How the Alabama standoff ended - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 08:47 PM | Calgary | -7.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
World

How the Alabama standoff ended

Authorities are crediting a hidden camera and specialized training with ending a standoff with an Alabama man who had been holding a child captive in an underground bunker.

FBI used camera, specialized training to end Alabama standoff

FBI agents and Alabama State Troopers work together near the site of the bunker where a nearly week-long standoff with Jimmy Lee Dykes ended on Monday. (Mark Wallheiser/Getty Images)

Authorities are crediting a hidden camera and specialized training with ending a standoff with an Alabama man who had been holding a child captive in an underground bunker.

The FBI Hostage Rescue Team moved in on hostage-taker and suspected murderer Jimmy Lee Dykes, 65, on Monday night, killing the man and rescuing Ethan, the five-year-old boy he had been holding captive in a bunker near Midland City in southeastern Alabama.

Dykes had been holed up in the underground bunker since shooting school bus driver Charles Albert Poland Jr. to death and taking the boy.

The FBIs Steve Richardson said authorities stormed the bunkerabout five square metres of floor space about one metre underground after Dykes was seen with a gun, leading officers to conclude the boy was in imminent danger.

Authorities were able to peer inside the bunker with a camera they managed to get into the underground structure, NPR reports. Video showed Dykes taking care of the boy and sleeping peacefully during the standoffs first days, but later appearing agitated, sources told NPR.

Its not clear how the camera was placed in the bunker, but authorities were able to speak directly with Dykes through a plastic pipe. The pipe also allowed officials to send items like food and the boys medicine into the bunker.

FBI mum on negotiation tactics

The FBI has been tight-lipped about its negotiations with Dykes, a retired trucker who served in the Navy during the Vietnam War era. Richardson said talks had been deteriorating during the 24 hours before the rescue.

"He always said hed never be taken alive," said Roger Arnold, an acquaintance of Dykes. "I knew hed never come out of there."

Meanwhile, FBI agents trained for the takedown using a mock model of Dykes bunker, ABC News, citing unnamed sources, reported.

The FBI has not released details of their raid on the bunker, nor have they said how Dykes was killed. Neighbours described hearing what sounded like gunshots around the time authorities moved in on the compound.

Dale County Sheriff Wally Olson said Dykes was armed when officers entered the bunker to rescue the child. He said the boy was threatened but declined to elaborate.

"That's why we went inside to save the child," Olson said.

Investigators continue to sweep Dykes property for explosives and other weapons on Tuesday.