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Agents rescue Alabama boy from bunker, kill kidnapper

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(MCT) — A 5-year-old Alabama boy held hostage in an underground bunker for nearly a week was rescued Monday in a swift operation that left the kidnapper dead, federal authorities announced.

The boy, identified only as Ethan, was whisked to safety and was “doing fine,” an FBI agent told reporters in Midland City, Ala. Agents feared the boy was in “imminent danger” after they spotted 65-year-old Jimmy Lee Dykes holding a gun.

Negotiations with the gunman had deteriorated over the previous 24 hours, according to FBI Special Agent Stephen E. Richardson, prompting agents to storm the bunker at 3:12 p.m. Central time.

“The subject is deceased,” Richardson said of Dykes, but he declined to provide details during a brief news conference late Monday afternoon. Residents described hearing an explosion and gunshots.

“It got really tough to negotiate with him,” Dale County Sheriff Wally Olson told reporters later.

Ethan was reunited with his mother at a hospital in nearby Dothan, Ala. “He’s laughing, joking, playing, eating — the things you’d expect of a 5- or 6-year-old,” Richardson said at an evening briefing.

The rescue ended the nearly weeklong standoff in a rural corner of southeastern Alabama that began when Dykes boarded a schoolbus Jan. 29 and shot the driver to death, then abducted Ethan.

Hospital officials declined to discuss Ethan’s condition.

“By the grace of God, he’s OK,” Olson said.

Citing the ongoing investigation, authorities revealed little at the evening briefing. Asked how agents could see that Dykes was holding a gun, Olson replied: “Using tactics and things of that nature.”

Agents had lowered a camera into the bunker and were closely watching Dykes, CBS News reported, quoting unidentified federal sources. Officers created two diversions to distract Dykes, then entered the bunker from the top, the network reported.

The end of the siege brought tears of relief in Midland City, population 2,300, located deep in the Bible Belt. Residents had endured a week of tension and fear after the bus driver, Charles Poland Jr., 66, was slain trying to protect the children, followed by the standoff and delicate negotiations with Dykes through the ventilation pipe.

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