In Australia, four kids took a vehicle belonging to one of their parents and went for a 600-mile drive through the country, according to the Australian Broadcasting Company.
The kids - a 14-year-old boy, two 13-year-old boys and 10-year-old girl - packed up their fishing rods, grabbed some cash, and got behind the wheel of the vehicle on Saturday.
One boy reportedly wrote a note to his family saying he was leaving.
The four-wheel drive was spotted at a service station in Banana at 4.45am, when the group is alleged to have stolen fuel.
The children, aged 10 to 14, made it all the way from the central Queensland city of Rockhampton to Grafton in NSW before they were finally found.
"[The children] locked themselves in the automobile and police appreciate had to utilize a baton to get dangle of into the automobile to arrest them", he mentioned, reported the Australian Broadcasting Company.
According to police, the children - 14-year-old boy, two 13-year-old boy and 10-year-old girl - could alternately keep the vehicle.
They packed the vehicle with fishing rods and took turns behind the wheel on the 10-hour drive.
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According to the outlet, the group traveled more than 560 miles from Gracemere to Grafton along the coast of Australia, before police were able to catch up to them later that day.
The four children took off from Gracemere overnight and are believed to be somewhere in New South Wales.
The children, aged between 10 and 14, escaped officers after a brief auto chase in one town.
"A couple of Red Bulls and you'll likely do anything".
Authorities told BBC they would question the children once their parents were present and said that the children would be facing charges, however did not specify what.
The 14-year-old lived in Grafton, which might have been the children's destination, Williams said.
Insp Williams said the community had likely shared the utilizing.
"It is a long way.so I couldn't imagine one person driving all that way", Acting Inspector Darren Williams told reporters in Coffs Harbour on Monday.





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