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Alabama standoff leaves a town baffled

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“He just seemed like everybody else,” he said.

When the incident began, Wilbur said, authorities quickly arrived. Her son, Kyle, used his phone to record officers across the street using an amplifier to communicate with Dykes in the first moments of the crisis:

“You need to lay down any weapons you have and approach the police,” a voice blares across Dykes’ property. “This is not going to fix itself.”

And then more sharply: “We are not going away.”

Wilbur said Dykes had always raved about various governmental conspiracies, but nothing that offered insight to his thinking. “I don’t know why he’s doing this,” she said.

In the absence of answers, people in Midland City have turned to the only thing that remains: faith. Saturday afternoon a few dozen people gathered at a gazebo outside City Hall, to pray for the boy, his family and his bus driver’s family. Someone posted a sign with a Twitter hashtag — #RescueEthan — and others sang “Amazing Grace.”

“As you lift your candle, and as you bow your head, remember these families,” said Libby Walden, known around town as Granny. She made an emotional declaration: “I believe Ethan will come out of that bunker. And Mr. Dykes will come out a changed man.”

Joshua Tucker, 20, arranged the vigil.

“We can’t physically go down in the bunker and help him,” he said. “So we are just doing everything we can do instead.”

Dykes’ neighborhood sits off U.S. Highway 231, where authorities used a small church and its parking lot as a command post and helipad. Across the highway, television crews set up cameras for live feeds.

Helicopters and satellite trucks are strange creatures in Midland City. But locals reacted with hospitality, bringing truckloads of food to the federal and local police units at the church. Pastor Melvin White barbecued chicken for the media.

“Everybody needs to eat,” he said.

Dale County Sheriff Wally Olson has held news conferences each morning and evening, but details are few. He spoke for just a few seconds Saturday, and seemed to be addressing Dykes himself. “I want to thank him for taking care of our boy,” he said.

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