Author Topic: Another shooting at a University  (Read 3915 times)

Rob10ring

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Re: Another shooting at a University
« Reply #10 on: February 14, 2010, 04:13:10 AM »
3 shots with a shotgun is no accident! Some well connected daddy got his daughter off, so she could later kill and maim others! Funny how files related to the "accidental" shooting disappeared.

http://www.cnn.com/2010/CRIME/02/13/alabama.university.shooting/index.html?hpt=T1

fightingquaker13

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Re: Another shooting at a University
« Reply #11 on: February 14, 2010, 04:29:31 AM »
3 shots with a shotgun is no accident! Some well connected daddy got his daughter off, so she could later kill and maim others! Funny how files related to the "accidental" shooting disappeared.

http://www.cnn.com/2010/CRIME/02/13/alabama.university.shooting/index.html?hpt=T1
3 shots??? Once is an oopsie, the consequece of an untrained bone head with a gun. Three? Unless thet shotgun was made by toyota we have a problem. ;D
FQ13

tombogan03884

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Re: Another shooting at a University
« Reply #12 on: March 15, 2011, 07:50:46 PM »
Update :

http://www.boston.com/news/local/breaking_news/2011/03/bishop_indicted.html

By John M. Guilfoil, Globe Staff

An Alabama grand jury has formally indicted Amy Bishop on capital murder and attempted murder charges stemming from the February 2010 University of Alabama Huntsville shootings.

The Huntsville Times reported online today that Madison County District Attorney Rob Broussard said the indictments came down last week.

Bishop was indicted on charges she killed three fellow professors: Maria Ragland Davis, Adriel Johnson, and department chairman Gopi Podila during a Feb. 12, 2010 faculty meeting in which Bishop was denied tenure at the university as a biology professor. She is also accused of shooting and wounding three other faculty members.

The capital charges carry the possibility that Bishop will be sentenced to death. Broussard’s office did not indicate whether it planned to pursue the death penalty, according to the Huntsville Times.

Calls to Broussard’s office and to Bishop’s attorney, Roy Miller, were not returned tonight.

Bishop made local headlines last year after the Globe reported that she shot and killed her brother, Seth, in 1986 with a shotgun blast.

The shooting was quickly ruled accidental by Braintree police, but Chief Paul Frazier, in a stunning Feb. 14, 2010 press conference, said the investigation was mishandled and swept under the rug by the department, possibly because Bishop’s mother was a town official and told police the shooting was an accident.


In June, the Norfolk district attorney’s office, which re-opened the case amidst the scrutiny, indicted Bishop for first-degree murder.

The Globe revealed a pattern of odd behavior from Bishop in the years after the killing of her brother, including an outburst against a woman in 2002 at a Peabody pancake house. Bishop, and her husband, James Anderson, were also suspects in the 1993 attempted bombing at the Newton home of Dr. Paul Rosenberg, a Harvard Medical School professor and physician at Children’s Hospital Boston. They were never charged.

tt11758

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Re: Another shooting at a University
« Reply #13 on: March 16, 2011, 09:48:59 AM »
Update :

http://www.boston.com/news/local/breaking_news/2011/03/bishop_indicted.html

By John M. Guilfoil, Globe Staff

An Alabama grand jury has formally indicted Amy Bishop on capital murder and attempted murder charges stemming from the February 2010 University of Alabama Huntsville shootings.

The Huntsville Times reported online today that Madison County District Attorney Rob Broussard said the indictments came down last week.

Bishop was indicted on charges she killed three fellow professors: Maria Ragland Davis, Adriel Johnson, and department chairman Gopi Podila during a Feb. 12, 2010 faculty meeting in which Bishop was denied tenure at the university as a biology professor. She is also accused of shooting and wounding three other faculty members.

The capital charges carry the possibility that Bishop will be sentenced to death. Broussard’s office did not indicate whether it planned to pursue the death penalty, according to the Huntsville Times.

Calls to Broussard’s office and to Bishop’s attorney, Roy Miller, were not returned tonight.

Bishop made local headlines last year after the Globe reported that she shot and killed her brother, Seth, in 1986 with a shotgun blast.

The shooting was quickly ruled accidental by Braintree police, but Chief Paul Frazier, in a stunning Feb. 14, 2010 press conference, said the investigation was mishandled and swept under the rug by the department, possibly because Bishop’s mother was a town official and told police the shooting was an accident.


In June, the Norfolk district attorney’s office, which re-opened the case amidst the scrutiny, indicted Bishop for first-degree murder.

The Globe revealed a pattern of odd behavior from Bishop in the years after the killing of her brother, including an outburst against a woman in 2002 at a Peabody pancake house. Bishop, and her husband, James Anderson, were also suspects in the 1993 attempted bombing at the Newton home of Dr. Paul Rosenberg, a Harvard Medical School professor and physician at Children’s Hospital Boston. They were never charged.



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