UPDATED — ‘Barefoot Bandit’ doesn’t seek bail, stays jailed

  • By GEORGE TIBBITS The Associated Press
  • Thursday, July 22, 2010 4:43pm
  • News

By GEORGE TIBBITS

The Associated Press

SEATTLE — The teenager accused in a two-year string of thefts from Washington state to the Caribbean made a brief court appearance today in the state where his escapades began, and opted not to seek bail.

Earlier in the day, federal prosecutors said Colton Harris-Moore, known as the “Barefoot Bandit,” posed “an extreme risk of flight” and should remain jailed until his trial.

In a court appearance that lasted just eight minutes, Harris-Moore did not contest his detention and waived his right to a preliminary hearing.

His next court appearance will likely come after a grand jury indictment.

Harris-Moore wore a tan jail-issued shirt and pants, appeared somber, and spoke quietly with his attorney during the hearing.

He answered “Yes” several times when the judge asked him if he understood the charge against him.

He faces one federal charge of interstate transportation of a stolen property in the theft last year of a plane from Idaho’s panhandle that crashed north of Seattle.

He faces a maximum 10-year sentence in prison if convicted.

The U.S. attorney’s office said he also is the primary suspect in at least 80 crimes committed since he escaped from a group home near Seattle in April 2008.

They include the theft of five airplanes, three of which were wrecked in crash landings, numerous car thefts, several boats and numerous break-ins of homes and businesses.

His escapades have turned him into a folk hero, with more than 90,000 followers on a Facebook fan page.

Both his attorney, John Henry Browne, and U.S. Attorney Jenny Durkan on Thursday downplayed that status.

Browne said after the hearing that Harris-Moore “wants kids and everybody to understand that what he did was not fun.”

“Nothing should be glorified,” said Durkan, who largely declined to comment on the case, adding that the investigation was ongoing and that more charges against Harris-Moore as well as charges against other people might be forthcoming.

“There’s nothing entertaining about these charges.”

Browne said he did not contest Harris-Moore’s detention because pending charges elsewhere would “start a traveling road show.”

Although Browne said it was possible that all the charges against his client might be pulled together into one trial, Durkan said that was unlikely given the large number of jurisdictions involved.

The courthouse was briefly locked down at the time of the hearing as the Seattle Fire Department responded to a report of white powder in the mail room, but the the substance was found to be nontoxic.

After a two-year run from the law, Harris-Moore was caught July 10 in the Bahamas, a week after he allegedly crash-landed an airplane stolen from an Indiana airport.

Bahamian authorities launched an extensive manhunt for the teenager and arrested him as he tried to flee in a boat.

He was deported to Miami after pleading guilty to illegally entering the island nation east of Florida. He was flown to Seattle on Wednesday aboard a U.S. Marshals plane.

Browne said Harris-Moore had not yet spoken to his mother, and that he had only met his client Thursday morning. He said his first impression of the teen was that “he’s really a kid.”

In their bid to hold him until trial, prosecutors wrote that Harris-Moore’s “unlicensed, covert and wreck-inducing flights pose an obvious threat to innocent passengers in other aircraft and persons on the ground.”

Because Harris-Moore already has fled the country in a stolen plane, they argued “there is every reason to believe that he would attempt to do so again, endangering more people in the process.”

The prosecutors also said there was strong evidence that Harris-Moore repeatedly stole and carried firearms while on the run and likely used or brandished firearms in some instances.

Police dubbed Harris-Moore the “Barefoot Bandit” because investigators found footprints identified as his at several crime scenes.

In February, chalk-outlined feet were found on the floor of a grocery store during a burglary in Washington’s San Juan Islands.

In Washington state, he long frustrated police who accused him of breaking into cabins and businesses in the heavily wooded islands north of Puget Sound.

Deputies once saw him jump from a stolen Mercedes, and later found his self-portrait on a stolen digital camera, posing in a black shirt with a Mercedes logo.

In addition to Washington state and Idaho, Harris-Moore is being investigated for crimes in Oregon, Illinois, Indiana, Wyoming, South Dakota, Nebraska and Iowa.

More in News

Colleen McAleer, Clallam County Economic Development Council
EDC: Retail leads business sectors in Clallam County

$518 million in taxable sales across all industries last year

A yellow oil-containment boom surrounds the 60-foot power cruiser Goldfinch after it sank at the Point Hudson Marina on Saturday. The boat was on its way from Seattle to Anacortes when it started taking on water. It made it to the Point Hudson and struck the breakwater as it entered the harbor but was able to be steered into slip 3, where it immediately sank. Port of Port Townsend staff responded and deployed the hard boom and absorbent material to contain the fuel spill. As of Monday afternoon, about 1,000 gallons of diesel had been recovered by Global Diving and Salvage with 650 gallons from the fuel tanks of the Goldfinch and the remainder being sopped up by absorbent material. The U.S. Coast Guard and the state Department of Ecology responded and performed additional containment. A plan for recovery was in the works, but it wasn’t expected to begin before Wednesday due to weather. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Boat sinks

A yellow oil-containment boom surrounds the 60-foot power cruiser Goldfinch after it… Continue reading

Retired Sheriff Joe Nole pinning interim Sheriff Andy Pernsteiners new badge on, following his appointment at the Jefferson County Courthouse.
Jefferson County Sheriff appointed till next election

Commissioners favored stability over change

New Oxford Houses in Port Angeles run into roadblocks

Larger, two-story building may not be approved for program

Bark House confirms reopening date

Open house to be held March 1

Samantha Herik, an EMT with the Port Angeles Fire Department, attaches a poster to the side of her department’s vintage 1956 Seagrave fire truck during a fundraising drive on Saturday in the Swain’s General Store parking lot in Port Angeles. PAFD is collecting donations to rebuild the retired vehicle, known as “No. 5,” with a restored engine and transmission. The truck is used primarily for the annual Operation Candy Cane food bank fundraising drive, along with other promotional purposes. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Donation collection

Samantha Herik, an EMT with the Port Angeles Fire Department, attaches a… Continue reading

Clallam County working with North Olympic Library System to relocate its law library

Expanded access to materials is the goal, administrator says

Director: Department continues to shrink

Public works projects not sustainable, he says

Sequim City Council member Kelly Burger takes the oath of office from City Clerk Heather Robley on Feb. 10 after council members voted to appoint him to replace Kathy Downer. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Sequim council appoints Burger to fill seat

Appointed position goes through certification of 2025 general election

Tristan Lowman.
Clallam Fire District 2 hosts annual recognition banquet

Kate Haworth, Taylor Counts and Tristan Lowman were among… Continue reading

Jefferson County home show set for Saturday

The Home Show sponsored by the Jefferson County Homebuilders… Continue reading

A mobile unit from the Jamestown Healing Clinic in Sequim drives to Clallam Bay on weekdays to provide treatment for 30-40 opioid use disorder patients in the West End. The program started last March. (Jamestown Healing Clinic)
Mobile health clinic treating patients on West End

Number of overdose deaths down, official says