Lead Opinion
Fоllowing a jury trial, Martin Flores appeals his conviction for kidnapping
When reviewing a defendant’s challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict, and the defendant no longer enjoys the presumption of innocence. Short v. State.
So viewed, the evidence shows that late one evening when a 12-year-old female was returning home after a party, 19-year-old Flores burst from the bushes near the front door of the young girl’s home and confronted her about her unwillingness to engage in a romantic relationship with him. He then grabbed her arm and forced her out of sight to the unlit back side of the residence, where he tripped her and pulled her pants down. Over the girl’s protests, Flores tried to penetrate her private area, but she pushed him to the side. In response, Flores flipped the girl over onto her stomach and penetrated her private area from behind. During the assault, he put his hand over her mouth to stop her from screaming.
The young girl’s mother, who had recently arrived home and had been looking for her daughter in the residence and in the yard around its entrance, walked to the back of the residence and saw Flores on top of her daughter with his pants down. The girl shouted that Flores was raping her, and Flores fled the scene.
Flores was indicted for aggravated assault (assault with intent to rape), kidnapping, false imprisonment, child molestation, and criminal attempt to rape. At trial, an officer testified that the victim picked Flоres from a photographic lineup and that the victim had told him she had been penetrated both while face-to-face with Flores and while Flores attacked her from behind. A jury found Flores guilty on all counts, following which the judge merged the false imprisonment count into the kidnapping count, and the criminal attempt count into the aggravated assault count, and sentenced Flores. Following the denial of his motion for new trial, Flores appeals.
1. Flores first argues that under Garza v. State,
Garza adopted a test first articulated in Govt. of Virgin Islands v. Berry,
(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 danger posed by the separate offense.
Garza, supra,
[assessment of these factors will assist Georgia prosecutors and courts alike in determining whether the movement in question is in the nature of the evil the kidnapping statute was originally intended to address — i.e., movement serving to substantially isolate the victim from protection or rescue — or merely a “criminologically insignificant circumstance” attendant to some other crime.
Id.
Our аssessment of the four factors confirms that the evidence here showed that
Henderson v. State,
2. Flores complains that the child molestation portion of the indictment charged him
First, some еvidence indeed showed that Flores’s private part touched the victim’s private part. The victim testified that Flores pulled down her pants and tried to touch her private part with his private part, that he penetrated her and that it may have been his private part that penetrated her, and that she cried out to her mother that he was raping her. The mother testified that she saw Flores on top of her daughter with his pants down and that her daughter exclaimed that he was raрing her. The medical examiner, while finding no male DNA on the victim, did find dirt and abrasions on the victim’s private part and could not rule out penile penetration or contact. In light of this evidence, Flores’s counsel tellingly argued (in an attempt to prevent the State from recalling the victim as a witness) that “the State’s already established the essential elements of the charges and that [the victim] should not be allowed to testify again.”
Second, even if the evidence showed that Flores only used his hand to touch the victim’s private part, such would not constitute a fatal variance, as Flores “was on notice that he was being tried for touching the girl in a private area.” Collins v. State.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
OCGA § 16-5-40 (a).
OCGA § 16-6-4 (a).
Short v. State,
Jackson v. Virginia,
Hash v. State,
Garza v. State,
Govt. of Virgin Islands v. Berry, 604 F2d 221, 227 (IV) (3rd Cir. 1979).
Rayshad v. State,
Henderson v. State,
With such clear and decisive Supreme Court of Georgia opinions on point, we are bound by the Georgia Constitution to follow that precedent and therefore are not authorized to consider the holdings of the foreign jurisdictions cited in the dissent. Ga. Const, of 1983, Art. VI, Sec. VI, Par. VI. OCGA § 16-5-40 (a). I note that House Bill 575 (effective date July 1, 2009) amended this Code section and addressed the asportation aspect of the kidnapping offense, but because that is a substantive change to the law, it has no retroactive effect here.
As a general rule, a reviewing court must apply the law as it exists at the time the court’s opinion is rendered rather than the law prevailing at the time of an arrest. [However, a statutory] amendment may be applied retroаctively if the changes do not affect constitutional or substantive rights and if the legislature did not express a contrary intention.
State v. McCabe,
Gentry v. State,
Collins v. State,
Buice v. State,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring and concurring specially.
I agree with all that is said in the majority, but write specially to emphasize the difficulty created by Garza v. State,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part.
I concur fully in Division 2, but I respectfully dissent from Division 1, because the majority fails to properly apply the test articulated by the Supreme Court of Georgia in Garza v. State.
[assessment of these factors will assist Georgia prosecutors and courts alike in determining whether the movement in question is in thе nature of the evil the kidnapping statute was originally intended to address — i.e., movement serving to substantially isolate the victim from protection or rescue — or merely a “criminologically insignificant circumstance” attendant to some other crime.16
Applying Garza’s four factors to the facts in this case, it is clear, as the majority concedes, that the duration of the movement, the first factor, was short. With respect to the second factor, the majority also correctly concludes that “the movement occurred during the commission of a separate offense.”
The testimony describing the extent of the movement came from the victim:
Witness: [W]hen he jumped out of the bushes, he started pulling my arm and then ... he took me to this tree when he was — as he was pulling me, he told me that “why haven’t you talked to me” and that — he was like “I want you to be mine and I don’t give a — if you don’t want to.” And then he started pulling me again.
State: [A]s he pulled you, . . . did you want to go with him? Witness: No.
State: Where did he pull you?
Witness: To the back of my mobile home park.
State: To the back of the park or the back of your home?
Witness: I mean the house, yes. . . .
State: All right. What happened as he pulled you back to the back of your home?
Witness: Somehow he made me trip and then he like started to pull my pants down and as I was trying to pull them up, so he hurt my hand, so —
State: So, he did what?
Witness: He hurt my hand when — because I was pulling them up, he was pulling them. And then he got on top of me, he’s tried to, you know, penetrate. So, he couldn’t, so I sort of pushed him to theside and then I was trying to like get away and then he grabbed me and then he got on top of me. . . .
On recall, the victim again testified that Flores “pulled me [by the arm] ... to the back of my house” as she struggled “to get away from him” bеfore he pulled her pants down.
This description of the attack demonstrates that the movement here was done in furtherance of and as a part of the underlying offense. Garza expressly sought to avoid criminalizing as a separate offense this type of short movement “designed to better carry out the [underlying] criminal activity,” because it would allow prosecution for “movements that many other jurisdictions would view as ‘incidental’ and thus not sufficient to sustain a kidnapping conviction.”
Further, with respect to the fourth Garza factor, the movement itself presented little or no danger (and yielded no injury) independent of the danger posed by the aggravated assault. This is in contrast to a scenario where a victim was taken from one place to another remote location that in and of itself heightened the danger to the victim.
With respect to the majority’s reliance on Henderson v. State,
In Henderson, the Supreme Court of Georgia addressed a scenario where the victims of an armed robbery were moved at gunpoint from one room to another within a two-room duplex and ordered to remove their clothes and get on the floor after the completion of the robbery inside the duplex. There, the Court held that this movement did support a kidnapping conviction because the movement was independent of the completed armed robbery, and the movement “created an additional danger to the victims by enhancing the control of the gunmen over them.”
The only clear distinction between these cases is the point at which the forcible movement occurred. In Garza, the room-to-room movement occurred during a false imprisonment as police attempted to intervene, and no kidnapping resulted. In Henderson, the room-to-room movement occurred after an armed robbery was cоmpleted, and a kidnapping resulted. Thus, from this precedent it appears that the timing of the movement, and the role it played in the underlying offense, are vital to applying the Garza factors.
Here, the forced movement was not a separate act performed after or before a completed assault, but it was a part of the same criminal course of conduct that occurred leading up to and during the attack (even if
Such a kidnapping scenario is similar to the one here and to those cited disapprovingly in Garza, i.e., where a victim was forced from one room to another in the course of an attempted rape,
Here, the victim was not moved far and was not held longer than necessary to complete the underlying assault which necessarily involved some detention of the victim. Further, the movement to the back yard was undertaken as a part of and to facilitate the attack; the movement itself did not present “a significant danger to the victim independent of the danger posed by the separate offense,” as required by the fourth factor in Garza.
In light of the particular facts of this case, I do not find the movement in this case sufficiеnt to sustain a conviction for kidnapping under current precedent. The Georgia Code defines the offense as “abduct[ing] or stealing] away.”
Prеviously, the slightest movement was sufficient. See, e.g., Griffin v. State,
[a]s other courts and commentators have noted, and as [the Supreme Court of Georgia] has witnessed, this expansive construction of asportation poses a potential danger that the definition of kidnapping will sweep within its scope conduct that is decidedly wrongful but that should be punished as some other crime. Thus, for example, the robber who forces his victim to move from one room to another in order to find a cаshbox or open a safe technically may commit kidnapping as well as robbery. This reasoning raises the possibility of cumulative penalties or of higher sanctions for kidnapping, even though the “removal” of the victim to another place was part and parcel of the robbery and not an independent wrong.
Garza v. State,
Adopted from Govt. of Virgin Islands v. Berry, 604 F2d 221, 227 (IV) (3rd Cir. 1979), the test was formulated in an effort to synthesize the various standards employed by jurisdictions embracing the modern approach with respect to asportаtion. As noted by the majority, the four factors are: (1) the duration of the detention or asportation; (2) whether the detention or asportation occurred during the commission of a separate offense; (3) whether the detention or asportation is inherent in the separate offense; and (4) whether the detention or asportation created a significant danger to the victim independent of that posed by the separate offense. See Garza,
Garza,
Id.
Id. at 701 (1).
Compare Berry, 604 F2d аt 227 (IV) (establishing the four-factor test adopted by Garza and holding that a short involuntary night-time drive to a beach where victim was robbed did not satisfy kidnapping statute), statutorily superceded, with Martinez v. Govt. of Virgin Islands, 2008 U. S. Dist. LEXIS 107613, *11 (III) (C) (2008) (applying the same test and holding that an involuntary, ten-mile, high-speed drive under armed threat to an isolated dead end road where victim was raped was sufficient to support kidnapping conviction). See also Garza,
Garza,
Id.
Henderson,
See Woodson v. State,
See Scott v. State,
See Phillips v. State,
Similarly, merely forcing a standing victim of an armed robbery to the floor could be construed as “enhancing the control” of a gunman over the victim. Compare Henderson,
See, e.g., Berry, 604 F2d at 227 (IV). For example, the Supreme Court of Maryland has characterized the modern trend (followed by our Supreme Court in Garza and in a majority of other jurisdictions) as follows:
If the victim is not moved too far, is not held for longer than is necessary to complete the other crime, and is not subjected to any significant pеril from the confinement or movement itself, if the confinement or movement can reasonably be viewed as undertaken solely to facilitate the commission of the other crime, and if commission of the other crime normally involves (even if it does not legally require) some detention or asportation of the victim, the court is likely to conclude that the confinement or movement was merely incidental to the other crime and thus reverse ⅛ separate kidnapping conviction.
State v. Stauffer,
[A] defendant may be convicted of both kidnapping and another substantive crime if, at any time prior to, during or after the commission of that other crime, the victim is moved or confined in a way that has independent criminal significance, that is, the victim was restrained to an extent exceeding that which was necessary to accomplish or complete the other crime.
State v. Salamon,
See Maynard v. Govt. of the Virgin Islands, 2008 U. S. Dist. LEXIS 15632, *10-11 (III) (A) (2008) (evidence that victim was dragged 50-100 feet was insufficient to show that movement was “further than . . . necessary for [the defendants] to commit the crime of robbery”). See also Ohio v. Price,
OCGA § 16-5-40 (a). I note that House Bill 575 (effective date July 1, 2009) amended this Code section and addressed the asportation aspect of the kidnapping offense, but because that is a substantive change to the law, it has no retroactive effect here.
As a general rule, a reviewing court must apply the law as it exists at the time the court’s opinion is rendered rather than the law prevailing at the time of an arrest. [However, a statutory] amendment may he applied retroactively if the changes do not affect constitutional or substantive rights and if the legislature did not express a contrary intention.
State v. McCabe,
