A former Louisiana State University student on Wednesday was found guilty of negligent homicide in the alcohol-related hazing death of a fraternity pledge two years ago.

It took less than an hour for the jurors to convict Matthew Naquin, 21, who now faces anywhere from probation to five years in prison at his Oct. 16 sentencing, The Advocate reported.

Prosecutors said Naquin was primarily responsible for the death of 18-year-old Max Gruver — who had been at LSU a month when he died of alcohol poisoning, the morning after a Phi Delta Theta hazing ritual dubbed “Bible Study.”

He and other pledges were forced to chug 190-proof liquor during the Sept. 13, 2017 event, if they didn’t know the answers to questions about the frat or couldn’t recite the Greek alphabet.

A toxicologist testified that Gruver was a “dead man walking” after downing the booze.

His blood-alcohol level was at 0.495%, more than six times the legal driving limit in Louisiana when he died.

An autopsy also detected THC, the chemical found in marijuana, in his system.

During the trial, James Patrick Canter, who pledged the frat with Gruver, said he could tell his pal “had not had much experience with drinking” though the did frequent bars during his brief time at LSU.

Two days before Gruver died, other frat boys warned Naquin to tone down his behavior with pledges, which they said was extreme and dangerous, according to court documents and trail testimony.

He was also charged with obstruction of justice for allegedly deleting thousands of files from his phone during the criminal investigation. That case is pending.

Naquin’s former LSU roommate, Ryan Matthew Isto, 20, of Butte, Montana, and ex-LSU student Sean-Paul Gott, 22, of Lafayette, pleaded no contest last year to misdemeanor hazing. Another former LSU student Patrick Andrew Forde, 22, was also charged with hazing.

Phi Delta Theta has been banned from the LSU campus until at least 2033.