Pittsburgh Allegheny

Resident of Bellevue apartment house accused of setting fire that destroyed building

Tony LaRussa
Slide 1
Tony LaRussa | Tribune-Review
Firefighters used Avalon’s ladder truck to battle flames shooting from the roof of a five-unit apartment house in Bellevue that was destroyed on July 24. Investigators have charged a man who lived in one of the units with starting the fire.
Slide 2
Tony LaRussa | Tribune-Review
Allegheny County police have charged a resident with setting a fire in the five-unit Bellevue apartment house where he lives. The July 24 blaze destroyed the building, which has been boarded up to keep trespassers out.
Slide 3
Tony LaRussa | Tribune-Review
Fire gutted a five-unit apartment house on Grant Avenue in Bellevue on July 24. A resident who lived on the first floor has been charged with intentionally setting the blaze.
Slide 4
Tony LaRussa | Tribune-Review
Smoke and water shoot from an attic window as firefighters douse the flames that spread up from the first floor of a Bellevue apartment complex. Police have charged the first-floor tenant with setting a July 24 blaze intentionally.

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A resident of a five-unit apartment house that was destroyed by fire last week has been charged with intentionally setting the blaze, according to Allegheny County Police.

Investigators have issued an arrest warrant for Michael Holleran, 44, who is accused of setting fire to the apartment house along Grant Avenue on July 24 by dousing used alcohol wipes with gasoline and igniting them, according to a criminal complaint.

Police charged Holleran with seven counts of arson and five counts of criminal mischief, all felonies.

Holleran — who allegedly told police that he has a long history of illegal drug use and currently is using heroin — said he uses the wipes “to treat parasites” and tried to dispose of them by setting them on fire, the complaint said.

On the day of the fire, Holleran allegedly used several wipes on his feet before placing them in an ashtray on the living room floor and lighting them on fire, police said.

Arson investigators ruled out “all natural causes” for the fire and recovered evidence that points to an accelerant being used to ignite the flames, according to court records.

According to the complaint, Holleran told police that he “treated the parasite by soaking his feet in Epsom Salt water and then wiping his feet with alcohol wipes. Holleran then placed these used wipes in an ashtray that sat on the floor of his living room. He then poured gasoline on them and set them on fire.”

When he was unable to extinguish the fire with water, he fled the apartment and helped another resident in the building escape, according to the complaint.

Meredith English, who lives on the third floor, told the Tribune-Review that he didn’t know the building was on fire until the first-floor resident broke through his door and helped him to safety.

The fire caused an estimated $250,000 in damage and displaced five residents, according to authorities. A number of firefighters suffered heat exhaustion, including two who were transported to a hospital for treatment.

During a second interview at a local motel on July 27, Holleran allegedly told police that at least 10 times in the past — including on the day the house caught fire — he tried to rid his apartment of worms by pouring puddles of gasoline on the floor, lighting them and then stamping them out with a wet mop.

He told police that when he does that, he can “hear the worms screaming as they burn,” according to the criminal complaint.

“This method is how he ensures the worms have died, which provide him with relief,” the complaint reads.

Mike Kutschbach, who lives next door to the burned-out building, described a recent conversation with Holleran.

“He stopped over to talk recently and the whole time he was scratching at his arms and I could see that he had already scratched up his face pretty good. He told me he was scratching because there were worms under his skin. He said he planned to use a power washer on the inside of the apartment to try to get rid of them,” Kutschbach said.

“Mike seems like a nice guy, but I think he has some serious problems.”

Holleran does not have an attorney listed in court documents.

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