BOULDER, Colo. - The University of Colorado's governing board on Tuesday
fired a professor whose essay likening some Sept. 11 victims to a Nazi leader
provoked national outrage and led to an investigation of research misconduct.
 University of Colorado professor Ward Churchill, is followed
by his attorney David Lane as he arrives for a special meeting of the
Board of Regents considering his dismissal at the university on Tuesday,
July 24, 2007, in Boulder, Colo. [AP]
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Ward Churchill, who had vowed to
sue if the Board of Regents took action against him, said immediately after the
8-1 vote was announced: "New game, new game."
Three faculty committees had accused Churchill of plagiarism, falsification
and other misconduct. The research allegations stem from some of Churchill's
other writings, although the investigation began after the controversy over his
Sept. 11 essay.
"The decision was really pretty basic," said university President Hank Brown,
adding that the school had little choice but to fire Churchill to protect the
integrity of the university's research.
"The individual did not express regret, did not apologize, did not indicate a
willingness to refrain from this type of falsification in the future," Brown
said.
Churchill's essay mentioning Sept. 11 victims and Nazi leader Adolf Eichmann
prompted a chorus of demands for his firing, but university officials concluded
it was protected speech under the First Amendment.
Brown had recommended in May that the regents fire Churchill after faculty
committees accused him of misconduct in some of his academic writing. The
allegations included misrepresenting the effects of federal laws on American
Indians, fabricating evidence that the Army deliberately spread smallpox to
Mandan Indians in 1837, and claiming the work of a Canadian environmental group
as his own.
But the essay that thrust Churchill into the national spotlight, titled "Some
People Push Back: On the Justice of Roosting Chickens," was not part of the
investigation.
That essay and a follow-up book argued that the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist
attacks were a response to a long history of US abuses. Churchill said those
killed in the World Trade Center collapse were "a technocratic corps at the very
heart of America's global financial empire" and called them "little Eichmanns."
Churchill has said Eichmann was a bureaucrat who carried out policies like
the Holocaust that were planned by others but was still responsible for his own
actions.
Churchill wrote the piece shortly after the attacks, but it drew little
notice until 2005, when a professor at Hamilton College in upstate New York
called attention to it when Churchill was invited to speak there.
In the uproar that followed, the regents apologized to "all Americans" for
the essay, and the Colorado Legislature labeled Churchill's remarks "evil and
inflammatory."
Bill Owens, then governor of Colorado, said Churchill should be fired, and
George Pataki, then governor of New York, called Churchill a "bigoted terrorist
supporter."
School officials concluded Churchill couldn't be dismissed because he was
exercising his First Amendment rights. But they launched the investigation into
his research in other work.
A faculty committee and an interim chancellor recommended Churchill be fired.
When a second committee reviewed the case, three of its five members recommended
a suspension. The other two said he should be fired.
Churchill remained on the university payroll but had been out of the
classroom since spring 2006, first because he was on leave and later because the
school relieved him of teaching duties after the interim chancellor recommended
he be fired.
The lone no vote on Tuesday came from Regent Cindy Carlisle, who was not
immediately available for comment.