Visitors hoping to catch a glimpse of the bald eagles on Camano
Island in Washington State's Puget Sound are more likely to see a
different bird in the sky: a police chopper skimming the cedar forests
in search of an outlaw.
Colton Harris-Moore, a gangly 18-year-old with
furtive eyes and a dimpled chin, has been on police blotters since he
was accused of stealing a bike at the age of 8. Since then, he is
suspected of having committed nearly 100 burglaries in Washington,
Idaho and Canada. Police allege that he graduated from bikes to cars,
then to speedboats.

Lately, he is suspected of stealing three small
aircraft — all the more impressive given that he has never taken a
single flying lesson.
Harris-Moore,
6 ft. 5 in. (1.96 m), has become a legend in the Pacific Northwest —
T-shirts bearing his face or the words FLY, COLTON, FLY are big sellers
in Seattle — and on the Internet. His Facebook fan club has 8,000
members, and a hokey ballad on YouTube sings his praises.
Harris-Moore's supporters see a deeper meaning to his popularity:
During hard economic times, they say, why not celebrate a poor boy who
robs from the island vacation homes of Seattle's dotcom gazillionaires?
But Harris-Moore apparently steals just as often from Camano's ordinary
folk as he does from the rich.
He
had a rough past. Harris-Moore's abusive father walked out after
choking him during an argument at a family barbecue. His mother raised
him in a mobile home dragged into the woods on the island's South End,
which, as local writer and stained-glass artist Jack Archibald says,
has "basically one main road, a two-lane blacktop that loops around
like a belt on a skinny fella."
Some locals speculate that
Harris-Moore burgles not for the money but to experience the fantasy of
the happy home life he never had as a child. According to local
sheriffs, he often slips into a house just to soak in a hot bath or
steal mint-chip ice cream from the fridge — a "Goldilocks thing," one
investigator says. Initially, Harris-Moore seemed to steal only what he
needed for life in the woods. "He's a survivalist," says Archibald.
The
teenager allegedly used one homeowner's computer and credit-card
information to order bear mace and a pair of $6,500 night-vision
goggles.
His
recent alleged crimes have been more brazen. He's been accused of
stealing speedboats to travel to nearby islands to plunder empty homes.
In November 2008, police suspect that Harris-Moore hot-wired a Cessna
that belonged to a local radio DJ — he'd ordered a flying manual on the
Internet — and crash-landed it 300 miles (about 480 km) east on an
Indian reservation. Since then, he may have stolen two other planes,
both of which were later found crashed.
He apparently walked away from
the wrecks, miraculously unharmed. On Fox News, Harris-Moore's mother
Pam Kohler outraged her tut-tutting interviewer by saying, "I hope to
hell he stole those planes. I'd be so proud. But next time, I want him
to wear a parachute."
So where is he now? When police recently
retrieved a stolen Mercedes-Benz on Camano, they discovered a camera
with a photo that Harris-Moore had snapped of himself. The manhunt has
become more intense. Before slipping away from a police raid on his
mother's trailer, Harris-Moore left a note: "Cops wanna play huh!?
Well
its no lil game.....It's war! & tell them that." Authorities say he
then broke into a deputy's car and stole, among other things, an
assault rifle. He is now considered armed and dangerous. "He's not
evil, but he's not Robin Hood either," says artist Jack Gunter, an
island resident. "Unless he's stopped, chances are he'll end up a
career criminal — or dead."
That, of course, would only add to
his legend. To his young fans, Harris-Moore is known as "the Barefoot
Burglar" because he once kicked off his shoes to flee deputies chasing
him in the woods.
One of his admirers — a young, tattooed waitress at
the Viking Restaurant in nearby Stanwood, on the mainland — says that
one night last month, she saw a tall young man sprinting down the
street. "He was barefoot, and he was laughing. I wanted it so much to
be Colton."