Suspected Los Angeles arsonist run down by former college football player

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"I didn't know I still had it, I'm not going to lie," one-time Kentucky Wildcats wide receiver Scott Mitchell said.
Get more newsSuspected Los Angeles Arsonist Run Former College Football Player Rcna218911 - Breaking News | NBC News Cloneon

A former college football player ran down a suspected arsonist, and Los Angeles firefighters tackled hillside flames before the burning brush could get out of control, officials said Tuesday.

One-time University of Kentucky wide receiver Scott Mitchell and girlfriend Davanh DiMarco were on their regular seven-mile hike Sunday when they came upon a burning tree and a suspicious man leaving the scene.

"'Oh wait, that tree's on fire!'" Mitchell recalled DiMarco telling him. "'Hey, that guy lit that tree on fire. He started that fire. Get him!'"

By this point, that man was about 150 yards down the road. And then all of a sudden, Mitchell found himself back on an SEC gridiron in the fall of 2004 or 2005.

"Even without digging, I was able to chase that guy down," Mitchell said. "I didn't know I still had it, I'm not going to lie."

The man told the couple he was a fire marshal and started the blaze as part of a controlled burn — a tale they didn't believe given his disheveled state.

"So I asked him, 'Where's your badge, fire marshal?'" said Mitchell, a talent manager. "And there was nobody else over there, so you can reasonably deduce that he set the fire."

Other hikers helped keep the man at bay and called 911.

Andrew Wistic O’Calliham, a 43-year-old homeless man, was arraigned Tuesday on suspicion of felony arson of a forest land, prosecutors said. A lawyer representing him could not be immediately reached for comment.

The suspect was being held in lieu of $75,000 bail.

Aerial personnel and about 53 firefighters on the ground “fully extinguished all active flames” along Runyon Canyon Road in the Hollywood Hills on Sunday afternoon, according to an LAFD statement.

Mitchell and DiMarco were evacuated during the devastating Eaton Fire earlier this year, so they're hyper-sensitive to smell or sight of any flames.

"Yeah we're grateful that it ended the way it did," said DiMarco, a fashion designer.

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