SEATTLE (AP) — The attorney for the teenager accused of being the “Barefoot Bandit” is working with prosecutors to negotiate a plea deal the lawyer says could involve using movie- or book-deal profits to compensate the victims of an alleged two-year, cross-country crime spree.
Through his lawyer, defendant Colton Harris-Moore, 19, pleaded not guilty this morning to federal charges that include the theft of a small plane in Bonners Ferry, Idaho, last fall.
He also pleaded not guilty to four other federal charges for an alleged cross-coutnry crime spree that ended with his arrest in a stolen boat in the Bahamas.

“He’s very reluctant to make a dime off this, he really is,” said his lawyer, John Henry Browne (pictured).
However, Browne said that when he told his client that money from movie or book deals could be used to repay victims — and incidentally win him a more favorable plea deal, with less time behind bars — “that changed his mind a little bit.”
The U.S. attorney’s office in Seattle declined to comment on whether it is negotiating a possible plea deal with Harris-Moore.
The “Barefoot Bandit” moniker was coined after a thief committed some of the crimes without socks or shoes and gained a big following on the Internet.
Harris-Moore is accused of leading authorities on a cat-and-mouse game
in pilfered cars, boats and small planes after allegedly escaping a
halfway house south of Seattle in 2008. This year he made a daring
cross-country dash that ended four months ago after he allegedly stole a
plane in Indiana, crash-landed it in the Bahamas and was captured by
Bahamian police at gunpoint in a stolen boat.
Harris-Moore, who was indicted by a grand jury last week, appeared
before U.S. Magistrate Judge Mary Alice Theiler on Thursday wearing
prison khakis over an orange shirt. He stated his name and year of
birth, and frequently looked down during the brief hearing.
He told the judge he understood the charges against him
— interstate
transportation of a stolen aircraft, a stolen firearm and a stolen
vessel, as well as being a fugitive in possession of a firearm and
piloting an aircraft without a valid airman’s certificate.
Browne entered the not guilty plea on Harris-Moore’s behalf. Afterward,
the attorney told reporters that discussions are in the early stages on a
possible deal that could resolve federal and state charges against
Harris-Moore.
Not guilty pleas are typical at this stage, even if defendants later
intend to change their pleas.
Four of the five counts against Harris-Moore carry maximum sentences of
10 years in prison, and Browne said that realistically his client could
be looking at anywhere from four to 12 years if convicted. Trial was set
for Jan. 18.
The federal charges stem from a spate of crimes in late 2009 and early
this year, when Harris-Moore is accused of flying a stolen plane from
Anacortes, in northwestern Washington, to the San Juan Islands; stealing
a pistol in eastern British Columbia; stealing a plane from a Bonners
Ferry hangar where authorities found bare footprints on the floor and
wall, and flying it to Granite Falls, Wash., where it crashed after
running out of fuel; and stealing a 32-foot boat in southwestern
Washington and taking it to Oregon.(The plane in Bonners Ferry was owned by a cattle rancher)
From Oregon, authorities said, the bandit hopscotched his way across the
U.S., frequently stealing cars from the parking lots of small airports,
until he made it to Indiana, where he stole another plane and made for
the Bahamas.
In all, Harris-Moore, a self-taught pilot, is suspected of more than 70
crimes across nine states.
A possible plea deal by Harris-Moore would require the consent of
prosecutors in other jurisdictions.
Some, including Greg Banks, the prosecutor in Island County, where
Harris-Moore grew up and where he was first arrested at age 12, have
indicated they want Harris-Moore to answer for local crimes in their
courts, rather than in one overarching plea in federal court in Seattle.
If those prosecutors don’t want to cooperate, “I’ll bankrupt them,”
Browne said, citing the expense of putting on a high-profile trial in
small, rural counties.
The assertion drew a chuckle from Banks.
“I’ve had calls all morning about whether a jury trial over a bunch of
burglaries is going to bankrupt our county, and the answer is no,” Banks
said. “It was a funny thing for him to say.”
Banks, however, said he wouldn’t rule out agreeing to a global plea deal
if it meant any profits could be used to repay victims, but he noted
the complexity of working out such a deal. And, he said, Harris-Moore
wouldn’t necessarily need to sell his story to pay restitution.
“He’s a fairly industrious young man,” Banks said. “By the time he gets
out of custody he’ll probably be able to get a job and make some money.
He’s talented.”
Browne said Harris-Moore has been in solitary confinement at the Federal
Detention Center south of Seattle, where he’s been drawing airplane
designs and reading about aircraft and nature. He’s received letters
from his mother and aunt, but few visits, and he’s not interested in
getting out of solitary, Browne said.
“He’d rather stay where he is, which is rather unusual,” the lawyer said.
Please keep it civil. Don't post comments that are obscene, defamatory, threatening, off-topic, an infringement of copyright or an invasion of privacy. Read our forum standards and community guidelines.
You must be logged in to post comments. Please log in here or click the comment box below for options.
comments powered by Disqus« Back to Sirens & Gavels