In 1999, Bеrnard Arnold, Sr., pleaded guilty to charges of kidnapping, rape, and possession of a firearm during the commission of a crime and received a sentence of 15 years in prison. After a successful habeas challenge, Arnold withdrew his plea and was granted a jury trial. The jury acquitted Arnold of the rape and possession charges, but convicted him on one count of kidnapping, after which the trial court imposed a twenty-year sentence. On appeal, Arnold argues that (1) his post-trial sentence constitutes an unconstitutionally vindictive punishment because it is greater than the sentence he received following his guilty plea; (2) the evidence was insufficient to support his kidnapping conviction; and (3) he is entitled to a new trial because the trial court erroneously charged the jury on the crime of kidnapping. For the reasons set forth infra, we affirm.
Viewed in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict,
Arnold then proceeded to drag the victim, who was kicking and screaming, around the side of the house and into the neighbor’s back yard. The victim’s son heard her screams and witnessed Arnold dragging his mother across the neighbor’s yard. The victim testified that while she was being dragged around the yard, Arnold gained control of the gun and threatened to kill her.
The son, fearing for his mother’s safety, grabbed a baseball bat аnd attempted to go to her rescue, but the victim—who wanted to protect her son from harm—demanded that he stay away. The son then ran back inside the house and attempted to call 911, but the telephone line had been cut, so he dashed across the street to a friend’s house, where that friend сalled 911. The son and his friend, both now armed with baseball bats, returned to the scene and attempted to aid the victim, but she again insisted that they stay away. The victim testified that Arnold raped and orally sodomized her while they were in the neighbor’s yard, and then fled “[w]hen he finished.” Shortly thereafter, the police arrived.
Arnоld was arrested later that day and indicted on the charges of, inter alia, kidnapping, rape, and possession of a firearm during the commission of a crime. He subsequently pleaded guilty to each of the charges and was sentenced to fifteen years confinement for kidnapping, twenty years fоr rape, and five years for possession of a firearm. In 2007, the Supreme Court of Georgia granted Arnold habeas relief after concluding that the record failed to show he had been informed that by pleading guilty, he was waiving his privilege against compulsory self-incrimination.
In August 2008, a jury convicted Arnold on one count of kidnapping, but acquitted him of the rape and possession charges. The trial court sentenced Arnold to serve 20 years in confinement.
At the outsеt, we note that on an appeal from a criminal conviction, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the jury’s
1. Arnold first contends that the trial judge was not permitted to increase his sentence for kidnapping from 15 years to 20 years following the trial because to do so was unconstitutionally vindictive under North Carolina v. Pearce.
In Pearce, the Supreme Court of the United States held that due process prohibits vindictiveness from playing any part in a new sentence imposed by a trial court after a criminal defendant has successfully attacked his conviction and obtained a new trial.
la Alabama v. Smith,
in the course of the proof at trial the judge may gather a fuller appreciation of the nature and extent of the crimes*61 charged^] [t]he defendant’s conduct during trial may give the judge insights into his moral character and suitability for rehabilitation[;] [and] [finally, after trial, the factors that may have indicated leniency as consideration for the guilty plea are no longer presеnt.13
And that is exactly what happened in the case sub judice. During the sentencing hearing, the trial judge—who had not imposed the original 15-year sentence
2. Arnold nеxt contends that the evidence of kidnapping was insufficient to sustain his conviction. Specifically, he argues that there was insufficient evidence of asportation.
A person commits the offense of kidnapping “when such person abducts or steals away another person without lawful authority or warrant and holds such other person against his or her will.”
(1) the duration of the movement; (2) whether the movement occurred during the commission of a separate offense; (3) whether such movement was an inherent part of that separate offense; and (4) whether the movement itself presented a significant danger to the victim independent of the dаnger posed by the separate offense.22
In analyzing these factors, it is not necessary that every one be satisfied in the State’s favor in order to find asportation.
Here, the evidence of Arnold’s movement of the victim was sufficient to sustain the asportation element of the kidnapping conviction. Although the time and distance spanned by Arnold’s forceful dragging of the victim out of the house, through the yard, and into the neighbor’s yard may not have been lengthy, the movement was of sufficient duration to satisfy the first Garza factor.
Because the movement in question here was sufficient in duration, unrelated to a separate оffense, and increased the danger to the victim, it was “in the nature of the evil the kidnapping statute was originally intended to address” and not “merely a criminologically insignificant circumstance attendant to some other crime.”
3. Finally, Arnold contends that the trial court improperly instructed the jury on the issue of asportation and that he is therefore entitled to a new trial. Although we agree that the charge given by the trial court was erroneous, this errоr does not entitle Arnold to a new trial.
The charge given to the jury was a correct statement of the law on asportation at the time of Arnold’s trial: “Only the slightest movement of the victim is required to constitute the necessary element of asportation.”
As discussed in Division 2, supra, Arnold forcefully dragged the victim from her bedroom, through and out of her house, across her yard, and into her neighbor’s yard in the darkness of the early morning hours. His movements of her were not an inherent or integral part of any other offense, and the movements presented a significant danger to the victim in that they enhanced Arnold’s control over her and decreased her chance of rescue by her teenage son. Based upon this evidence, we conclude it highly probable that the error of the trial court in not instructing the jury to consider the Garza factors of asportation in no way contributed to the judgment of guilt on the charge of kidnapping.
For all of the foregoing reasons, we affirm Arnold’s conviction.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
See Calloway v. Stale,
See Arnold, v. Howerton,
The judge who presided over the trial was not the same judge who previously accepted Arnold’s plea and sentenced him during the plea hearing.
Calloway,
Crawford v. State,
Calloway,
Id. at 725 (II) (C) (“Due process of law... requirеs that vindictiveness against a defendant for having successfully attacked his first conviction must play no part in the sentence he receives after a new trial.”); see also State v. Hudson,
Pearce,
Texas v. McCullough,
Id. at 803; see also Hudson,
Smith,
While our conclusion is, perhaps, bolstered by the fact that the trial judge who imposed the sentence before us on appeal is different from the trial judge who imposed the vacated sentence, we wish to make clear that nothing in this opinion should be construed as suggesting that a trial judge whose sentence is successfully challenged by a criminal defendant is somehow incapable of imposing a subsequent sentence free from any vindictiveness.
Smith,
Arnold also argues that, because the victim had a gun, the evidence was insufficient to show that he abducted her against her will. However, the testimony at trial showed that the victim stood at 4'9" tall, weighed 125 pounds, was unable to turn off the safety on the gun, and was kicking and screaming as Arnold (6'1" tall and 225 pounds) dragged her through the yаrd. The jury was entitled to conclude from that evidence that the victim did not voluntarily go with Arnold into the yard. See Parson v. State,
OCGA § 16-5-40 (a).
See generally Lyons v. State,
See Garza,
604 F2d 221, 227 (IV) (3d Cir. 1979).
Garza,
See, e.g., Sipplen v. State,
Garza,
Compare Henderson v. State,
See Williams v. State,
Because the fаctors are satisfied regardless, we need not decide here whether an offense for which Arnold was acquitted qualifies as a “separate offense” under Garza’s second and third factors. See Williams,
See id. at 503-04 (1) (b) (holding that movement which occurred before victim was beaten did not occur during the commission of aggravated battery offense).
See Goolsby,
See Williams,
Garza,
See note 18, supra.
See Hammond,
Hammond,
See, e.g., id. at 145 (2) (holding that because evidence was sufficient under Garza standard, highly probable erroneous instruction did not contribute to judgment); Dixon v. State,
