Author Topic: The police cannot catch this barefoot bandit teen in Washington  (Read 767 times)

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Offline jw

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The police cannot catch this barefoot bandit teen in Washington
« on: October 10, 2009, 06:53:08 PM »
People are turning this kid into a hero like Robin Hood or something................he has outwitted the police for a very long time.

Teen fugitive Colton Harris-Moore becomes a national celebrity

By Eric Stevick
Herald Writer
For better or worse, a prolific young burglar from Camano Island is becoming a household name across the country.

On Thursday, two national media outlets devoted air time to the story of 18-year-old Colton Harris-Moore, who is accused of stealing boats, cars and Cessna aircraft.

T-shirts with Harris-Moore's face on the front were ringing up brisk sales at a Seattle print shop Thursday, with orders coming from as far away as Pennsylvania and New Hampshire. A fan club on Facebook has drawn thousands of entries. There was even a story posted on the Web site for the sensational tabloid Weekly World News about the “barefoot burglar.”

There have been tales of Harris-Moore hiding in the woods, eluding police and becoming increasingly brazen. In fact, a shot was fired after a recent burglary near Granite Falls near where the last stolen plane possibly connected to the teen was found.

There are reasons that Harris-Moore's story, both the embellished and factual versions, has widespread appeal, said a University of Washington expert on folklore.

“Somehow people like to live vicariously through people like this,” said Michael Allen, a history professor at the University of Washington's Tacoma campus. “It has elements of the frontier, lawlessness and anti-authoritarianism, and a lot of Americans love that.”

One person not caught up with the hoopla is Island County Sheriff Mark Brown.

Brown said he often calls on the media and the community to help him do his job of catching criminals. Such was the case in 2006 when Harris-Moore was first captured and sentenced to three years confinement for residential burglary. He escaped from a juvenile half-way house in Renton in April 2008 and has been on the run since, leaving a trail of dozens of crimes in four Washington counties, Idaho and British Columbia.

Now, Brown fears there is a feeding frenzy that could be harmful in the long run.

“It's like the pendulum has gone completely the other way,” he said. “We shouldn't be commenting on ongoing investigations, but everyone wants the instantaneous information.”

Once Harris-Moore is caught — safely — “that would be the time to digest the psychological and social factors that people seem to be” focusing on, Brown said.

Speculation that Harris-Moore was headed back to his home on Camano Island grew when a stolen plane was found wrecked near Granite Falls on Oct. 1. On Sunday, Snohomish County deputies were called to investigate a residential burglary near the crash site. During the investigation, someone shot at the deputies.

No one was hurt, and no arrests have been made despite a massive manhunt Monday by dozens of SWAT team members.

Snohomish County officials have refused to link the Granite Falls crimes to Harris-Moore, saying they need to wait for evidence to be tested.

Regardless, public speculation is rampant.

And, despite the teen's growing renown, he's leaving behind a trail of victims.

On Thursday, a Seattle radio personality told his listeners he's the owner of one of the small airplanes Harris-Moore might have stolen.

Bob Rivers, who has been a radio personality at KZOK (102.5 FM) for nine years, said his Cessna 182, worth about $150,000, was stolen from a locked hangar on Orcas Island in November. His plane was later found crashed on the Yakama Indian Reservation. It was so badly damaged that it is a total loss.

A DNA sample from vomit found in that plane is being analyzed. A DNA sample from blood in a Sept. 8 cash machine burglary on Orcas Island linked that crime to Harris-Moore last week.

Rivers said he was shocked when he heard someone had stolen his plane.

“I was called, and I couldn't believe it,” he said. “As to the current suspect, I have only done what everyone else has done, which is read about it in the newspaper. I can't be any more sure than the police are.”

Rivers said he decided to tell his story publicly in hopes it will help catch Harris-Moore.

“I'm not a fan of the media frenzy because I don't like the whole cult hero thing, but if keeping it alive helps solve it, then I think it's worth it.”

Rivers appeared on a nationally broadcast FOX News interview Thursday with Harris-Moore's mother, Pam Kohler.

“It's not my place to judge anyone,” Rivers said afterward. “I'm told he had a difficult childhood. The only thing I agreed with her on is she would like him to turn himself in.”

Kohler said she agreed to be interviewed in hopes it will help get her son to surrender himself before he gets hurt.

Later Thursday, CNN Headline News featured a segment about Harris-Moore, which included an interview with Herald reporter Jackson Holtz who has covered the story for two years.

At Good Times Printing in Seattle, orders for Harris-Moore T-shirts are coming in from around the country, said Adin Stevens, who owns the company.

“I sold a couple hundred bucks worth this morning,” Stevens said Thursday. “With all the interest, I was forced to think about why I wanted to make the shirts. I really don't know, to be honest. I just think it's an extraordinary story. I can relate to Colton in a number of ways. It's a good outlaw story. ... I had my share of trouble growing up.”

Stevens said 25 percent of the sales proceeds will go to an organization devoted to helping troubled youth.

Kohler, Harris-Moore's mother, said that would be a good cause, but she doesn't want anyone making money off her son's alleged exploits.

“I don't think it would be right for someone to profit from something that is so sad.”

Eric Stevick: 425-339-3446, stevick@heraldnet.com.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jl8KEvdXkJE&feature=player_embedded#

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bEHLnfuD6_c&NR=1

http://www.mynorthwest.com/resources/audio_headlines/audio_player.php?a=11042&f=/kiro/2009/10/10062009120809.mp3

Mother of teen fugitive proud of son

By STEPHANIE KLEIN
MyNorthwest.com

The mother of Colton Harris-Moore, the teen suspected of stealing and crashing a plane near Granite Falls and shooting at SWAT, said she'd rather not know where her son is.

"He has never told me where he's staying. I don't know the people he's staying with and I like it like that because that way I don't have any information to give to the police. I think he's a lot safer wherever he is," Pam Kohler told KIRO Radio's Dave Ross.

Interview: Pam Kohler

Dozens of police combed the woods outside of Granite Falls on Sunday night and Monday, after a shot was fired near deputies responding to a break-in. Deputies Sunday found stolen items: blankets, shoes and possibly food, but nothing of high value, behind the home. Police called off the search Monday afternoon.

The saga is beginning to feel like something out of the movie "Catch Me If You Can," as Harris-Moore keeps finding new ways to embarrass police by slipping through their grasp.

The 18-year-old typically breaks into businesses or unoccupied vacation homes, lies down on the couch and then dashes into the woods if confronted. He earned himself the nickname of "the barefoot burglar" by committing some of his crimes without wearing shoes.

Kohler said her son's run-ins with the law started at an early age. "A cop car came down the driveway with Colt in the back seat and his bike in the trunk. The police officer asked me if that was his bike and I said, 'Yes, I just bought it for him.' They have always assumed that Colt was a bad kid, that he stole stuff, and they never, ever let up on him. They were always after him for something, even when he didn't do it."

Harris-Moore's mother said the Island County Sheriff's Department knows everything about everyone and she believes Harris-Moore was targeted since he was very young.

Harris-Moore was first convicted at age 12 and is suspected in nearly 50 cases since he sneaked out the window of a halfway house in April 2008. He is believed to have taken and hard-landed two airplanes from the San Juan Islands in the past year before stealing a boat and making his way to Point Roberts, a nub of land in the northwest corner of Washington that's an easy walk from the Canadian border.

Because Sunday night's break-in occurred near where a stolen plane from Idaho crash-landed last week, detectives thought it might have been the work of Colton.

According to an insurance adjuster who reviewed the damage from the crash-landing near Granite Falls, whoever stole the plane started it with a screwdriver, the owner of the Cessna said. The plane, which appeared to have run out of gas, was totaled.

Many are wondering how the 18-year-old would have learned how to fly. "He's smart," said Kohler, who claimed, "he took an IQ test a few years ago and he's three points below Einstein."

"If he flew those planes without lessons, I am very, very proud," said Kohler.

Police believe Harris-Moore also recently took thousands of dollars from safes and ATMs at businesses in the Orcas Island hamlet of Eastsound.

The teen has exploited the fact that the police do not have the manpower to mount an all-out hunt in a property crime case. Sheriff's offices on some of the islands do not even have tracking dogs.

Frustrated residents wonder how hard it is to find a 6-foot-5, 200-pound teenager in the confines of an island, while red-faced cops bristle at what they see as attempts to romanticize the fugitive. A Harris-Moore fan club has emerged on Facebook, and a Seattle man started selling T-shirts bearing his picture and the words "Momma Tried."

Island County Sheriff Mark Brown, whose office has dealt with Harris-Moore at least since he was 11, said he recently blew up at a "Today" show producer who wanted to ask him about the made-for-Hollywood aspect of the story.

"He is an adult felon!" Brown said. "I will not have him made into some kind of folk hero."

Kohler said she spoke with her son about three or four weeks ago. He told her not to talk with reporters. She explained to him that she is trying to tell his story in a positive light. "He's not a bad guy."

Kohler told Colton she plans to write a book about her son's life, to which Harris-Moore replied, "Go ahead mom."

She said some of the proceeds from the book about Harris-Moore's life would be used to open an animal shelter that her son has wanted for abused animals. He also wants harsher punishment for animal abusers.

Kohler said she supports her son, "I'm his mother," and she has suggested he turn himself into Denny Youth Center in Everett. "He will never be treated fairly by the Island County Sheriff's Department."
« Last Edit: October 10, 2009, 06:55:56 PM by jw »

 

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