by: Mike Miller
11/15/2016

Believe it or not there are some people who steal just to get arrested and get their names in the papers. There are some who are so prolific they develop a media following complete with moniker. The “Barefoot Bandit” is one such thief. He surely could have used a stop theft class before things spiraled so out of control.

Colton Harris-Moore, the teenage fugitive who became known as the Barefoot Bandit during his two-year crime spree, pleaded guilty to seven federal charges, including stealing airplanes, a boat and firearms and transporting them across state and sometimes national boundaries. He faces up to six and a half years in prison.

Mr. Harris-Moore, who inspired Facebook tribute pages and supportive T-shirts (“Momma Tried,” one said) for his remarkable ability to elude law enforcement over the years, smiled ay Judge Richard A. Jones of United States District Court, when the “guilty” verdict was read seven times.

Time for Hollywood

Harris-Moore reached a plea deal with the government in part by pledging that he would not profit from publicizing it in the future. A Seattle entertainment lawyer, Lance Rosen, said that he was negotiating the sale of rights to Mr. Harris-Moore’s story but that any proceeds would go toward the more than $1.4 million in restitution Mr. Harris-Moore owes for the planes, boat and other items he stole.

Mr. Harris-Moore grew up poor and a victim of abuse on Camano Island, north of Seattle in Puget Sound. He was charged with his first crime at 12 and began his spree after escaping from a juvenile halfway house in April 2008. Over the next two years, Mr. Harris-Moore broke into banks, stole Cessna airplanes, a 34-foot powerboat, semiautomatic pistols and a stream of Ford trucks and Cadillacs before finally being caught after crash-landing a plane on Great Abaco Island in the Bahamas on July 4, 2010. He had no formal flight training.

State prosecutors in four Washington counties are expected to pursue as many as 40 charges, included first-degree burglary in which a handgun was involved, a charge that could keep him in prison longer than the federal charges do.

Asked in court how many years of school he completed, Mr. Harris-Moore, now 20 and a high school dropout, replied, “10 years.” His lawyer, John Henry Brown, told reporters after the hearing that Mr. Harris-Moore hoped eventually to attend college to study aviation and engineering.

There is no bright spot to this story. It is yet another case of youth gone wrong! Too bad he didn't take a Washington Theft Class!