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Irish
02-15-10, 10:50
Interesting to note she shot and killed her brother in 1986 which was thought to be an accident at the time. Video & pictures at link: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100213/ap_on_re_us/us_ala_university_shooting

HUNTSVILLE, Ala. – The professor accused of killing three colleagues during a faculty meeting was a Harvard-educated neurobiologist, inventor and mother whose life had been marred by a violent episode in her distant past.

More than two decades ago, police said Amy Bishop fatally shot her teenage brother at their Massachusetts home in what officers at the time logged as an accident — though authorities said Saturday that records of the shooting are missing.

Bishop had just months left teaching at the University of Alabama in Huntsville when police said she opened fire with a handgun Friday in a room filled with a dozen of her colleagues from the school's biology department. Bishop, a rare woman suspected in a workplace shooting, was to leave after this semester because she had been denied tenure.

Police say she is 42, but the university's Web site lists her as 44.

Some have said she was upset after being denied the job-for-life security afforded tenured academics, and the husband of one victim and one of Bishop's students said they were told the shooting stemmed from the school's refusal to grant her such status. Authorities have refused to discuss a motive, and school spokesman Ray Garner said the faculty meeting wasn't called to discuss tenure.

William Setzer, chairman of chemistry department at UAH, said Bishop was appealing the decision made last year.

"Politics and personalities" always play a role in the tenure process, he said. "In a close department it's more so. If you have any lone wolves or bizarre personalities, it's a problem and I'm thinking that certainly came into play here."

The three killed were Gopi K. Podila, the chairman of the Department of Biological Sciences, and two other faculty members, Maria Ragland Davis and Adriel Johnson. The wounded were still recovering in hospitals early Saturday. Luis Cruz-Vera was in fair condition; Joseph Leahy in critical condition; and staffer Stephanie Monticciolo also was in critical condition.

Descriptions of Bishop from students and colleagues were mixed. Some saw a strange woman who had difficulty relating to her students, while others described a witty, intelligent teacher.

Students and colleagues described Bishop as intelligent, but someone who often had difficulty explaining difficult concepts.

Bishop was well-known in the research community, appearing on the cover of the winter 2009 issue of "The Huntsville R&D Report," a local magazine focusing on engineering, space and genetics. However, it was unclear how many of her colleagues and students knew about a more tragic part of her past.

She shot her brother, an 18-year-old accomplished violinist, in the chest in 1986, said Paul Frazier, the police chief in Braintree, Mass., where the shooting occurred. Bishop fired at least three shots, hitting her brother once and hitting her bedroom wall before police took her into custody at gunpoint, he said.

Frazier said the police chief at the time told officers to release Bishop to her mother before she could be booked. It was logged as an accident.

But Frazier's account was disputed by former police Chief John Polio, who told The Associated Press he didn't call officers to tell them to release Bishop. "There's no cover-up, no missing records," he said.

Attempts by AP to track down addresses and phone numbers for Bishop's family in the Braintree area weren't immediately successful Saturday. The current police chief said he believed her family had moved away.

After being educated at Harvard University, Bishop moved to Huntsville and in 2003 became an associate professor at the University of Alabama's campus there. The school, with about 7,500 students, has close ties with NASA and is known for its engineering and science programs.

Setzer, the chemistry chairman, said he was not aware of the incident with Bishop's brother.

Bishop and her husband placed third in a statewide university business plan competition in July 2007, presenting a portable cell incubator they had invented. They won $25,000 to help start a company to market the device.

Her husband, James Anderson, was detained and questioned by police but has not been charged. Police said Bishop was quickly caught after Friday's shooting. A 9-millimeter handgun was found in the bathroom of the building where the shootings occurred, and Huntsville police spokesman Sgt. Mark Roberts said Bishop did not have a permit for it.

Bishop was in custody and it wasn't immediately known if she has an attorney. No one was home at the couple's house.

Several experts said campus shootings commonly occur because the shooter has some kind of festering grievance that university officials haven't addressed, and the granting of tenure can be a polarizing and politicized process for many academics.

"Universities tend to string it out without resolution, tolerate too much and to have a cumbersome decision process that endangers the comfort of many and the safety of some," said Dr. Park Dietz, who is president of Threat Assessment Group Inc., a Newport Beach, Calif.-based violence prevention firm.

Tenure, which makes firing and other discipline difficult if not impossible, can seem generous to outsiders. But the job protection gives professors the freedom to express ideas and conduct studies without fear of reprisal. The system typically emphasizes research over teaching, and tenured professors typically are paid more.

While it's rare for the stresses of the tenure process to incur violence, what's even rarer is for a woman to be accused in such an incident like the one Friday that also left three of Bishop's colleagues injured, two critically.

"Workplace shootings of that kind are overwhelmingly male," said Franklin E. Zimring, a law professor and director of violence prevention at the University of California, Berkeley. "Going postal was essentially a monopoly position of the XY chromosome."

Irish
02-15-10, 10:53
Deleted - Redundant.

Irish
02-15-10, 11:27
She was also suspected in a bombing plot. http://www.aolnews.com/2010/02/14/professor-accused-in-shootings-was-suspect-in-bomb-plot/19358072/

(Feb. 14) -- The college professor and mother of four who is charged with opening fire on a group of colleagues at the University of Alabama Friday was also eyed as a suspect in the attempted mail bombing of a Harvard professor 17 years ago.

Paul Rosenberg, a medical school professor and doctor at Boston Children's Hospital, was opening mail after returning from vacation in 1993 when he spotted wires and a cylinder inside a package addressed to him, according to the Boston Globe. Two pipe bombs were stuffed inside the package.

A federal investigation focused on Amy Bishop, a postdoctoral fellow who was then working at the Children's Hospital, as a suspect, a law enforcement official told the newspaper.


Huntsville Police Dept. / AP
Professor Amy Bishop, pictured in a mug shot Saturday, is accused of killing three faculty members at the University of Alabama in Huntsville, Ala.
Bishop, and her husband, Jeff Anderson, were both questioned in the case. Officials said Bishop had a motive, as Rosenberg was allegedly going to give her a negative review on her doctorate work.

Authorities have refused to discuss a motive in Friday's shooting that left three of Bishop's colleagues dead, but the neurobiologist was reportedly denied tenure -- a type of job-for-life security afforded academics -- by the University of Alabama in Huntsville and was vocal in her opposition to the decision, as well as her plan to appeal.

Officials never filed any charges against Bishop related to the mail bombs, but were also concerned about a violent incident in her past.

In 1986, Bishop shot and killed her 18-year-old brother with a shotgun at their Braintree, Mass., home. She told police at the time that she had been trying to learn how to use the gun, which her father had bought for protection, when it accidentally discharged. In all, three shots were fired: Braintree police Chief Paul Frazier said she shot once into a wall, then shot her brother, then fired a third time into the ceiling.

Authorities released her and said the episode was a tragic accident. She was never charged, though Frazier on Saturday questioned how the investigation was handled.

Some of Bishop's colleagues, including William Setzer, chairman of the department of chemistry, told The Associated Press they did not know about her brother's death.

Despite her history, relatives and students said Bishop had never suggested she might become violent, even with the looming loss of her teaching post.

Everyone from family and friends to her students at the University of Alabama in Huntsville said the intelligent and at times awkward teacher seemed normal in the hours before police say she opened fire in a faculty meeting Friday afternoon, leaving three dead and another three wounded.

Jim Anderson - the father of Bishop's husband - told The Associated Press on Sunday his son had no idea Bishop was planning the bloodshed she's accused of.

"He knew nothing. He didn't know anything," the father said. He said that the police had spoken with his son at length and that "they are doing a good job."

Police say the gun Bishop's accused of using in the Alabama shooting wasn't registered, and investigators don't know how or where she got it.

Bishop was arrested soon after the shooting and charged with capital murder. Other charges are pending. Her husband was detained and questioned by police but has not been charged.

Anderson told The Chronicle of Higher Education that he dropped his wife at the faculty meeting where the biology professor allegedly gunned down her colleagues. Bishop called her husband less than an hour later and asked to be picked up, but mentioned nothing of the shooting, Anderson said. By the time Anderson arrived to campus, his wife was in police custody.

Anderson told The Chronicle of Higher Education that he did not know his wife had a gun when he dropped her off and he did not know what specifically led to the shooting. Anderson also said he knew his wife felt the university's decision to deny her tenure was not fair, and she planned to appeal the decision to the university's Board of Trustees.

In the days and hours before the shooting, Bishop's friends, colleagues and students said she was acting like the intelligent - but odd - professor they knew.

UAH student Andrew Cole was in Bishop's anatomy class Friday morning and said she seemed perfectly normal. Kourtney Lattimore, 19, a sophomore studying nursing who had Bishop for anatomy and physiology courses, said she didn't notice anything out of the ordinary.

"She was fine. It was a normal day," Lattimore said.

Bishop had worked closely for three years with Dick Reeves, who had been CEO of BizTech, which had been working with her to market a cell incubator she invented to replace traditional equipment used in live cell cultures. Bishop often mentioned the issue of tenure in their discussions, Reeves said.

"It was important to her," he said.

However, the two had spoken as early as Wednesday, and Reeves said she showed no signs of distress.

Killed in Friday's shooting were Gopi K. Podila, the chairman of the Department of Biological Sciences, and professors Adriel Johnson and Maria Ragland Davis. Three people were wounded. Two of them - Joseph Leahy and staffer Stephanie Monticciolo - were in critical condition early Sunday. The third, Luis Cruz-Vera, had been released from the hospital.

Sammie Lee Davis, Davis' husband, said in a brief phone interview that he was told a faculty member got angry while discussing tenure at the meeting and started shooting. He said his wife had described Bishop as "not being able to deal with reality" and "not as good as she thought she was."

Bishop was calm as she got into a police car Friday, denying that the shootings occurred. "It didn't happen. There's no way. ... They are still alive."

JackOSU
02-15-10, 11:32
Just goes to show you that all the CRAZIES are educated at Haaarrrrrvard....oh wait doesn't that one guy who's "in charge" have a degree from that place???

Irish
02-15-10, 12:51
CNN Video report here http://www.cnn.com/2010/CRIME/02/15/alabama.shooting/index.html?hpt=T1

John_Wayne777
02-15-10, 13:11
Her track record is worse than Hassan's. :rolleyes:

Irish
02-15-10, 13:16
Her track record is worse than Hassan's. :rolleyes:

What gets me is 3 shots fired from a shotgun and killing her brother was an accident?!? Then the prime suspect in a mail bombing attempt... no pattern of craziness here.

dbrowne1
02-15-10, 13:47
Interesting to note she shot and killed her brother in 1986 which was thought to be an accident at the time.

I don't get the impression that most of the people involved in the investigation thought it was an "accident." Given that she fired three times inside the house (not once, which one could plausibly call an accident) after arguing with her brother (clear motive), and then ran outside and tried to carjack somebody with the shotgun ... call me crazy, but it sure doesn't look like an accident to me.

Even the current police chief is all but saying she was let off too easy on that incident. It sounds like they were booking her and the then-chief told them to let her go for reasons that remain unclear.

Volucris
02-15-10, 14:41
This is the worst case scenario of a loony slipping through the cracks of our justice system. Unfortunate that this has happened and even more unfortunate that there were so many chances to apprehend her before hand. Considering she's the only one to pop so far I say we're still doing pretty good. I feel sorry for the friends and family of the victims; they didn't deserve this.

Agile53
02-15-10, 14:42
Nah JackOSU, some of them got their schooling in Columbus :)

Agile, a Maize & Blue man.

JackOSU
02-15-10, 23:58
Nah JackOSU, some of them got their schooling in Columbus :)

Agile, a Maize & Blue man.

Haaahaaaa...so how's GayROD working out for you guys again??

See avatar!! ;)

SkiDevil
02-16-10, 03:35
Her track record is worse than Hassan's. :rolleyes:

I was thinking the same thing after hearing the initial reports of this incident as well.

Robb Jensen
02-16-10, 07:42
http://www.aolnews.com/2010/02/14/professor-accused-in-shootings-was-suspect-in-bomb-plot/19358072/

(Feb. 14) -- The college professor and mother of four who is charged with opening fire on a group of colleagues at the University of Alabama Friday was also eyed as a suspect in the attempted mail bombing of a Harvard professor 17 years ago.

Paul Rosenberg, a medical school professor and doctor at Boston Children's Hospital, was opening mail after returning from vacation in 1993 when he spotted wires and a cylinder inside a package addressed to him, according to the Boston Globe. Two pipe bombs were stuffed inside the package.

A federal investigation focused on Amy Bishop, a postdoctoral fellow who was then working at the Children's Hospital, as a suspect, a law enforcement official told the newspaper.


Huntsville Police Dept. / AP
Professor Amy Bishop, pictured in a mug shot Saturday, is accused of killing three faculty members at the University of Alabama in Huntsville, Ala.
Bishop, and her husband, Jeff Anderson, were both questioned in the case. Officials said Bishop had a motive, as Rosenberg was allegedly going to give her a negative review on her doctorate work.

Authorities have refused to discuss a motive in Friday's shooting that left three of Bishop's colleagues dead, but the neurobiologist was reportedly denied tenure -- a type of job-for-life security afforded academics -- by the University of Alabama in Huntsville and was vocal in her opposition to the decision, as well as her plan to appeal.

Officials never filed any charges against Bishop related to the mail bombs, but were also concerned about a violent incident in her past.

In 1986, Bishop shot and killed her 18-year-old brother with a shotgun at their Braintree, Mass., home. She told police at the time that she had been trying to learn how to use the gun, which her father had bought for protection, when it accidentally discharged. In all, three shots were fired: Braintree police Chief Paul Frazier said she shot once into a wall, then shot her brother, then fired a third time into the ceiling.

Authorities released her and said the episode was a tragic accident. She was never charged, though Frazier on Saturday questioned how the investigation was handled.

Some of Bishop's colleagues, including William Setzer, chairman of the department of chemistry, told The Associated Press they did not know about her brother's death.

Despite her history, relatives and students said Bishop had never suggested she might become violent, even with the looming loss of her teaching post.

Everyone from family and friends to her students at the University of Alabama in Huntsville said the intelligent and at times awkward teacher seemed normal in the hours before police say she opened fire in a faculty meeting Friday afternoon, leaving three dead and another three wounded.

Jim Anderson - the father of Bishop's husband - told The Associated Press on Sunday his son had no idea Bishop was planning the bloodshed she's accused of.

"He knew nothing. He didn't know anything," the father said. He said that the police had spoken with his son at length and that "they are doing a good job."

Police say the gun Bishop's accused of using in the Alabama shooting wasn't registered, and investigators don't know how or where she got it.

Bishop was arrested soon after the shooting and charged with capital murder. Other charges are pending. Her husband was detained and questioned by police but has not been charged.

Anderson told The Chronicle of Higher Education that he dropped his wife at the faculty meeting where the biology professor allegedly gunned down her colleagues. Bishop called her husband less than an hour later and asked to be picked up, but mentioned nothing of the shooting, Anderson said. By the time Anderson arrived to campus, his wife was in police custody.

Anderson told The Chronicle of Higher Education that he did not know his wife had a gun when he dropped her off and he did not know what specifically led to the shooting. Anderson also said he knew his wife felt the university's decision to deny her tenure was not fair, and she planned to appeal the decision to the university's Board of Trustees.

In the days and hours before the shooting, Bishop's friends, colleagues and students said she was acting like the intelligent - but odd - professor they knew.

UAH student Andrew Cole was in Bishop's anatomy class Friday morning and said she seemed perfectly normal. Kourtney Lattimore, 19, a sophomore studying nursing who had Bishop for anatomy and physiology courses, said she didn't notice anything out of the ordinary.

"She was fine. It was a normal day," Lattimore said.

Bishop had worked closely for three years with Dick Reeves, who had been CEO of BizTech, which had been working with her to market a cell incubator she invented to replace traditional equipment used in live cell cultures. Bishop often mentioned the issue of tenure in their discussions, Reeves said.

"It was important to her," he said.

However, the two had spoken as early as Wednesday, and Reeves said she showed no signs of distress.

Killed in Friday's shooting were Gopi K. Podila, the chairman of the Department of Biological Sciences, and professors Adriel Johnson and Maria Ragland Davis. Three people were wounded. Two of them - Joseph Leahy and staffer Stephanie Monticciolo - were in critical condition early Sunday. The third, Luis Cruz-Vera, had been released from the hospital.

Sammie Lee Davis, Davis' husband, said in a brief phone interview that he was told a faculty member got angry while discussing tenure at the meeting and started shooting. He said his wife had described Bishop as "not being able to deal with reality" and "not as good as she thought she was."

Bishop was calm as she got into a police car Friday, denying that the shootings occurred. "It didn't happen. There's no way. ... They are still alive."

According to this website http://crime.about.com/od/gunlawsbystate/p/gunlaws_al.htm
There is no 'gun registration' in Alabama. Me thinks some reporter got a little carried away with their creative reporting.

ForTehNguyen
02-16-10, 08:10
she accidently shot her younger brother back in 1988 or something 3x....with a shotgun. Then she was accused or something for setting a bomb.

yea :rolleyes:

ZDL
02-16-10, 08:12
*******

Alric
02-16-10, 08:19
If it wasn't a semi-auto shotgun, that police chief must have had some other motive for ruling it an accident.

ForTehNguyen
02-16-10, 08:28
http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?&articleid=1232943&format=&page=1&listingType=Loc#articleFull


A family source said Bishop, a mother of four children - the youngest a third-grade boy - was a far-left political extremist who was “obsessed” with President Obama to the point of being off-putting.