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To his thousands of fans, 18-year-old Colton Harris-Moore is a modern day Jesse James (without the bad), part Robin Hood (without the good), and a little bit James Bond (without the panache).

The Washington state sheriffs he has drawn into a six-year game of cat-and-mouse have other names for him though - names like "burglar," "felon" and "barefoot bandit."

Mr. Harris-Moore, who logged his first criminal conviction at the age of 12 and has become known for going without footwear, appeared to ratchet up the stakes in a long-running police search for his whereabouts recently when signs of his antics were discovered on the Canadian side of the U.S. border north of Idaho.

Since the fugitive busted out of a juvenile detention facility in April, 2008, Mr. Harris-Moore, known as "Colt" to his fans, has grown into a rebel legend. U.S. newspapers have documented his increasingly crafty thefts, which now go beyond the simple robbery of cash and surveillance equipment to encompass the climbing of multi-storey buildings, destruction of heavy-duty safes and the stealing of luxury cars, boats and small aircraft.

Online, his story has gone viral, spawning a Facebook fan club with thousands of members and even a pro-Colt T-shirt sales business that law-enforcement officials hunting for the teen call "disgusting."

Police in tiny Creston, B.C., became entwined with the legend of Colt last month when they found an abandoned BMW that had been reported stolen in Vancouver. On its own, the car did not set off any cross-border alarms. But next, police began investigating a spate of bizarre break-ins at hangars around Creston's sleepy airport. Several aircraft were tinkered with and one single-engine plane was "moved around a considerable amount on the runway," according to RCMP Staff Sergeant Gordon Stewart.

His officers began to connect the multi-jurisdictional dots days later, when word spread that similar break-ins had occurred 55 kilometres south at the Boundary County Airport in Idaho. On Sept. 29, the thief managed to fly off with a stolen Cessna 182 in the pre-dawn light - an act that the young Mr. Harris-Moore, a self-trained but unlicensed pilot, seems to be trying out as his new calling card.

After a stunned pilot discovered the missing plane, they found the barefoot prints.

Those prints have been a recurring trademark over the course of more than four dozen break-ins for which Mr. Harris-Moore has been convicted or is alleged to have committed since 2004.

He's been on the run since 2008, although surveillance videos have occasionally recorded him burglarizing homes in and around Camano Island, located in Puget Sound, about 50 kilometres north of Seattle.

He's also been sighted on Orcas Island, an area popular with vacationers, accessible only by boat, for the past two summers. Locals suspect that he sticks around in the off-season. He's been known to sneak into empty homes to take advantage of their owners' amenities, including the Internet, which he uses to order surveillance equipment that he has shipped (unbeknownst to absent homeowners) to his borrowed addresses.

"This guy has got energy from hell," spat Marian Rathbone, who with her mother owns Vern's Bayside Restaurant, a popular dining spot. Vern's first fell victim to Mr. Harris-Moore two summers ago when he broke in to empty $12,000 from the restaurant's safe and use its credit cards and computers to order two security cameras and a small aircraft-instruction DVD, which he had delivered to the store a week later.

"He had obviously been watching the tracking numbers because he busted in that night [to get the parcels]" Ms. Rathbone said.

The robbery - and the fact that Mr. Harris-Moore was so "cocky" as to deliberately leave behind a single dollar bill and her twisted, bent credit cards - left Ms. Rathbone more angry than shaken. So she spent good money installing a security-camera system, which helped this summer when Mr. Harris-Moore broke in again.

In spite of the video evidence, Mr. Harris-Moore has stealthily evaded police capture. But as news of his antics continues to spread, particularly as he ventures into the air, he has garnered himself a devoted fan base. His Facebook fan group had more than 3,000 members yesterday.

Adin Stevens, a Seattle-based T-shirt designer, registered the website http://www.coltonharrismoorefanclub.com to handle the steady stream of orders for the Colton Harris-Moore Fan Club T-shirts he designed after learning about the case a few months ago.

"I relate to him a lot. I remember what it's like to be a teenager," Mr. Stevens said yesterday, adding: "I don't really look at it as too much of a moral issue compared to the extraordinary story of what he's doing. He's not out to hurt anybody. That's obvious."

Increasingly, though, there are concerns that, at the very least, Mr. Harris-Moore is going to hurt himself. He appears so far to have stolen three small planes, all of which he has crashed in hard landings. "Certainly we want to catch him," said Mark Brown, the Camano Island sheriff. "Part of the problem is the sensationalist tone this has taken. What we absolutely need and hope for is a successful capturing of a felon ... without having to use violence or having violence used against us."

******

Colton Harris-Moore has been on the lam from police since April, 2008. The fugitive crossed into Canada

recently and is thought to have stolen a car in Vancouver and driven it to the U.S. border. Police in five

jurisdictions are searching for him.

BRITISH COLUMBIA

Vancouver

Suspected of stealing a black BMW.

Creston

Suspected of a recent break-in at Creston Airport

Point Roberts

Suspected of stealing a boat to get to Point Roberts.

UNITED STATES

IDAHO

Bonners Ferry

Suspected of stealing a private plane.

WASHINGTON

Orcas Island

Suspected in a string of burglaries.

Camano Island

Escaped after convictions on counts of burglary, assault and mischief.

Granite Falls

Fled after crash-landing plane stolen in Bonners Ferry.

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