Who is stealing -- and crashing -- airplanes in Washington state?
Police say they found this self-portrait of Colton Harris-Moore in the deleted file of a stolen digital camera.
Since
November, police say, at least three small, private planes have been
stolen and flown off. Whoever was behind the throttle didn't go very
far.
The latest plane to go missing crash-landed last week in a
clearing in Granite Falls, Washington, after running out of fuel,
police said.
The rough landing damaged the Cessna
182, which along with its instruments is worth more than $500,000. But
authorities said the plane's pilot appears to have walked away unhurt.
The man that police call the prime suspect does not have a pilot's
license. But he does have a Facebook fan club, which compares him to
Jesse James "without the murders" and exhorts: "Fly, Colt, Fly."
Although he is only 18, Colton Harris-Moore has been on authorities'
radar for years. "Colt," as he is called, was first arrested for
burglary at age 12, said Detective Ed Wallace, a spokesman for the
Island County Sheriff's Office. The break-in at a local school earned
Colton a few weeks in a juvenile facility, Wallace said.
Local
media reports tally nine arrests for Harris-Moore before the age of 15.
Now police in five counties in Washington state are looking for him.
Harris-Moore dropped out of high school and, according to Wallace,
police believe he spent his teens burglarizing unoccupied homes on
Camano Island, a vacation community of about 15,000 people off the
Washington state coast. He became known as "the Barefoot Burglar,"
because, investigators say, he preferred to prowl shoeless.
Gradually, Wallace alleges, Harris-Moore moved onto more sophisticated crimes.
"He will typically break into a home or vehicle and copy down the
credit card numbers," Wallace said. "He then leaves the credit cards
behind so people don't realize they have been stolen."
Wallace
said Harris-Moore has charged thousands of dollars worth of video
games, GPS devices and police scanners online, using stolen credit
cards.
When Harris-Moore wasn't squatting in homes, he took to
the woods with survival gear to elude police. He's been known to hide
in the trees. "He's almost like a feral child," Wallace said.
Harris-Moore's days of running from authorities on the 40-square-mile
island appeared to end in 2007 when he was arrested and pleaded guilty
to three counts of burglary. Wallace said some of the charges were
dismissed as part of the guilty plea.
Less than a year later, Wallace said, Harris-Moore allegedly walked away from a juvenile halfway house.
Police on Camano Island again began receiving reports of thefts that
fit Harris-Moore's profile, Wallace said. In 2008, a deputy said he
spotted Harris-Moore in a stolen Mercedes-Benz, but he lost the suspect
when he allegedly dove from the moving vehicle.
After the chase,
police recovered a stolen digital camera from the car. Wallace said he
found a deleted self-portrait of Harris-Moore, who posed in a shirt
with a telltale Mercedes-Benz insignia. The shirt also belonged to the
vehicle's owner.
Harris-Moore faces 10 counts in that case, as
well as other thefts, Internet crimes and burglaries, Wallace said.
Charges are expected soon in a dozen more cases.
Harris-Moore
dropped from sight for a while when wanted posters of him went up
around Camano Island. Soon, though, authorities in the San Juan Islands
noticed a series of break-ins and wondered whether Harris-Moore was
island-hopping.
The theft of a Cessna 182 from the San Juan
Islands in November jogged Wallace's memory. He recalled what he had
found on a computer he said Harris-Moore used. "He had looked at flight
manuals and how to fly a plane," he said.
Another theft of a
small experimental plane had been reported in September. John Zerby,
undersheriff of San Juan County, said police don't think the two thefts
are a coincidence. "This doesn't happen here, that's why we think they
go together," he said.
Police consider Harris-Moore to be a
fugitive. He has not been charged in any of the plane thefts. Zerby
said authorities are testing vomit found in the cockpit of one of the
stolen planes to see whether they can place the teen inside the plane.
Even though Harris-Moore has no known flight training, Zerby said
police are certain he is their mystery pilot.
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