Late-notice faculty removals have also become more commonplace, according to Melton, stemming in part from Falwell's stated desire to tame the teaching corps. "He considers the faculty to be disposable beasts of burden," Melton says. Last summer, 14 professors at Liberty's School of Education were suddenly told that their contracts would not be renewed as part of what former Liberty spokesman Len Stevens called a "reorganization." This June, a dozen faculty members at Liberty's School of Divinity were notified that their contracts would not be renewed. By that late in the year, it is too late to find another job in higher education for the fall.

For former faculty members, Liberty's culture of fear can live on. The school often requires terminated professors to sign a nondisclosure agreement if they want their severance packages, several told me - a practice that is extremely uncommon in higher education, according to Robert Bezemek, a California lawyer who represents labor unions at universities. (As Melton puts it, "They force this NDA on you by leveraging the ability to feed your family against you.") Even former teachers who hadn't signed NDAs told me they feared that talking to me on the record would somehow get them blacklisted from jobs elsewhere or imperil their friends who still work at Liberty. One thought my request to speak with him was a trap, calling my previous connection with the school "fishy." When I contacted another for an interview, she warned me, "The university is on to you." I confess I harbor a certain paranoia, too, from years of being watched at the Champion. Melton and several other current and former members of the faculty told me that they believe the administration surveils everything they do on Liberty's server, tracking when instructors complete a task late and searching for evidence of "disloyalty" to Liberty or Falwell, as a former professor put it. Another onetime instructor declined to use his university-issued laptop because he thought Liberty had equipped it with spyware.