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Alabama standoff leaves a town baffled

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(MCT) — MIDLAND CITY, Ala. — Midland City is a place where things have always gone more or less according to plan. There was that time the Beck house burned down, but even then two Bibles and a picture of Christ remained untouched.

So the current crisis — a little boy kidnapped and held prisoner underground for days — has left people here struggling to find a purpose behind it. They have found none on their televisions or in local newspapers, because authorities have released little information.

On Tuesday, a gunman believed to be 65-year-old Jimmy Lee Dykes stormed a school bus, shot and killed driver Charles Poland, and dragged a 5-year-old named Ethan from the bus and into a subterranean bunker on his property. But Dykes has not, in any public way, aired a grievance. So for almost a week Midland City’s 2,300 citizens have remained suspended in horrified puzzlement.

“Just, why?” Ed Baker, a retired helicopter pilot, said Saturday.

People who know Dykes describe him as an odd and menacing presence in the neighborhood — digging strange holes in his yard, beating dogs — but they had no answers as to his motives.

“We call him Mean Man,” said Ronda Wilbur, who lives across the street from Dykes. “He killed my dog with a lead pipe.”

She said Dykes’ troubles in the neighborhood started as soon as he arrived in his travel trailer several years ago. He removed another neighbor’s mailbox, she said, and replaced it with his own. By day he would sit in a deer-hunting stand overlooking the road, glaring at children and intimidating parents.

Wilbur said her husband once had words with Dykes. “He told my husband he wouldn’t just K-I-L-L the D-O-G-S,” she said. She spelled words, because her 7-year-old granddaughter, Ava, clung to her legs. “He would do the P-E-O-P-L-E too, especially the K-I-D-S.”

He disliked children in the neighborhood, she said, because they had come onto his property at some point. But there seems to be nothing connecting Dykes with Ethan, a child with Asperger’s syndrome who didn’t make it off the school bus as quickly as his 21 schoolmates. Another boy, 12-year-old Brantley Reilly, had gotten off the same bus a few minutes earlier, and said that nothing about Ethan stood out.

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