Update: 2/16/10, 10:41 a.m.: Amy Bishop's husband, James Anderson, told investigators that he and his wife were firing guns at the shooting range shortly before she fired on her colleagues at the University. Joseph Ng, a survivor of the shooting rampage, also told investigators that the faculty meeting, where the incident occurred, initially appeared routine enough for him to be working on his manuscript before the bloodshed. Get more details here.
Update: 2/15/10, 10:05 a.m.: Police re-open investigations into Amy Bishop's violent past.
Professor Amy Bishop, 42, recently shot and killed three of her colleagues in the Biology Department at the University of Alabama-Huntsville. The professor is charged with capital murder and more charges are likely. She could face the death penalty if convicted.
Watch the latest developments of the case here:
"She began to talk about her problems getting tenure in a very forceful and animated way, saying it was unfair," an anonymous source said.
As Bishop was led away, she was asked by a reporter what happened. "It didn't happen. ... They are still alive," she said in a low voice, shaking her head.
This is a terrible tragedy, but perhaps there is something we can learn from this. There are three thoughts I have as we analyze the shooting at the University of Alabama-Huntsville and Amy Bishop's alleged behavior:
1) According to reports I've received, two of the professors Bishop killed were black: This is not to say that the individuals were targeted for being black, but it certainly makes one wonder if race was a factor in this shooting. Again, there is not enough evidence to say that this is the case.
2) Amy Bishop shot her brother in 1986: Although the original shooting was an accident, the case has been recommended for additional investigation. If it is indeed the case that she shot her brother deliberately, this might argue that Bishop had a propensity toward violence already. Her erratic behavior may have been a warning sign to other faculty that she needed to be removed from the department.
3) Amy Bishop's issues with tenure are not uncommon: There have been scores of cases in the past of graduate students or faculty engaging in violent acts as a result of the stresses of academia. The tenure process is incredibly ambiguous and politicized, leading to some faculty even losing their sanity. Black scholars are exposed to the challenges of tenure more than anyone, since we are different, and being different is not rewarded in academia. While I am not one to say that Amy Bishop did or did not deserve tenure, it is easy to wonder if this Harvard-educated scholar was good enough to meet the standards of University of Alabama-Huntsville. The tenure process is often a non-transparent affair in which dirty tricks are played behind closed doors (I've seen some doozies, I assure you). People take care of their friends and use tenure as a way to get rid of their enemies, thus escalating the amount of hostility in many academic departments across America.
Of course, Amy Bishop's challenges with tenure do not justify her alleged behavior. At the same time, the severe mental anguish caused by an ultimately unfair set of policies and practices should be reviewed and reconsidered by us all. I was personally denied tenure for what many felt to be unjust political reasons (no black man has ever been recommended for tenure by my business school - Syracuse University - in more than 100 years of operating history), so I know the stress of the process firsthand. Personally, I was lucky to have obtained the kind of support which allowed me to detach from the petty politics of those around me (Rev. Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton, Michael Eric Dyson and Dr. Julianne Malveaux came to support me), but there are many other scholars who invest their lives in to this process and don't have the support they need to ensure a level playing field. The lifelong investment in the tenure process can often lead to unhealthy reactions to cheap political tricks that keep qualified scholars from getting the rewards they deserve. Excluding the shooting by Professor Amy Bishop (which none of us can condone), I can also point to other cases of campus violence that resulted directly from either tenure denials, unapproved dissertations, etc. While we have the right to decide who gets hired and fired, "business as usual" in academia often puts scholars in the uncomfortable position of either having their lives inexplicably altered or being forced to destroy the life of someone who has dedicated their life to academic success. The potential for volatile behavior becomes quite high under these circumstances.
In order to deal with the threat of workplace violence, academia needs additional oversight. We need independent, outside entities to review every inch of the tenure and hiring process to ensure that the rules are being applied fairly. Black scholars should be especially diligent in pushing for such advocacy, in large part because we are the ones who are most victimized by unjust tenure denials every year. Additionally, it is the absolute fear of this academic terrorism (where people destroy your career and give you no recourse to respond) which causes us to lose our academic souls. Instead of doing good scholarly work to help our communities, we spend years hiding quietly and humbly in the intellectual shadows (biding our time) in hopes that our lifelong quest for tenure is not disrupted by a racist holding a grudge.
Obviously, Amy Bishop has some psychological issues, so her response to the academic environment was ultimately an unhealthy one. At the same time, a part of me wonders if this incident would have occurred had Dr. Bishop felt that she had some kind of recourse to air her grievances. Perhaps if she'd felt that she were getting a truly unbiased appeal, she would not have believed her back to be against the wall. Given that her husband, also a highly trained scholar, is considered a "person of interest," we can see just how deep the resentment went within her family.
"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.
It is possible that if Dr. Amy Bishop felt that she had access to unbiased options, I would argue that she may not have chosen to possibly spend the rest of her life in prison. I assume that resorting to violence was the last option for this hard-working, Harvard-educated scholar, since she'd rationally chosen to appeal her original tenure decision. As universities reconsider their responses to workplace violence, we must remind ourselves that we cannot toy with the livelihoods of employees without running the risk of people getting hurt. The University of Alabama Huntsville shooting was not, to be honest, as isolated of an instance as we might think. While actual violence may be rare, the potential for violence is always around us. The focus should not only be our collective outrage at Amy Bishop's highly inappropriate behavior, we've also got to be smart and courageous enough to challenge the tenure process itself.
Dr. Boyce Watkins is the founder of the Your Black World Coalition. To have Dr. Boyce commentary delivered to your email, please click here. 


Comments: (120)
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By: Mimi on 2/17/2010 8:13PM
SAMMY,
THIS IS A RACE THING....NOT BASED ON WHO THIS BISHOP WOMAN KILLED BUT BASED ON THE FACT THAT SHE KILLED HER BROTHER WHEN SHE WAS 20 YEARS OLD AND YET HER RECORD IS SPOTLESS. HOW IS THAT POSSIBLE?
NO RECORD AT ALL OF THE INCIDENT...HMMMM...I WONDER WHY?
THIS WOMAN SHOT AT HER BROTHER THREE TIMES PRIOR TO ENDING HIS LIFE WITH A SHOT GUN BLAST TO THE CHEST.
THIS WOMAN THEN WENT OUT INTO THE STREET WITH A LOADED SHOT GUN AND AIMED IT A PASSING VEHICLE.
THIS WOMAN AT THE AGE OF 20...WHEN FINALLY CAUGHT BY THE POLICE AFTER FLEEING THE SCENE OF THE CRIME WAS CAUGHT WITH A SHOT GUN THAT HAD A ROUND IN THE CHAMBER AND A ROUND IN HER POCKET.
THIS WOMAN WAS NEVER CHARGED WITH A CRIME. HER RECORD WAS SPOTLESS.
IT IS A RACE THING BECAUSE IF SHE WERE BLACK, SHE WOULD HAVE HAD A RECORD, SHE WOULD NOT HAVE HAD THAT JOB AND THEREFORE TENURE WOULD NEVER HAD BEEN AN ISSUE WHICH RESULTED IN THE DEATHS OF THREE MORE PEOPLE BY THE HANDS OF A PSYCHOPATH.
IF THIS WAS NOT A RACE THING ....THIS WOMAN WOULD HAVE SERVED TIME WHEN SHE WAS 20 YEARS OLD, SHE WOULD HAVE HAD A RECORD, AND TENURE WOULD NOT HAVE BEEN AN ISSUE FOR HER BECAUSE SHE WOULD NOT HAVE HAD THAT JOB DUE TO HER RECORD.
IT IS A RACE THING....BECAUSE THE NEWS REPORTS ARE REPORTING THAT THE RECORDS INVOLVING THE 1986 SLAYING OF HER BROTHER ARE MISSING.
NOW MAYBE YOU ARE THE ONE THAT IS UNABLE TO COMPREHEND "A RACE THING"....BUT I AM NOT.
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By: sherman on 2/17/2010 7:03PM
Thanks Sammy, for the very insightful comment from an eyewitness who was actually there. It is so good to hear the truth, instead of inciteful rhetoric from an disgruntled, wannabe tenured, so-called professor, who believes everything is racial because he has been denied tenure at Syracuse University, simply because of his race ( Even though he also lacks credibility).
As you stated, there were 6 people shot out of the 12 total that was in the room, and more would have been shot, if not for the re-load, and the heroic actions of the others, who rushed the shooter, and pushed her out the door. Nowhere, is there any insinuation or mention of racial overtone.
What this so called Dr. Boyce, is doing is trying to profit off of race baiting, to give him more ammunition in his case against Syracuse, and also his continued employment as some race expert, on those news programs (IE,he is race hustling), all at the expense of further dividing, and continuing racial hatred.
Dr. Boyce, has lost any credibility that he may have once had, and has no honor. Only a person with mental deficiencies, would give his thoughts or comments any value.
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By: e on 2/18/2010 11:35AM
I agree with Sheryl about the inside politics of worksites. It's enough to kill over.
But seriously people, to our shooter, they were all martians behaving disrespectfully to her. She needed to send a message to all that she wasn't going to take it any more. It is moments like this that we should all step back and pause and understand the lesson.
The real message here is that your actions have consequences and if you never relent,If you keep messin' with people, you should expect to be shot.
This was not a racist act because the shooter would have treated everyone in the room with the same measure of respect they gave her. If they treated her like she was crazy, what more could you expect from a crazy woman?
For every measure of disrespect you visit upon another, a like measure is your due. If any of you understand Righard Wright and Bigger Tom, there is an equation here. Do unto others as they would have done unto you. That is a simple enough law. If you want to "get back" expect the worst.
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By: Eli on 2/18/2010 11:48AM
Not sure if this has been mentioned, but this professor was also arrested for assault in 2002. She went to an IHOP and asked for a booster seat for her child. There was another mother there using the last one. She walked up to her and strated cussing at her. When the other mom wouldn't give up the booster seat, Bishop punched her in the head. Some reports say she was given probation (http://blog.al.com/breaking/2010/02/amy_bishop_charged_with_2002_a.html) and some say the case was dismissed (http://www.thebostonchannel.com/news/22587820/detail.html) This is a woman that is compeltely unbalanced, and yet seems to have never been to prison, despite her many violent acts. I feel that the larger point to be made is less how race played into who the victims were and more how race played into Bishop constantly 'getting away with it'. I mean, we're talking about killing her brother, possibly mailing pipe bombs, pointing a shotgun at employees of a used car dealership, assaulting a mother at an IHOP and killing 3 UAH professors before she is actually taken to prison on a serious charge.
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By: Watcher Watchmen on 2/18/2010 12:00PM
This is nothing new. She's just another who fell through the systematically protective SCREEN that keeps white criminals HIDDEN, UNCONVICTED and CLEAN.
And contributes to the reasons why their crimes "APPEAR" lower than they really are.
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By: rh on 2/18/2010 1:36PM
WHITE PEOPLE ARE SPOILED OVER PRIVILAGED CHILDREN, WHO ARE SCARED EVERYONE IS OUT TO GET THEM BECAUSE OF THE EVIL THEY HAVE DONE OTHERS. tHEY TRY TO MAKE IT UP BY ADOPTING BLACK CHILDREN, FEEDING BLACK COUNTRIES, SO THEY MAY HAVE YOU TAKE YOUR EYES OFF THE FACT OF DOMINATING YOUR COUNTRY. As I write a white man has tried to kill his family and took his private plane that he owns and ran it into a building filled with people, this happened in Austin Texas. The media is so busy making up excuses for his psychotic behavior, because he is white and a man of great means.
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By: sherman on 2/18/2010 3:05PM
I am Black, and proudly so, but some of you other Blacks that comment on here, sometimes makes me ashamed of it. When are you going to realize that these same white people that you claim to despise so much, has a place in your brain, that can be pushed at will. You spend most of your time concentrating on the white man, instead of using this energy to become independent. You tend to want to put blame at every doorstep but your own.
There is not one shred of evidence, that race played any part in this crazy woman's action. The fact that she got away with killing her own brother, and also with assaulting another woman, could be just the result of her privileged status as a professor; Her brother and the other woman were white, and I don't think that being white alone, would have exempted her from prosecution.
My guess is that even if she had killed all twelve of the people in that room, and only two of them happened to be black, the same idiots on here making this racial now, would still persist that it were. People, you need to stop, or you will become that, what you so mostly claim to despise.
Dr. Boyce, doesn't give a damn about anything, but himself. He is an professional race hustler, who makes his money by exploiting the race issue.
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By: Plaintalk2010 on 2/18/2010 6:23PM
I wonder why they did not originally report this as a white lady killing three people, two of them Black. I had to read several reports before discovering this. Like you said, not that these men were killed because they were black, but everything should be on the table at this point.
http://www.plaintalk2010.com
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By: George Harrison on 2/19/2010 3:09PM
I have got to add a commit. The shooter was a well known uber-liberal. She was well known for very vocal support of The president. So much so that Democrats and supporters of the President said she was off-putting and embarrassing. Two of the six people she shot were African-American. To now imply she was some kind of closet raciest is shocking. This is a rush to judgment based of the fact the shooter was white. Please do not cheapen the work and sacrifice of others just to score a cheap shoot.
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By: Carol cdl Justice on 2/24/2010 5:33PM
I would like to know why there is no decent information or photos of the black professors that were killed.
They deserve respect. It's very difficult being a black professional.
I got a very quick glimpse of them on Channel 14 which is a news station in Charlotte NC.
Not one paper has carried any information or photos of them.
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