WTF?!? Todays Modern-Day Huckleberry Finn- Barefoot boy has eluded Police for 1 1/2 Years

imaginative

keep your eye on the ball
The Kid is really becoming somewhat of a modern folk hero...

Colton Harris-Moore, the barefoot boy bandit, outfoxes sheriffs

News_655978a.jpg


In the forests and remote islands around Seattle, police are setting traps for a barefoot teenage outlaw who has eluded them for nearly two years.

Police say 18-year-old Colton Harris-Moore, whose escapades are turning him into a folk legend, is a one-man crime wave, responsible for 50 burglaries as well as stealing light aircraft, which he taught himself to fly from video games, and several speedboats.

He lives in the woods, shuns shoes and catches his own food. His only technological aid is a pair of thermal-imaging goggles to hunt at night and his weakness is pizzas, which he asks to be delivered at the edge of the woods.

For some Harris-Moore is a modern Butch Cassidy: a surprisingly agile 6ft 5in cat burglar who thanks his victims by leaving them notes and cheeky photographs of himself, which have sold for £300 on eBay.

Thousands subscribe to his Facebook page and his image appears on T-shirts with the logo “Fly, Colton, Fly!”. Local rock groups have penned songs about him.

Hollywood producers have lodged lucrative film deals with his family and offered to pay for lawyers if he gives himself up.

Raised in a caravan on Camano Island, an isolated community in the Puget Sound, Harris-Moore started living wild at the age of seven. He would break into holiday homes, steal blankets and food and vanish into the woods for days.

In April 2008, after being sent to a juvenile detention centre, he complained that the beds were too short for his lanky frame and went on the run.

Police believe he fled to Canada and then, a few weeks ago, came back across the border to Idaho where he stole a Cessna 182 and flew to Seattle. He crash-landed in a forest clearing and walked away with cuts and bruises.

Since then he has been accused of stealing other planes for hops around the islands in the Puget Sound, including another Cessna belonging to a disc jockey who vented his frustration on radio, saying: “He still doesn’t know how to land a plane in one piece.”

He evaded a police pursuit by crashing a Mercedes-Benz into a roadside gas storage tank, using the explosion as a diversion to escape back into the woods where, he says, he feels like a Native American.

This was followed by the largest manhunt in recent memory. Three dozen sheriffs, aided by specialist armed units and an FBI helicopter, fanned out across Camano Island but failed to capture him. “We saw him, we think, but it’s like he disappeared in front of our eyes,” said one sheriff.

His luck may be about to run out. During a recent sweep a rifle shot was fired at police, raising his status to “armed and dangerous”. His mother, Pamela Kohler, now fears that even if he did not fire the shot he will be held responsible.

Kohler said she was proud her son had stolen the aircraft because he had never had a flying lesson in his life. “I was going to send him to flight school, but I guess I don’t have to,” she said. “I’d tell him the next time he took a plane: wear a parachute and practise your landing.

“If he shot that gun, it was really stupid. I don’t expect him to come out of the woods alive.”

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/us_and_americas/article6946030.ece
 

imaginative

keep your eye on the ball
Teen Bandit Colton Harris-Moore: Modern-Day Huckleberry Finn?

As an alleged criminal, Colton Harris-Moore is pretty sloppy. But as an escape artist, he's positively stealth.

And he's only 18. Harris-Moore, who goes by the nickname "Colt," is a suspect in nearly 50 burglaries and thefts, including the jacking of two boats and two airplanes, authorities in two Washington state counties said.

"I scratch my head and ask, 'Why can't we catch this kid?'" Island County Undersheriff Kelly Mauck said.

Officials in Island and San Juan counties said they have evidence linking him to the alleged crimes in the form of DNA, fingerprints, eyewitnesses and surveillance videos.

"Colton Harris-Moore, in my opinion, is a horrible criminal," Mauck said of the alleged activity. "He's very good at evading capture, but he's a horrible criminal."

The teen has allegedly broken into hardware stores, homes, restaurants and ATMs, although he has had some trouble successfully pulling off the latter, according to authorities in this rural area of islands off the Washington mainland.

"We have always been very successful linking Colton Harris-Moore through evidence to the crimes he committed," Mauck said of the alleged crimes.

Harris-Moore, whom Mauck described as somewhat of a loner who had a tough life with his mother in a ramshackle trailer park on Camano Island, first became known to Island County authorities at the age of 11, when he began compiling his lengthy record.

He was nabbed for burglary in 2006 after officers, acting on a tip, found out he was holed up in someone else's house ordering pizza from a local restaurant. Working with the pizzeria, it was officers who made his next order and Harris-Moore was eventually sentenced to three years in a juvenile detention facility.

He lasted for about a year before escaping out a window from a "less secure facility" that typically houses juveniles nearing the end of their release, a source of frustration for Island County officials, Mauck said.

Officials are unsure exactly how much he has racked up in cash and stolen goods in the past two years, but said it's likely several thousands of dollars.

Mauck said the last burglary in which they suspect Harris-Moore occurred in July.

Teen on the Run: Have Plane, Will Travel

San Juan County Sheriff Bill Cumming said the teen doesn't always steal money but, rather, tools and other items that might sustain his life on the run.

"He appears to be on foot, and when he needs transport, he is most likely engaged in hitchhiking or stealing," Cumming said.

It was in San Juan County that authorities allege Harris-Moore stole two boats and two planes simply for the purpose of island hopping around the rural communities that are dotted with summer houses for vacationers.

His first alleged plane theft was in 2008, Cumming said, and the second last month, although there's no evidence he's ever been instructed on how to fly.

"We do know he has a keen interest in aviation," Cumming said, noting that officials believe he once used a stolen credit card to order a flight manual.

In both cases, the planes were found but with damage consistent with a hard landing that police believe is indicative of someone not proficient behind the controls. One plane went down on the Yakama Indian Nation reservation.

Both boats, Cumming said, were stolen in a 2½ week period this summer.

Harris-Moore, a formidable kid at 6 feet 3 inches tall and 205 pounds, has earned some kind of admiration in Island County for being a sort of modern-day Huckleberry Finn, Mauck said. But the sheriff in San Juan said the teen is making residents in his county nervous.

"I think everybody is kind of amazed, really the volume of illegal behavior he's engaged in in a short period of time," Cumming said.

Authorities aren't really sure where exactly he stays but believe it's a combination of camps in the woods and unoccupied seasonal homes.

"He's a bit of a survivalist and can stay below the radar," Cumming said.

Frustrating to officers, Mauck said, is that even when they get a tip that Harris-Moore is squatting somewhere, they can't just bust in and arrest him. By the time officers go through the proper channels of obtaining search warrants and otherwise abiding by the legal process, he's gone.

"We're forced to play by the rules and he doesn't play by the rules," Mauck said.

Officials Say Teenager 'Very Good' at Evading Authorities

Harris-Moore has also been able to evade police even when they are standing right in front of him. Not only has he been able to outrun them to hide in the woods he knows much better than they do, Mauck said, the unarmed teen once baited an officer into thinking he had a gun.

Knowing the officers wouldn't be able to tackle someone believed to be armed, Mauck said, Harris-Moore waited until the officers backed off before fleeing.

But Mauck and Cumming say the teen has never shown violent behavior and is not known to be a drug user.

The teen's mother, Pamela Kohler, could not be reached for comment, but Mauck said, she hasn't exactly been helpful.

"Pam Kohler has never been overly cooperative with our office," he said. "She is always been defensive of her son."

But Mauck said he believes Kohler and her son's lifestyle have contributed to Harris-Moore's behavior.

"Living in the woods isn't too far from what he's used to," he said.

Neither Mauck nor Cumming know exactly why Harris-Moore is so intent to live this kind of "Catch Me If You Can" lifestyle, but suggest it just could simply be fun for him.

"One can only guess," Cumming said.

http://abcnews.go.com/US/teen-bandit-colton-harris-moore-called-modern-day/story?id=8653404
 

imaginative

keep your eye on the ball
The Ballad of Barefoot Harris:p

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=66hg...55242F311&playnext=1&playnext_from=PL&index=4

A ballad written about at-large bandit Colton "Barefoot" Harris-Moore.

Lyrics:

When Barefoot was born
He was born in the woods
With a lockpick in his hand
He was raised on the run
And now he's running still
Taking everything he can

I never knew a boy
With a head in the clouds
So far he flew away
But his fingers work so fast
He stole three planes and crashed
I know he'll make it out someday

Colton he was sly
And colton he was fast
They could never pin him down
But he never hurt a fly
And he never killed a man
And he never will be found

So remember Mr. Lawman
And remember Mr. Crook
Watch close as he slips on by
For every step you take
Old Barefoot's takin' two
So fly on, Colton fly

Now Barefoot grew up and
He skipped right out of town
But he always stuck to his guns
He stole across the states
And he stole into our hearts
And he stole right into Washington

Now Barefoot, he was fair and
Barefoot, he was just
A better man couldn't be found
He never left a trace
Until he won that race
When election time came round

So remember Mr. Lawman
And remember Mr. Crook
Watch close as he slips on by
For every step you take
Old Barefoot's takin' two
So Colton, keep on running
Your mother sends her love
Remember how old Jesse went
So Barefoot Colton watch your back
And fly on, Colton fly
 

MamaDel

Inactive
"We're forced to play by the rules and he doesn't play by the rules," Mauck said. -

That quote from the second article reminded me of americans having to play by the rules and it's ineffectiveness against a government who doesn't.

I don't condone stealing when there is an honest alternative, but I have to admit I admire his ability to evade enforcement. I wonder if he really fired a gun. Someone as smart as him would have to know that changes the game.

MamaDel
 

Cardinal

Chickministrator
_______________
I seriously doubt he fired any gun. I suspect that is a ruse that frustrated LEOs are using to "up the ante".
 

ceeblue

Inactive
Sooner or later they will catch the criminal. For this one it could be a good idea to sentence him to Army Ranger school, something like that where he can be challenged, learn discipline and be useful.

If they don't catch him, sooner or later the fellow will turn mean. That may have already started with the gunshot. A good diversion that. He's young enough to be stupid enough to not fully realize the consequences of firing a gun in the vicinity of peace officers.
 

Old Futz

Inactive
Sorry, but making a hero our of a guy who breaks into houses and cabins to steal and leave a mess, steals and wrecks aircraft, robs from ATMs, and causes a large number of innocent people a great deal of stress by his actions is, in my opinion, a loser, common thief, and POS. Having to drive through the area where the last plane was crashed, a house was burgled, and people unable to return home (along with the report of a shot being fired in the vicinity of the police) was not a pleasant experience. Several years ago and not far down the same road a teenaged girl pretended to be in serious distress at the edge of the woods and was given assistance by a passing good Samaritan, whom she shot and killed. Maid Marian to Robin Hood?

I noticed that eventually seven cars and trucks joined into an informal convoy as we drove carefully through into Granite Falls. I also would imagine that a number of us were armed and alert. I hope that the perp is taken out of circulation before someone gets seriously hurt or killed.
 
Up north it gets pretty cold, he will get frost bite on his toes if he goes barefoot. You can't steal hospital care.

One of these days, that boy is gonna wake up dead!!
 

Caplock50

I am the Winter Warrior
Old Futz, I'm with you on this one. The kid ain't no Robin Hood. He's just a plain old thief and crook.
 

Publius

On TB every waking moment
He would have been smart to stay on the reservation and try to behave him self, the law would never find him until ten or more years later.
 

BigBadBossyDog

Inactive
I think we see where he went wrong:

Kohler said she was proud her son had stolen the aircraft because he had never had a flying lesson in his life.
 

et2

TB Fanatic
Old Futz, I'm with you on this one. The kid ain't no Robin Hood. He's just a plain old thief and crook.

+2 ... Zero sympathy for the scumbag. I don't know how much of the story to believe ... he calls for pizza (with what his shoe) and has it delivered at "the edge of the woods". Who in their right mind would deliver a pizza like that?

Time for a good old hunting trip.
 

SIRR1

Inactive
Cappy your back, good to here from you Sir!

I hope all is well and your ok, missed ya!

SIRR1
 
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