Boston

Hostage drama stretches into third day after Alabama school bus shooting

Law enforcement officials walk near the scene of a shooting and hostage taking in Midland City, Alabama.

A gunman suspected of fatally shooting an Alabama school bus driver before holing up in an underground bunker with a young child is a Vietnam veteran with anti-government views, authorities and an organization that tracks hate groups said.

Law enforcement officials from multiple agencies were bivouacked near the bunker in Midland City but offered few details about a standoff with the shooter that stretched into its second day on Wednesday.

Authorities said driver Charles Albert Poland Jr., 66, was killed after the gunman boarded a bus ferrying more than 20 children home from school on Tuesday.

The suspect demanded the driver let a student off the bus, Alabama media reported. When Poland refused, the man boarded the bus and shot the driver before taking a 6-year-old kindergarten student and fleeing the scene.

The shooting and subsequent hostage drama came as a national debate rages over gun violence, especially in schools, after a gunman shot dead 20 students and six staff members at a Connecticut elementary school last month.

In Alabama on Wednesday night, the suspected gunman remained holed up with the boy in the underground bunker on his property down a dirt road. Any efforts to negotiate with the man, or to stage a hostage rescue operation, were shrouded in secrecy with authorities declining to comment.

Television images showed security force officers, clad in camouflage uniforms and brandishing assault rifles, patrolling the area.

An Alabama legislator, Representative Steve Clouse, told reporters the hostage suffered from Asperger’s Syndrome and ADHD but had apparently been able to receive his medication while held captive. The Dale County Sheriff’s Department said the child was not believed to have been harmed.

Schools in the area of the Alabama shooting were closed on Wednesday and will remain shuttered for the rest of the week.

DRIVER HAILED AS HERO

Dale County Superintendent Donny Bynum lauded Poland as “a hero … who gave his life to protect 21 students who are now home safely with their families.”

The superintendent’s assistant said the young boy still being held by the gunman appeared to have been chosen at random.

“Emotions are high, and it’s a struggle for us all to make sense of something so senseless, but let us keep this young student, his family and Mr. Poland’s family in our thoughts and prayers,” Bynum said in a statement.

The Southern Poverty Law Center reported on its Hatewatch blog that a chief investigator with the Dale County Sheriff’s Office identified the gunman as 65-year-old Jimmy Lee Dykes, although Reuters could not independently verify the gunman’s identity.

Investigator Tim Byrd said Dykes’ friends and neighbors described him as a “survivalist” who did not trust the government, according to the law center blog.

“He was standoffish, didn’t socialize or have any contact with anybody,” Byrd told Hatewatch.

Dykes had not been on the law center’s radar before the shooting and standoff, and there was nothing to suggest he was a member of any hate group, said senior fellow Mark Potok.

“What it looks like is that he’s some kind of anti-government radical and survivalist,” Potok told Reuters. “And exactly what that means, we don’t know.”

Court records show Dykes had been due to appear for a bench trial on Wednesday following his arrest last month on a menacing charge.

James Edward Davis, a neighbor of Dykes, told CNN the arrest stemmed from an incident on December 10 when Dykes pulled a gun on him and his young daughter. According to Davis, Dykes was upset because he believed Davis had driven onto his property. Dykes fired two gunshots as Davis sped off in his car, he said.

“This man has been an accident waiting to happen. He’s been a ticking time bomb,” Ronda Wilbur, another neighbor of Dykes, told CNN, complaining he had killed her family dog by beating it with a lead pipe and then bragged about it to her husband.

“He got increasingly more bizarre. He spent most of the last two years moving concrete blocks around and digging, constantly digging and moving dirt,” she said of Dykes.

Wilbur and other neighbors said Dykes had moved into the area about two years ago and kept mostly to himself.


News
Entertainment
Sports
Lifestyle
International

Saudi Arabia religious police takes issue with Twitter

While many people in Saudi Arabia may be using Twitter, it doesn't mean some Saudi officials are happy with that.

Local

Boston looks to curb bicycle injuries as ridership…

A new, comprehensive report on bicycling trends in Boston reveals a spikes in ridership and a slight increase in rider injuries.

Local

Alleged extortionist nabbed in booby trap

A Roxbury woman is accused of extortion after she tried to get money from a man after a minor car crash so she could get breast implants.

International

U.S. slams Japanese mayor's sex-slave comments as 'offensive'

The United States condemned as "outrageous and offensive" comments by the mayor of the Japanese city of Osaka who said this week that Japan's military brothels during World War Two…

Gossip

Jessica Walter on 'Arrested Development': The Bluth is…

For Jessica Walter, the forthcoming return of "Arrested Development" offers a reassuring reminder that her career has transcended not just different genres, but different generations.

Arts

There is a method to the beautiful madness…

There's both "Method and Madness" aplenty in José Mateo Ballet Theatre's final program of the season

Television

Summer TV Guide: What you'll be watching

What the networks have in store

Entertainment

All hail the First Lady: Eve is back…

It’s been awhile since hip-hip artist Eve released an album — we haven’t heard much from the Ruff Rider’s First Lady since 2004’s “Eve-loution” — which had a lot of…

Auto racing

Report: Dick Trickle, former NASCAR driver, dead of…

Report: Dick Trickle, former NASCAR driver, dead of apparent suicide

MLB

Living the Fantasy: Early NFL depth charts

Adam Levitan talks fantasy sports

NFL

Chargers go after Freeney, Pats still in mix?

Chargers go after Dwight Freeney, Patriots still in mix?

NBA

Rivers to return as Celtics coach in 2013-14

Doc Rivers to return as Boston Celtics head coach in 2013-14

Food

Super smoothies by Julie Morris

Julie Morris, talk smoothies and shares her favorite recipe from her new book "Superfood Smoothies."

Food

[Nosh On] Urban Picnics: Dine in the great…

The mercury in our thermometer is finally on the rise, which means that patio dining around town is similarly peaking. We sought out two new, out-of-the way patios to get…

Entertainment

With Urban Hops, the Urban Grape has found…

Don't consider yourself a beer drinker? The Urban Grape, purveyors of one of the best wine and spirits collections in this town, is set to prove you wrong with their…

Food

The Five Stages of Lunch at Bone Daddy's…

It seems that after two years on the mean streets of Boston as food truck Go Fish!, mobile eats mastermind Brother Trucker has decided that burgers are where it’s at.…