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The lawyer for an Alabama college professor accused of shooting three colleagues to death says he believes the teacher is insane, and that she can't remember the shootings.
Defense attorney Roy W. Miller said Thursday that Amy Bishop has severe mental problems that he believes to be paranoid schizophrenia. He said she gets in conflicts with people needlessly and then becomes obsessed with them.
Miller said in an interview with The Associated Press that Bishop's failure to obtain tenure at the University of Alabama in Huntsville was likely at the heart of the shootings, which occurred during a faculty meeting last Friday.
District Attorney Robert Broussard says he won't oppose a mental evaulation for Bishop. He says his office will be ready for an insanity defense in court.
THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (AP) _ A biology department chairman gunned down at a faculty meeting was remembered Thursday as a father figure who cared deeply about his students, the kind of professor who kept his office door open in case they needed to talk about personal problems.
Mourners hugged and cried Thursday at a memorial service for Gopi K. Podila, 52, slain last week at the University of Alabama in Huntsville along with two colleagues.
Fellow professor Amy Bishop remains jailed, accused of killing them and wounding three others. Police have not released a motive, but colleagues say she was unhappy about being denied tenure. Podila, however, had supported her tenure application.
Students said he supported them too. Former student Joy Agee recalled that he helped her overcome her anxiety about a speech to a community group by showing up in the audience.
"He told me if I got nervous during the speech to just look at him and just talk to him," she said.
At Thursday's memorial, a long line of mourners moved slowly from the funeral home lobby, down a hallway and before an open casket in the sanctuary. A private service was to be held later.
A campus memorial service will be Friday evening, and services for slain biology professors Adriel Johnson and Maria Ragland Davis are set for Friday and Saturday.
More than 100 people attended a service Thursday afternoon held by the Council on African-American Faculty, which Johnson organized at UAH in 2004 and Davis helped promote in recent years. The two were among seven black faculty members at the school at the time, a number that had grown to 14 prior to their deaths. Overall, the school has 340 full-time faculty members.
"We have not only lost two founding members of our group but we have also lost two of our biggest advocates," said Sonja Brown-Givens, the council's current president.
Professor Frank Leahy and staff assistant Stephanie Monticciolo remained hospitalized in critical condition Thursday. Another faculty member, Luis Cruz-Vera, was shot in the chest and has been released.
The shooting decimated the biology department _ of 14 members, six were killed or wounded, one is jailed, and the rest are dealing with the shock and loss of colleagues.
"Our department has pretty much been cut in half," said Leland Cseke, a faculty member. "It's devastating."
Remaining department members have been meeting in small groups, trying to help each other cope with the loss, said one of them, John Shriver.
At a school respected for its academics, and a department recognized for its work in a city of NASA engineers and other high-tech industries, the shooting left students without teachers and administrators trying to regroup.
Podila began working at UAH in 2001 and did research involving plant biology and work that can be used in the development of biofuels. He was admired for his ability to not only run the department and "keep everybody happy," Shriver said, but also to continue doing important research, travel overseas on behalf of the department and still teach.
Davis had industry experience that set her apart from other faculty members who had more academic backgrounds, said another professor, Joseph Ng.
"The students just loved her. She always had a very nice demeanor, and she was always there for the students," he said.
Johnson was known for his sense of humor and students "flocked to him" because of his willingness to open up to them, said Florence Holland, an administrator at Auburn University who knew and worked with him.
A mentor for minority students, Johnson started at UAH in 1989 and was also involved with the school's Minority Graduate Student Association.
"He was always trying to encourage underrepresented groups to go into math and science and engineering," Holland said. "Some people, when they get to a certain level of success are like 'I have mine, you get yours,' but Dr. Johnson wasn't like that. He was very willing to work with students and just overall passionate about that."
Then there was Podila, whose friends recalled his homemade pizzas and his penchant for singing and dancing. They said he had become even more caring as the years went by, and they felt cheated he was taken from them.
Trisha Collins, a former student, said he talked her through difficult years in her personal life.
"It's amazing how when people believe in you, it causes you to believe in yourself," she said in a statement.
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