Slain hostage's family prays for 2 still held



Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's group threatens to kill another hostage in 24 hours.
HILLSDALE, Mich. (AP) -- Through their grief and anger, relatives of an American construction worker beheaded in Iraq extended prayers for an American and a Briton still in captivity and threatened with the same fate.
A video posted Monday on a Web site showed the decapitation of a man identified as contractor Eugene Armstrong. Armstrong and two other construction workers, American Jack Hensley and Briton Kenneth Bigley, were abducted Thursday.
"This is what we did not want to hear," Armstrong's family said in a statement.
Two others threatened
The militant group led by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi claimed responsibility for the slaying of Armstrong and said another hostage -- either an American or a Briton -- would be killed in 24 hours.
In the statement Monday, Cyndi Armstrong, a cousin by marriage, remembered Armstrong, known as Jack, as "a good guy" who "didn't like to stay in one place. He loved to travel."
She said his family was praying for Hensley, Bigley and their families.
Identifying brother
Armstrong's brother Frank received a call Thursday from the FBI to identify his 52-year-old brother on an earlier videotape from the kidnappers, according to the Detroit Free Press.
"It's been hard for me and my family," Frank Armstrong told the newspaper Monday from his home in Osseo, near Hillsdale.
During a prayer vigil, two ministers addressed a crowd in front of the courthouse on the small city's main street. Yellow ribbons adorned the building's bannister and trees around it, and many in the crowd carried American flags.
Donna Mackay did not know Armstrong or his family, but tears shone in her eyes as she explained that she and two friends had organized the prayer vigil before they learned of the hostage's death.
"We wanted to show the family we support them," said Mackay, 53.
Across the street from the court, homemade banners consoled: "Our prayers are with you," and "Our nation mourns your loss." The vigil featured hymns such as "Amazing Grace," patriotic songs and the Pledge of Allegiance.
"He was a member of our community. It's such a tragedy, so shocking. How can we ever understand why anybody would do this?" said Jan Tesch, 59.
Traveled all over
Armstrong grew up in Hillsdale, about 100 miles southwest of Detroit, but left the area around 1990. His construction work took him around the world; he lived in Thailand with his wife before going to Iraq.
Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., released a statement extending his sympathy to Armstrong's family. "It is our fervent hope that those who perpetrated this atrocity on an innocent man will be brought to justice," said Levin.
In Marietta, Ga., home of the other American held, friends and neighbors were seen approaching the Hensley home Monday and giving notes to a police officer posted outside.
Two children, schoolmates of the Hensleys' daughter, Sara, arrived in the afternoon with a stack of cards and messages.
Many of the cards were from members of the Pine Mountain Middle School band and orchestra, said one of the children, 13-year-old Alex Davis. He said Sara was a band member.
One of the cards, written in blue marker on computer paper, read, "Sara I'm sorry your dad went overseas but trust in God he will watch over you."
Still hoping
Speaking on CNN's "NewsNight With Aaron Brown," Patty Hensley, wife of Jack Hensley, said she was "devastated" to hear of Armstrong's death: "He was one of my husband's best friends and best co-workers, and I know his family is terribly devastated at this point."
"I'm making another attempt at pleading with these captors to please open communications with us again so that we can perhaps come to some agreement on what it is exactly they want and perhaps how those needs can be met," she said.