Kudos to The Associated Press for reporting on the ground in the Bahamas about the search for 19-year-old fugitive Colton Harris-Moore, better known as the Barefoot Bandit.

But for a graphic that puts Harris-Moore's alleged exploits in context,

. Then read the AP's latest:

View Tracking Colton Harris-Moore, aka The Barefoot Bandit in a larger map

Colton Harris-Moore, who hopscotched his way across the U.S. and appears to have escaped in a stolen plane to the Bahamas, lived up to his legend Wednesday, eluding a manhunt after allegedly committing a new series of break-ins on a normally quiet island.





Bahamian police interviewed burglary victims while searching for the 19-year-old Camano Island man on Great Abaco Island days after the fugitive dubbed the "Barefoot Bandit" is suspected of crash-landing the plane and making his way to shore.

His arrival coincided with an annual regatta that could make it easy for him to blend in among the crowds of visiting tourists.

A Royal Bahamian Police Force bulletin warned that Harris-Moore should be considered "armed and dangerous."

Bar and restaurant owner Alistair McDonald said he was one of Harris-Moore's latest victims.

McDonald said surveillance video captured the suspect inside his establishment in Great Abaco's Marsh Harbour before dawn Tuesday. He said the suspect at one point looked directly into a security camera, then shone a flashlight into it to blur the image and turned all three security cameras to the wall.

"He seemed pretty relaxed and at ease," McDonald said, adding that he thinks the burglar was looking for money or got spooked because he left empty-handed.

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-- Kimberly A.C. Wilson