Carl Ramsey was convicted by a jury of the crimes of first-degree kidnapping, attempted murder, and robbery. On aрpeal, he challenges the trial court’s refusal to direct a verdict in his favor on the kidnapping charge, claiming insufficient record evidence on the “removal” element of the offense. See Iowa Code § 710.1 (1987) (kidnapping defined). In the alternative, Ramsey contends that the kidnapping statute, as applied to him under the facts of this case, is unconstitutionally vague. We affirm.
As we consider Ramsey’s challenge to thе trial court’s denial of his motion for directed verdict, “we examine the whole record in the light most favorable to the State, accept all legitimate inferences permitted by the evidence, and uphоld the jury’s finding when there is substantial evidence to support it.”
State v. Newman,
The trio observed James Clark sitting in his truck in front of а tavern. Ramsey approached the truck and asked Clark whether he would give Ramsey and his buddies a ride to a party in Bettendorf, approximately three miles away. Clark willingly obliged. He even acceptеd five dollars for fuel. Cristal, meanwhile, ran *494 off to inform the police of what Ramsey and his accompliсes were planning.
Clark testified that at no time during the trip to Bettendorf was he threatened with a weapоn or made to feel in any danger. When he and his passengers reached a rural residence that was supposedly the location of the “party,” Clark stopped his vehicle and turned off the ignition. He repоrted that suddenly his hands got “tight” and he “saw yellow.” This is the last thing Clark remembered until he “woke up” three weeks later, having mirаculously survived a gunshot wound from a bullet fired point blank to the back of his head.
Based on this record, Ramsey claims there is insufficient evidence to support a conviction for kidnapping. The State was required tо prove, among other things, that the defendant “confine[d] a person or remove[d] a person from оne place to anoth-er_” Iowa Code § 710.1;
see also State v. Hatter,
In essence, Ramsey asks this court to reject' the “kidnapping by deception” theory adopted by the court of appeals in
State v. Coen,
For essentially the same reason, we reject Ramsey’s due process vagueness challenge. He contends that becausе the word “deception” is not used in section 710.1, it cannot form the basis upon which his conviction rests. Ramsey is confusing means with ends, however. Ramsey’s intent, as expressed by his girlfriend and logically inferred from subsequent events, was to remove an innocent person to a remote location, shoot him, and steal his car. Whether thе removal was accomplished by force or artful deception, the end result remains the same.
The question is whether section 710.1 gives a person of ordinary intelligence fair notice of what is prohibited and provides an explicit standard for those who apply it.
See State v. Pierce,
AFFIRMED.
All Justices concur except CARTER, J., who concurs in the result.
