Timeline reveals Travis King’s odd behavior before mad dash in North Korea

Army private Travis King staged his mad dash across the border into North Korea just one day after he missed his flight to the US because he claimed he lost his passport – and one onlooker says he was “going so fast” that officials had no chance of catching him.

King, 23, cleared customs at Incheon Airport in Seoul on Monday and texted his military escorts that he had checked in to the American Airlines flight bound for Dallas, CNN reported.

Instead of getting on the 6:36 p.m. flight, however, King claimed to have misplaced his passport, which meant he had to reverse back through the immigration process, the outlet explained.

“He passed through all the security points up to the boarding gate but he told the airline staff that his passport was missing,” an official from Icnheon told CNN.

The American Airlines staff are believed to have escorted the Wisconsin native back to the departure side, where King subsequently left the airport without notifying his superiors.


Travis King.
King was set to return to the US this week.
VIA REUTERS

“He came back to the departure side of the airport at 7:02 p.m,” nearly 30 minutes after the flight departed, the airport official told CNN.

The next day, King was spotted in civilian clothes on a tour of the Joint Security Area inside the demilitarized zone that divides North and South Korea.

He appeared to be traveling alone, and did not speak to the other tourists, witness Sarah Leslie later told the Associated Press.

A photo captured by Leslie shows King in a dark-colored shirt and hat staring at the border just seconds before he sprinted onto the North Korea side.

“I assumed initially he had a mate filming him in some kind of really stupid prank or stunt, like a TikTok, the most stupid thing you could do,” she recalled of the moment King made a break for it.


Sarah Leslie.
Witness Sarah Leslie said she initially thought King was staging a prank.
AP

“But then I heard one of the soldiers shout, ‘Get that guy.’

“He was going so fast, and we were so close to the border, that he was gone by then.”

King initially tried to enter Panmungak Hall, but the front door was locked, a US official told CNN.

He then ran to the back of the building, only to be hurried into a van and driven away by North Korean guards.

It was only on Tuesday, when King failed to report to Fort Bliss as planned, that the US military realized the private second-class was missing, the outlet said.

South Korean immigration officials later confirmed that he did not board the American Airlines flight on Monday evening.


A North Korean soldier stands guard at their guard post.
King is still believed to be in custody in North Korea.
REUTERS

As of Wednesday, the US government was still trying to piece together King’s motive for defecting, as well as his current status.

“We are still gathering all the facts, it is still very early on,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said.

“The administration has and will continue to actively work to ensure his safety and the return of Private King to us and to his family.”

The US believes that King is still in North Korean custody, though it is unclear whether he is still alive, CNN said.

Attempts to reach out to government officials in the hermit kingdom have yielded no results.


South Korean and U.S. Army soldiers.
The US government is still trying to piece together King’s motive for defecting.
AP

King’s bizarre stunt occurred just one week after he was released from detention in South Korea, where he served 50 days’ hard labor following multiple assault allegations and damaging a police vehicle.

In October last year, King is believed to have repeatedly pushed and punched a victim at a club in Seoul, court documents indicate.

When police put him in the backseat of the patrol car, King reportedly spouted expletives and insults aimed at Koreans, the South Korean army, and the police.

He then kicked the patrol car door several times, resulting in about 584,000 won, or $460, in damages, the legal ruling said.

King faces similar charges related to a September incident, which were later dropped.

“His assault case was similar to other cases I’ve represented of young drunk men,” one of the South Korean lawyers who represented King told CNN, noting that the soldier seemed like “a normal guy in his early 20s.”


Travis King.
King is a Private 2nd Class from Racine, Wisconsin.
AP

As a result of the assault and other charges, King was demoted in rank before being sent to the detention facility.

The Wisconsin native’s uncle, Carl Gates, said earlier this week that his nephew spiraled after the death of his younger cousin in February.

“When my son was on life support, and when my son passed away … Travis started [being] reckless [and] crazy when he knew my son was about to die,” Gates explained.

“Because he couldn’t be here. He was in the Army, overseas.

“I know it’s related to what he did.”

King’s mother, Claudine Gates, previously told ABC that she “can’t imagine” the motivation behind her son’s defection, and that she just wants him “to come home.”