NEWS

Tad Cummins planned to take Elizabeth Thomas to Mexico, court documents say

Staff and wire reports

Ex-Tennessee teacher Tad Cummins planned to take his 15-year-old former student Elizabeth Thomas to Mexico before venturing to other countries, and may have had the means to do it, according to new court documents.

"The defendant had plans to attempt to escape across the United States border to Mexico. He then planned to seek passage to countries further south of Mexico," states a document filed Monday in a California federal court.

"In furtherance of this plan, the defendant procured a small watercraft and conducted a test run to cross into Mexico across the water from San Diego. The defendant also considered the feasibility of a land crossing into Mexico."

Cummins is charged with kidnapping Elizabeth in early March, taking her from a restaurant near her home in Columbia, Tennessee and eluding law enforcement for 38 days before they were captured last week in Cecilville, California. The new federal court documents also show the 50-year-old Cummins admitted to switching vehicle license plates twice, disabled his vehicle's GPS system, used aliases, altered his appearance, paid only in cash and used back roads during his nearly six weeks on the run.

"During his flight, the defendant engaged in a daring cat-and-mouse run from law enforcement in order to further his own prurient desires while engaging in a number of sophisticated maneuvers to avoid being caught. His actions in evasion were criminal," the document states.

"This level of sophistication demonstrates that he cannot be trusted with conditions, or any combination of conditions, of release while awaiting trial in the Middle District of Tennessee."

Federal authorities filed the documentation as a way to argue why they believe Cummins should be held until trial. The judge agreed, according to a news release from the office Jack Smith, acting U.S. attorney for the Middle District of Tennessee.

The release states a judge ordered Cummins remain in custody and be transferred back to Tennessee as soon as possible. If convicted on the federal charge of transporting a minor across state lines for the purpose of engaging in unlawful sexual activity, Cummins faces anywhere from 10 years in prison to a life sentence.

The Associated Press contributed to this story. 

Related:

► How a Nashville native helped capture Tennessee's most wanted man

► 5 things we know about Tad Cummins

► Timeline shows troubling events before Elizabeth Thomas' disappearance

► Vanished: Learn more about Tennessee's missing children