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Updated: Monday, 12 Oct 2009, 10:56 PM PDT
Published : Monday, 12 Oct 2009, 10:55 PM PDT
Posted by: Scott Coppersmith
Los Angeles (myFOXla.com) - Homicide detectives investigating a deadly wildfire that ravaged
much of Angeles National Forest said Monday they were looking for a
transient suspected of starting a smaller fire several miles away.
Babatunsin Olukunle, 25, has not been linked to the massive
Station Fire that burned northeast of Los Angeles, but detectives
want to question him about that blaze, said Los Angeles County
sheriff's Lt. Liam Gallagher.
Olukunle was spotted at the site of a smaller fire that
burned a small patch of brush six days before the Station Fire
broke out Aug. 26. The Station Fire destroyed 89 homes, burned 250
square miles and killed two firefighters when their truck plunged
off a mountain road.
The smaller fire was extinguished by U.S. Forest Service
workers who reported seeing Olukunle walking into the forest and
away from the fire. They asked him to stay put while they tackled
the blaze but after quickly extinguishing it, he had gone,
Gallagher said.
Authorities declined to comment on how the two fires had
started, except to say both were the result of arson. Gallagher
said the smaller fire had burned an area of brush about the size of
a small tabletop, but it was not a traditional campfire surrounded
by rocks and he was not aware of any cooking utensils being found.
"The fact that he was seen at a fire that had been started
six days before and six miles up the road is something that caught
our attention and something we need to talk to him about,"
Gallagher said.
Olukunle, who dropped out of the University of California,
Davis, in 2004, is articulate and has an accent, Gallagher said. He
was last seen in the Lancaster area about a week ago, when he
walked into a Social Security office. No arrest warrant has been
issued.
Olukunle may have been sleeping in the national forest for
about four months.
His family emigrated from Nigeria in 1999, Gallagher said,
and it wasn't immediately known why Olukunle had taken to the
streets after leaving college.
"He came back from summer break, was acting strangely and
just took off and never came back," Gallagher said.
Olukunle's only arrest was for illegal camping, authorities
said.