Though escaping the dash characters (which can have a special meaning as character range specifiers when inside a character class) should work, one other method for taking away their special meaning is putting them at the beginning or the end of the class definition.
In addition, \+ and \@ in a character class are interpreted as + and @ respectively. The escapes are, however, unnecessary and may confuse someone trying to interpret the regex visually.
I would recommend the following regex for your purposes:
(http|ftp|https)://[\w-]+(\.[\w-]+)+([\w.,@?^=%&:/~+#-]*[\w@?^=%&/~+#-])?
this can be specified in JavaScript either by passing it into the RegExp constructor (like you did in your example):
var urlPattern = new RegExp("(http|ftp|https)://[\w-]+(\.[\w-]+)+([\w.,@?^=%&:/~+#-]*[\w@?^=%&/~+#-])?")
or by directly specifying a regex literal, using the // quoting method:
var urlPattern = /(http|ftp|https):\/\/[\w-]+(\.[\w-]+)+([\w.,@?^=%&:\/~+#-]*[\w@?^=%&\/~+#-])?/
The Regexp constructor is necessary if you accept a regex as a string (from user input or an AJAX call, for instance), and might be more readable (as it is in this case). I am fairly certain that the // quoting method is more efficient, and is at certain times more readable. Both work.
I tested your original and this modification using Chrome both on <JSFiddle> and on <RegexLib.com>, using the Client-Side regex engine (browser) and specifically selecting JavaScript. While the first one fails with the error you stated, my suggested modification succeeds. If I remove the h from the http in the source, it fails to match, as it should!
Finally, an excellent resource that taught me 90% of what I know about regex is Regular-Expressions.info - I highly recommend it if you want to learn regex (both what it can do and what it can't)!