.