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Charleston shooting: Florist who trailed suspect Dylann Roof's car and alerted police hailed a hero

Debbie Dills spotted Roof's black Hyundai and decided to follow it while driving to work in North Carolina, 250 miles from Charleston

Tom Brooks-Pollock
Friday 19 June 2015 04:14 EDT
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North Carolina florists Todd Frady and Debbie Dills. Debbie trailed Charleston shooting suspect Dylann Roof and alerted police, while driving to work
North Carolina florists Todd Frady and Debbie Dills. Debbie trailed Charleston shooting suspect Dylann Roof and alerted police, while driving to work (Gabe Whisnant/Twitter)

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A florist who was instrumental in the arrest of Dylann Roof – spotting his car, following it for 30 miles and alerting police – has been hailed a hero following the apprehension of the Charleston shootings suspect.

Debbie Dills was driving to work through Gastonia, North Carolina, when she spotted Roof’s car, a black Hyundai Elantra, sporting a South Carolina tag and a Confederate flag.

It rang a bell – and she recognised the suspect’s bowl haircut from the news – but she wasn’t sure it was him, so she rang Todd Frady, her boss at Frady’s Florist, in Kings Mountain, who called police.

Despite nerves, Ms Dills decided to trail the vehicle for around 30 miles, until Roof was arrested by local officers in Shelby, North Carolina – around 250 miles and four hours’ drive from Charleston – to bring an end to a 14-hour manhunt.

Ms Dills, from Gastonia, told the Guardian that something “just didn’t look right” about the car, which was driving along US Route 74, so she impulsively decided to follow it.

“I saw the pictures of him with the bowl cut. I said, 'I've seen that car for some reason.’ I look over, and it's got a South Carolina tag on it,” Ms Dills told the Shelby Star, her local newspaper.

“I thought, 'Nah, that's not his car.' Then, I got closer and saw that haircut. I was nervous. I had the worst feeling. Is that him or not him?”

After calling her boss, Ms Dills initially took her exit for work – but changed her mind and decided to re-join the highway to track the black Hyundai to see what happened, and whether the vehicle really belonged to Roof.

She said: "He wasn’t doing anything abnormal. He wasn't driving slow. He was just driving. He just kept going."

After arresting him, the police officers involved – who turned up within 15 minutes of taking Mr Frady’s call – visiting Ms Dills at work to thank her and shake her hand. But in interviews, she credited god for placing her at the right place at the right time.

“I was in church last night myself. I had seen the news coverage before I went to bed and started praying for those families down there.

“Those people were in their church just trying to learn the word of God and trying to serve. When I saw a picture of that pastor this morning, my heart just sank," she told the Star.

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