51-year-old Debbie Dills was driving to work yesterday through Shelby, North Carolina - about four hours' drive from Charleston - when she spotted a black Hyundai with a South Carolina plate and a confederate flag.
"I don't know what drew my attention to the car," she told CNN.
"There was just something inside of me that said it just didn't look right to me," she said.
Police had earlier launched a massive manhunt and identified the gunman as 21-year-old Dylann Storm Roof.
Roof is suspected of killing nine people, including pastor and South Carolina State Senator Clementa Pinckney, during a prayer meeting at the historic Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston on Wednesday night.
Dills said she saw the people on TV praying, asking God to help someone find the killer.
Dills believes God used her to answer those prayers.
As soon as she informed her boss, he got in touch with the Kings Mountain police while Dills started driving again in an attempt to catch the Hyundai so that she could report the licence plate number.
"I was very nervous," she said.
Roof continued to drive and by the time Shelby police caught up with her, she had driven nearly 50 km, following the suspect.
Shelby police then pulled Roof over and took him into custody.
Dills said Roof never adjusted his speed or driving.
"He wasn't doing anything abnormal," she said. "He wasn't driving slow. He was just driving. He just kept going," she added.
"Just after the arrest, three of them from Kings Mountain were standing right over there. Thanking me and shaking my hand," she was quoted as saying by the Shelby Star.
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