It was 3:40 in the morning on Jan. 4, 2017, when Megan Bode got text messages from her estranged husband.
She was staying with her parents when the photos he texted her showed racing fuel on the floor of the garage of their Indian Hills condo and of him holding a butane lighter.
She previously received a call from him and feared he might kill himself, and was on the phone with a 911 dispatcher when she got the photos.
“I tried to talk him down, but he hung up,” Bode says now, remembering how at first her mother didn’t want her to go to the condo on Audobon Drive, but then drove her to the scene.
When they arrived, Bode’s home and several others at the Pinecrest at Indian Hills condominiums were engulfed in flames. Three units, including the condo Bode had shared with Matthew Olson—and from whom she had been separated—were destroyed.
Crews from Cobb Fire Station 21 on Lower Roswell Road were sent to an address in the 4000 block of Audobon Drive after someone there called 911 threatening suicide. They ended up working a devastating fire that broke out as people were sleeping.
Although nobody was injured, 21 trucks and emergency vehicles had battled the blaze that lit up the East Cobb sky.
“What he did was terrible,” Bode said of Olson, now her ex-husband, who was arrested that day. “He could have hurt people.”
Olson, now 34, was charged with first-degree arson and more than a dozen other offenses. This June, after pleading guilty to arson, he received a 20-year sentence with six years to serve, and was ordered to pay $6,653 in restitution to Bode.
Olson also was sentenced to serve five years for attempting to elude a police officer, three years for possession of a controlled substance and 12 months for DUI, according to Cobb Superior Court Clerk’s Office records.
He pleaded guilty in June to those charges, stemming from his arrest in a vehicle on Johnson Ferry Road near Woodlawn Drive a few hours after the fire. The sentences are to run concurrently, and Olson is being credited with time served, according to the court records.
Cracking a tough type of crime
For giving investigators the photos and telling them of Olson’s stated intent to start the fire, Bode helped them solve what they say is one of the hardest crimes to prove.
“It’s because the evidence is being destroyed,” said Jimmy Taylor, Cobb deputy fire chief. “We rely a lot on what citizens can tell us.”
On Friday, Bode received an $8,500 check from the Georgia Arson Control Board at Station 21, and at the behest of Cobb fire investigator Brian Beaty, who investigated the fire that left her home an ashen rubble.
“I don’t feel like I was a hero,” said Bode, who got divorced, rebuilt the condo and lives there today while running 3-D Physiques, a fitness studio at Parkaire Landing Shopping Center.
“I was not expecting this at all.”
Beaty, currently Cobb’s chief fire investigator, said getting the photos made their case a lot easier.
“Usually, you don’t get photos” demonstrating such an intent to commit arson, he said.
To effectively fight crime, Cobb fire chief Randy Crider said, “it has to be a community effort. . . . Any cooperation we get from the citizens of Cobb County is greatly appreciated.”
Ken LeCroy, a consultant for the Georgia Arson Control Board, said the organization hands out around 10 rewards every year. The funding comes from the insurance industry.
He said the reward program is designed to encourage citizens to report arson without fear of retribution. Similar to Crimestoppers, they can offer tips anonymously. This case was different.
“Ms. Bode did this because it was the right thing to do,” LeCroy said.
Rebuilding and moving on
Bode said that losing her home at the hands of her then-spouse was emotional, but she went to her job the day after the fire.
“It was a matter of sink or swim,” she said.
On July 11, Olson was moved to the Georgia Diagnostic and Classification Prison in Jackson, according to the Georgia Department of Corrections, and his sentence has a maximum release date of January 2023.
His mother, Juli Olson, was grateful that her son was granted first-offender status with the consent of the victims. She wrote a letter in July to Cobb Superior Court Judge Mary Staley that’s included in court records expressing “my complete and genuine thankfulness . . . for giving my son a second chance at a better and new future when he is released.”
Olson’s mother wrote “I can only imagine what Megan and those families went through those first excruciating hours and in the days, weeks, months and years following. My heart can believe it was hell on earth. The extreme emotional trauma and pain and the devastation of losing everything they had, is beyond words.”
Bode said that Matthew Olson, her former husband, “has been battling a lot of demons,” mainly addiction.
“I forgave him a long time ago,” she said. “I hope he can rebuild his life.”
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