A six-year-old boy was found hiding in a cardboard box in his family’s garage after being feared to have been aboard a homemade helium balloon that hurtled 80km through the sky on live TV.
The discovery marked a bizarre end to a saga that started when the giant silvery balloon floated away from the family’s yard on Thursday morning, sparking a frantic rescue operation that involved military helicopters and briefly halted some departures from Denver International Airport.
Then, more than two hours after the balloon gently touched down in a field with no sign of the boy, Sheriff Jim Alderden turned to reporters during a news conference, gave a thumbs up and said six-year-old Falcon Heene was at his house.
“Apparently he’s been there the whole time,” he said.
The confusion over whether the boy was in the balloon arose as the family tinkered with the craft on Thursday and Falcon’s father scolded him for getting inside a compartment. He said Falcon’s brother saw him inside the compartment and that’s why they mistakenly thought he was aboard the balloon when it launched.
The boy had fled to the garage, however, climbing a pole into the rafters and hiding in a cardboard box at some point after the scolding and was never in the balloon during its two-hour journey through two counties.
“I yelled at him. I’m really sorry I yelled at him,” Richard Heene said, choking up and hugging Falcon to him during a news conference.
“I was in the attic and he scared me because he yelled at me,” Falcon said. “That’s why I went in the attic.”
Heene said the balloon wasn’t tethered properly, and “it was a mishap.”
“I’m not going to lay blame on anybody,” he said.
The boys’ parents — Richard Heene and his wife, Mayumi — are storm chasers who appeared twice in the ABC reality show Wife Swap, most recently in March. The show promoted the Heene family as storm chasers who also “devote their time to scientific experiments that include looking for extraterrestrials and building a research-gathering flying saucer to send into the eye of the storm.”
Richard Heene adamantly denied the notion that the whole thing was a big publicity stunt.
“That’s horrible after the crap we just went through. No,” he said.
Later, Richard Heene bristled when the family was asked to clarify and said he didn’t know what his son meant. He didn’t ask his son what he meant by “a show.”
“I’m kind of appalled after all the feelings that I went through, up and down, that you guys are trying to suggest something else,” Richard Heene said.
Neighbor Bob Licko, 65, said he was leaving home when he heard commotion in the backyard of the family. He said he saw two boys on the roof with a camera, commenting about their brother.
“One of the boys yelled to me that his brother was way up in the air,” Licko said.
Licko said the boy’s mother seemed distraught and that the boy’s father was running around the house.
Licko said he didn’t believe any hoax was involved.
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