Before a 9-year-old boy stowed away on a flight to Las Vegas last week, he had already stolen a car, sneaked into a Bloomington water park without paying and come under the scrutiny of child protection investigators, a Hennepin County official wrote Monday.
In a one-page e-mail obtained by the Star Tribune, Janine Moore, area director of the county's Human Services and Public Health Department, told administrators and County Board members that since December 2012, county staff have conducted four child-protection assessments on the boy's family.
"The reports have been inconsistent and there have been no injuries to the child; however, there is a pattern of behavior," she wrote in the e-mail, marked "private data."
She didn't identify the boy, his family or where they live, but wrote that his mother works at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, so "there is also an investigation into whether she aided him flying to Las Vegas."
Last Thursday, the boy passed through security and airline checkpoints to board a flight to Nevada without a ticket or boarding pass. His story captured national attention because of his preternatural cunning in eluding detection at supposedly stringent checkpoints that require identification and boarding passes.
The day before the flight, the boy had conducted a detailed reconnaissance trip at the airport that involved taking a piece of luggage from a carousel, then ditching it at an airport restaurant after eating there without paying.
On Thursday, to pass through the Transportation Safety Administration (TSA) checkpoint for his flight, the boy reportedly blended in with a family with children.
He was seen on surveillance video chatting with a Delta gate agent, then walking down the jetway when the agent was distracted. The Vegas-bound flight had empty seats, and attendants didn't realize what the boy had done until after takeoff, when his name wasn't on the flight manifest as an unaccompanied minor.