delivered the Opinion of the Court.
We granted certiorari to determine whether the Colorado Court of Appeals was correct in reversing the conviction of Nick San Emerterio for first-degree kidnapping.
See People v. Emerterio,
I
The defendant was charged in El Paso County District Court with first-degree kidnapping, 1 first-degree sexual assault, 2 and soliciting for child prostitution, 3 based on events that occurred on October 17, 1987. The victim was a woman who was eighteen years old at the time. She testified at the defendant’s jury trial and described her *1163 encounter with the defendant as outlined in the following paragraphs. The defendant did not testify.
On the afternoon of October 17,1987, the victim was walking along a busy street in Colorado Springs on her way from her apartment to a convenience store a few blocks away. A vehicle driven by a person later identified as the defendant was traveling on a side street and stopped at the intersection with the street along which the victim was walking. The defendant opened the passenger door of the vehicle and asked the victim for directions. The victim offered directions and pointed the way. The defendant grasped her arm, pulled her into the vehicle against her will, and drove to the parking lot of a small, quiet shopping center several blocks away, all the while restraining the victim by her arm or her shirt. During the trip, the defendant said the victim was to perform sexual favors for him for fifty dollars and that he also wanted her to bring him some eleven- or twelve-year-old children so that he could take pictures of them. After stopping the vehicle in the parking lot, the defendant grasped the victim by the back of the head and forced her to place her mouth to his penis. Afterward, the defendant drove the vehicle down an alley, still holding the victim to prevent her from escaping, and stopped before entering a busy street.
After the sexual assault and continuing during the ensuing drive, the defendant again told the victim he wanted her to bring him eleven- or twelve-year-old children, adding that he wished to take nude pictures of them and that he wanted the children to perform sexual favors for him. The victim testified that she “tried to play along with him” and promised to bring him some children. The defendant promised monetary compensation for both the victim and the children, and the two agreed that the victim would meet him at a designated time and place the next day with an eleven- or twelve-year-old child. The victim testified further that she cooperated and made the promise to prevent the defendant from becoming angry and to avoid bodily injury.
The defendant gave the victim five dollars, rather than the promised fifty dollars, telling her that she had not performed the earlier sexual favor correctly. Then, while the vehicle was still stopped in the alley, the victim was able to break free from the defendant’s grasp and escape. She immediately reported the events to a friend, who notified the police. The defendant was ultimately arrested, charged, brought to trial, and convicted of first-degree kidnapping, first-degree sexual assault, and soliciting for child prostitution. The district court sentenced the defendant to twelve years imprisonment on each count, the sentences to run concurrently.
• The defendant appealed to the court of appeals, which affirmed the convictions for first-degree sexual assault and soliciting for child prostitution
4
but reversed the conviction for first-degree kidnapping and remanded for entry of a judgment of conviction and imposition of sentence for second-degree kidnapping.
Emerterio,
*1164 II
The statute defining first-degree kidnapping provides in relevant part:
Any person who does any of the following acts with the intent thereby to force the victim or any other person to make any concession or give up anything of value in order to secure a release of a person under the offender’s actual or apparent control commits first degree kidnapping:
(a) Forcibly seizes and carries any person from one place to another....
§ 18-3-301(1), 8B C.R.S. (1986) (emphasis added). To review the court of appeals’ decision that there was insufficient evidence to establish that the defendant intended to force the victim “to make any concession” in order to secure her release, we must address the meaning of the term “concession” as it relates to the evidence.
In considering whether there is sufficient evidence to support a jury’s finding of fact, we must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution.
People v. Jensen,
The evidence would have permitted the jury to find that the defendant intended to force the victim to promise to bring him eleven- or twelve-year-old children and that she did promise to meet him at a designated time and place on the following day to provide him with such a child. The evidence also permits the inference that the defendant implicitly agreed to release the victim when he had completed the sexual assault and when she had made the promise to supply the defendant with young children. This brings us to the specific question of whether such a promise constitutes a “concession” within the meaning of the first-degree kidnapping statute.
In determining the meaning and scope of a statutory term, our primary objective must be to give effect to the intent of the General Assembly.
People v. District Court, Second Judicial Dist.,
The General Assembly amended Colorado’s kidnapping statute in 1971, ch. 121, sec. 1, §§ 40-3-301, -302, 1971 Colo.Sess. Laws 388, 421-22, and set forth two degrees of the offense. 6 As related to the facts of this case, first-degree and second-degree kidnapping were distinguished by the actor’s intent in seizing a victim. Compare § 18-3-301(l)(a), 8B C.R.S. (1986), *1165 ■with § 18-3-302(1), 8B C.R.S. (1986). The revision originated with a recommendation made by the Colorado Legislative Council to elevate the offense to aggravated kidnapping if the actor holds a victim for ransom. The Council’s proposed language covered those situations where the person acts with the specific intent to force another “to give up anything of value in order to secure [the victim’s] release.” Colorado Legislative Council, Research Publication No. 98, Report to the Colorado General Assembly: Preliminary Revision of Colorado Criminal Laws 19 (1964). 7 The Council stated that while “ransom will usually be money, the broader term ‘anything of value’ is used to cover things like jewels or other valuables.” Id. at 20. Thus, as recommended by the Council, although the term “anything of value” was meant to be broadly inclusive, it was still limited by the requirement that the item sought have monetary value. 8
The General Assembly, however, enacted a more comprehensive version of the first-degree kidnapping statute. It adopted most of the Council’s recommendations, but added the words “make any concession or” before the words “give up anything of value”, in the final enactment. Although we have been unable to discover any legislative discussion relating to this new language, we must assume the General Assembly intended to increase the statute’s scope beyond the Council’s proposal so as to cover situations where a kidnapper seeks something other than monetary reward in exchange for the victim’s release.
Bridges,
Our construction of the term “concession” is consistent with interpretations that courts in at least two other jurisdictions have given to statutes that extend first-degree kidnapping beyond ordinary ransom situations.
State v. Hanna,
The Federal Kidnapping Act also defines kidnapping broadly, making it unlawful to “seize[ ], ... or carr[y] away and hold[ ] for ransom or reward
or otherwise
any person, except in the case of a minor by a parent thereof....” 18 U.S.C. § 1201 (1988) (emphasis added). The phrase “or otherwise” was added to the statute in 1934,
10
and the United States Supreme Court has since given a broad interpretation to these words.
See Gooch v. United States,
The Federal Kidnapping Act would appear to support a construction that holding someone to obtain any form of benefit would satisfy the statute’s intent requirement.
See United States v. Healy,
Furthermore, we reject the court of appeals’ reasoning that the defendant’s lack of control over the victim after her release and his consequent inability to secure her performance of the promise meant that there could not be a concession.
See Emerterio,
This view comports with our suggestion in
Bridges
that proof of a victim’s submission to a sexual assault may establish a “concession” if “ ‘the defendant warranted, and the victim perceived, that her freedom was dependent upon her submission to the sexual assault.’ ”
Bridges,
Our focus on the defendant’s intent is also in line with the approach taken by other jurisdictions.
See State v. Knutson,
Ill
The court of appeals erred in determining that a victim’s promise to perform an act after her release and over which the defendant has no control to insure her performance cannot constitute a “concession” under section 18-3-301, 8B C.R.S. (1986). Consequently, we conclude that there is sufficient evidence to support the jury’s finding that the defendant intended to force the victim to make a concession in order to secure her release. We reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and return the case to that court with directions to remand for entry of judgment of conviction and imposition of sentence for first-degree kidnapping.
Notes
. § 18-3-301, 8B C.R.S. (1986).
. § 18-3-402, 8B C.R.S. (1986).
.§ 18-7-402, 8B C.R.S. (1986).
. The defendant’s convictions and sentences for first-degree sexual assault and soliciting for child prostitution are not before us for review.
. In addition to rejecting the defendant’s extraction of the victim's promise to obtain children as a means of establishing the statute’s intent element, the court of appeals also determined that her "forced submission to defendant’s sexual assault [could not] serve as the concession required by § 18-3-301(1).”
Emerterio,
Furthermore, the defendant argues that the trial court’s instruction defining the elements of first-degree kidnapping, in addition to the prosecutor’s closing argument, allowed the jury to return a verdict of guilty on a legally impermissible basis and, therefore, that his conviction must be set aside. Since the defendant did not raise this issue in his cross-petition for certiora-ri, however, we decline to consider it on review.
. The previous statutes, §§ 40-2-44, -45, 3 C.R.S. (1963), did not establish different “degrees" of kidnapping. Instead, they set forth various ways by which the crime of kidnapping could be accomplished and prescribed a range of penalties depending on how the actor committed the offense and whether the victim sustained bodily harm.
. The Council's comment on the proposed first-degree kidnapping section stated:
This section defines the offense of simple kidnaping and false imprisonment with the intent to extort a ransom. It increases the penalty for kidnaping when it is done for ransom....
Colorado Legislative Council,
Research Publication No. 98, Report to the Colorado General Assembly: Preliminary Revision of Colorado Criminal Laws
20 (1964) (emphasis added);
see Bridges,
199 Colo, at 525,
. When the General Assembly enacted the kidnapping statutes in 1971, it also adopted a definition of the phrase "thing of value.” Ch. 121, sec. 1, § 40-l-1001(r), 1971 Colo.Sess.Laws 388, 414. As presently codified, ‘"[t]hing of value’ includes real property, tangible and intangible personal property, contract rights, choses in action, services, confidential information, medical records information, and any rights of use or enjoyment connected therewith,” § 18 — 1— 901(3)(r), 8B C.R.S. (1986), all of which appear to have objective value in most situations. Although the first-degree kidnapping statute uses the slightly different term "anything of value,” we have considered the phrases interchangeable in the context of a prosecution for theft.
See People v. Parga,
. The court cited cases from other jurisdictions where evidence of sexual assaults supported convictions for kidnapping under statutes requiring an intent to obtain either a concession, advantage, or thing of value from a victim.
See, e.g., State
v.
Dubina,
. The Amending Act of May 18, 1934, ch. 301, 48 Stat. 781, 18 U.S.C. § 408a.
. As the Court noted in
Gooch,
the rule of
ejusdem generis
“limits general terms which follow specific ones to matters similar to those specified.”
Gooch,
. The Court in
Gooch
suggested, but did not decide, that “reward” may itself be broad enough to encompass things not possessing pecuniary value.
