Opinion
In these certified appeals involving criminal offenses against two victims, the defendant, Paolino Sanseverino, and the state both appeal from the judgment of the Appellate Court, which reversed the judgment of conviction, rendered after a jury trial, of kidnapping in the first degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-92 (a) (2) (A)
1
and sexual assault in the first degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-70 (a) (1)
2
for acts committed against the victim G,
3
and of
*612
sexual assault in the first degree in violation of § 53a-70 (a) (1) and attempt to commit sexual assault in the first degree in violation of General Statutes §§ 53a-49 (a) (2)
4
and 53a-70 (a) (1) for acts committed against another victim, C.
State
v.
Sanseverino,
The Appellate Court’s opinion sets forth the following facts that the jury reasonably could have found. “In June or July, 1998, the defendant, the owner of Uncle’s Bakery in Newington, hired C to work in the bakery. . . . One day, toward the end of her shift, while she was alone with the defendant, the defendant asked C to take a box into the back room. The defendant followed C into the back room, grabbed her by her shoulders and pushed her against a wall and a metal shelving unit. She could not move because the defendant had one arm and his upper body pressed against her. The defendant pulled her shirt out of her pants, put his hand under her shirt and touched her breasts. She tried to push him away and told him three or four times to stop, but he told her that ‘he could do whatever he wanted to [her] because he had friends in the Newington police department, and it would be [her] word against his. Nobody would believe [her].’ He then unbuttoned her jeans, pulled them down and digitally penetrated her vagina. He unbuttoned his pants and pulled out his penis. He turned C around and held her down by the back of the neck, pinning her with her head between the shelving unit and the wall. He tried to insert his penis into her vagina, but because she kept moving around, he did not successfully penetrate her, although she did feel the pressure of him trying to insert himself.
“At that point, the buzzer rang at the front door, indicating that a customer had entered the store. The defendant turned C around, put his hand over her *614 mouth, pushed her against the wall and told her to stay there and to be quiet. When the defendant left to assist the customer, C ran out of the bakery and went home. She never returned to the bakery. At home, C went into the bathroom, took off her clothes and showered. She later burned her clothing. She testified that her initial intention was to call the police but that when she got home, her boyfriend had three other people with him, and she did not want them to know, so she did not tell anyone or call the police at that time. She did not tell anyone what had happened to her until ‘a couple of months later.’ C testified that after what happened, she was angry always, and if she was not working, she was sleeping. She said that she would not talk to anybody or let anybody touch her, and she would not let anybody be around her. Her boyfriend’s mother, with whom C was residing, eventually asked her about her behavior and mood, and C ‘finally broke down and told her what had happened at the bakery.’
“On November 8, 1998, C contacted Peter Lavery, an officer with the Newington police department, to report that she had been sexually assaulted sometime in June or July, 1998, by the defendant at Uncle’s Bakery. She gave a sworn statement of what had occurred. Later that same day, she contacted Lavery and said that she did not want to press charges against the defendant and did not want to go through any further investigation of the case because it would be too stressful for her to go to court and go through the court proceedings. In August, 1999, however, after being informed that a second rape victim, G, had come forward, C agreed to reinstate her case against the defendant. C and G did not know each other.
“In the fall of 1998, G became a regular customer at Uncle’s Bakery. In the spring of 1999, she approached the defendant about working at the bakery and was hired to work from 5 a.m. to 7:30 a.m. In May, 1999, as
*615
G started her shift at 5 a.m., she went into the back room of the bakery to get her apron. The defendant followed her in and grabbed her. She told him to ‘get away and stop,’ to which the defendant replied, ‘[you] know you want it, so stop.’ The defendant grabbed G’s arms, pushed her against the wall, pinned her arms over her head with his arm, and pressed his body against hers so she could not move. She twice yelled at him to stop, but he did not. She testified that she became afraid and that she froze. While still keeping her pinned [with one hand], he pulled her pants down, then pulled his pants down. He inserted his penis inside her vagina and then, prior to climaxing, pulled out and ejaculated on the floor. The defendant let G go, and she went into the bathroom, locked herself in and did not come out again until she heard another person enter the bakery. G then came out of the bathroom, waited until her shift was over and went home. She threw away her clothes. She did not talk to anybody about what had happened because, she testified, she felt ashamed, dirty, cheap and scared because the defendant had threatened her. She testified that he had told her [on numerous occasions] that ‘he was with the family, the mob, and that if [she] ever said anything ... he would take care of [her] and [her] family.’ G continued to work at the bakery for about one week because she was afraid of the defendant. After one week, she . . . quit because she ‘could [not] stand to see [the defendant] anymore.’ At some point, G told her former husband and her sister what had happened. She was advised not to say or do anything ‘because it would cause a scandal’ and because her sister and her sister’s husband ‘were in the process of buying the business from the defendant.’ She testified that if she had said anything, ‘they might have lost the business.’ In July, 1999, however, G reported the sexual assault when she found out that the defendant was ‘smearing [her] name, saying that [she] was doing sexual favors for other men.’ This made her angry and determined that ‘he’s not going to get away with this.’ . . .
*616
The defendant subsequently was charged in connection with both incidents.”
State
v.
Sanseverino,
supra,
The record reveals the following additional undisputed facts and procedural history. The state separately had charged the defendant with kidnapping in the first degree with respect to C and G. Prior to trial, upon agreement of the state, the trial court dismissed the charge of kidnapping in the first degree as to C, which the defendant claimed had been brought beyond the statute of limitations. 5 The trial court denied the defendant’s motion to have the charges relating to C and G tried separately pursuant to Practice Book § 41-18. 6 At the close of the state’s case-in-chief, the defendant moved for a judgment of acquittal, which the trial court also denied. During the presentation of his case, the defendant claimed that he had dated both C and G for a period of time and that any sex with the victims was consensual. 7 The jury subsequently returned a verdict *617 of guilty on all four counts of the substitute information: sexual assault in the first degree and attempt to commit sexual assault in the first degree as to C, and kidnapping in the first degree and sexual assault in the first degree as to G. The trial court sentenced the defendant to a total term of forty years imprisonment. The defendant appealed from the judgment of conviction to the Appellate Court.
The Appellate Court determined that the trial court improperly had denied the defendant’s motion to sever the charges relating to C and G, concluding that the defendant had been prejudiced substantially by the consolidation of the two cases, because—viewed through the lens of our holding in
State
v.
Ellis,
*618
We thereafter granted the defendant’s petition for certification to appeal to this court on the following question: “Did the Appellate Court properly conclude that ... § 53a-92 (a) (2) (A), kidnapping in the first degree, is not unconstitutionally vague as applied to the defendant’s conduct?”;
State
v.
Sanseverino,
I
The defendant first claims that § 53a-92 (a) (2) (A) is unconstitutionally vague as applied to the facts of his case. Specifically, the defendant contends that, because the conduct at issue here predated our decision in
State
v.
Luurtsema,
Although the defendant broadly phrases his claim in constitutional terms, upon review of his specific contentions, it is clear that he is in effect addressing the same
*620
considerations with respect to the kidnapping statute— i.e., the incidental and necessary nature of the restraint to the underlying criminal offense
10
—that we recently reconsidered in
Salamon.
Therefore, because our case law advises us to eschew unnecessarily deciding a constitutional question; see, e.g.,
Tarro
v.
Commissioner of Motor Vehicles,
In
State
v.
Salamon,
supra,
In response to the defendant’s claim on appeal to this court in Salamon, we reexamined our long-standing interpretation of the kidnapping statutes to encompass even restraints that merely were incidental to and necessary for the commission of another substantive offense, such as robbery or sexual assault. Id., 522-28. We concluded that neither considerations related to the doctrine of stare decisis nor legislative acquiescence as to our prior, literal interpretation justified adherence to that interpretation; id., 520-22; particularly when it was bound, in some instances, to produce “unconscionable, anomalous, or bizarre results.” Id., 524. Moreover, we noted that, since 1977, when this court first had interpreted the kidnapping statutes, courts of many other states had adopted a contrary interpretation, barring convictions on the basis of incidental restraint or movement. Id., 526-27. Thus, in Salamon, we engaged, for the first time, in a more searching inquiry as to whether the kidnapping statutes “warrant[ed] the broad construction that we had given them.” Id., 524.
Our case law dating back to 1977 had concluded that the kidnapping statutes required only an element of intent, and not any time or distance elements. Id., 531-32. In this regard, the hallmark of a kidnapping is an *622 “abduction,” 12 which requires “restraint,” 13 the latter also being an element of the lesser crime of unlawful restraint. Id., 530. Each of these terms, which are statutorily defined, requires a separate intent element. The differing intents required for abduction and restraint presented us with an ambiguity not previously explored under our case law. Id., 534. In other words, we had not “explored the parameters of that intent, in particular, how the intent to prevent [a victim’s] liberation . . . that is, the intent necessary to establish an abduction, differs from the intent to interfere substantially with [a victim’s] liberty . . . necessary to establish a restraint. Certainly, when an individual intends to interfere substantially with another person’s liberty, he also intends to keep that person from escaping . . . [but] the point at which an intended interference with liberty crosses the line to become an intended prevention of liberation is not entirely clear.” (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) Id. We concluded in Salomon that this “point” is significant because, “[a]t least in a case not involving the secreting of a victim in a place he or she is unlikely to be found,” it is the intent that separates an abduction, and thus a kidnapping, from a mere unlawful restraint, which imposes “relatively minor penalties . . . .’’Id.
To resolve this ambiguity, we examined the “common law of kidnapping, the history and circumstances surrounding the promulgation of our current kidnapping *623 statutes and the policy objectives animating those statutes, [and] we conclude[d] the following: Our legislature, in replacing a single, broadly worded kidnapping provision with a gradated scheme that distinguishes kidnappings from unlawful restraints by the presence of an intent to prevent a victim’s liberation, intended to exclude from the scope of the more serious crime of kidnapping and its accompanying severe penalties those confinements or movements of a victim that are merely incidental to and necessary for the commission of another crime against that victim.” Id., 542. Although we reaffirmed our long-standing rule that no minimum period of restraint or degree of movement is necessary, 14 “[t]he guiding principle is whether the [confinement or movement] was so much the part of another substantive crime that the substantive crime could not have been committed without such acts . . . .” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id., 546.
“Whether the movement or confinement of the victim is merely incidental to and necessary for another crime will depend on the particular facts and circumstances of each case. Consequently, when the evidence reasonably supports a finding that the restraint was not merely incidental to the commission of some other, separate crime, the ultimate factual determination must be made by the jury. For purposes of making that determination, the juiy should be instructed to consider the various *624 relevant factors, including the nature and duration of the victim’s movement or confinement by the defendant, whether that movement or confinement occurred during the commission of the separate offense, whether the restraint was inherent in the nature of the separate offense, whether the restraint prevented the victim from summoning assistance, whether the restraint reduced the defendant’s risk of detection and whether the restraint created a significant danger or increased the victim’s risk of harm independent of that posed by the separate offense.” Id., 547-48. Applying this standard to the facts in Salamon, we concluded that, although the defendant had not been charged with assault, the judgment of conviction of kidnapping in the second degree had to be reversed and the case remanded for a new trial because the defendant was entitled to a jury instruction explaining that a kidnapping conviction could not lie if the restraint was merely incidental to the assault. 15 Id., 550.
Applying our holding in
Salamon
to our review of the Appellate Court’s determination regarding the trial court’s denial of the defendant’s motion for a judgment of acquittal in the present case, we conclude that, although the question of whether kidnapping may stand as a separate offense is one for the jury; id.; under the facts of the present case, no reasonable jury could have found the defendant guilty of kidnapping in the first degree on the basis of the evidence that the state proffered at trial. “The standard of review we apply to a claim of insufficient evidence is well established. In reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence to support a
*625
criminal conviction we apply a two-part test. First, we construe the evidence in the light most favorable to sustaining the verdict. Second, we determine whether upon the facts so construed and the inferences reasonably drawn therefrom the [finder of fact] reasonably could have concluded that the cumulative force of the evidence established guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
State
v.
Perkins,
In the present case, the evidence clearly establishes that the defendant restrained G solely for the purpose of sexually assaulting her. Although we have carefully scrutinized the record, transcript, exhibits and briefs, we have found no evidence that the defendant restrained G to any greater degree than that
necessary
to commit the sexual assault. G walked into the back room of the bakery to get an apron. The restraint occurred thereafter when the defendant grabbed G from behind and pushed her against the wall, pinning her arms over her head with his arm and pressing his body against hers to keep her from moving. These actions were clearly undertaken solely for the purpose of allowing the defendant to initiate, and to keep G from moving away from, his sexual advances. None of the restraint that the defendant applied to G was for the purpose of preventing her from summoning assistance nor did it significantly increase the risk of harm to G outside of that created by the assault itself. The defendant released G immediately after he had ejaculated. For these reasons, we conclude that no reasonable jury could have convicted the defendant of a kidnapping in light of our holding in
Salamon.
16
Cf.
State
v.
Salomon,
*626
supra,
II
We next turn to the issue raised in the state’s certified appeal. The state submits, inter alia, that the Appellate Court improperly determined that the defendant had been prejudiced substantially by the trial court’s denial of his motion to sever the charges concerning the two victims, C and G. The state specifically contends that the evidence in both cases would have been cross admissible at separate trials to show a common scheme or plan on the part of the defendant, and, therefore, the defendant could have suffered no substantial prejudice as a result of the consolidation. In the alternative, the state claims that the trial court properly consolidated the charges according to the considerations that this court set forth in
State
v.
Boscarino,
*627
The following additional procedural history is relevant to our resolution of this issue. Prior to trial, the defendant made a motion, pursuant to Practice Book § 41-18, to sever the charges against him and to order separate trials for the charges relating to each victim. The defendant argued that, because the crimes were so similar, he would be prejudiced by the consolidation because the jury could use evidence of guilt of a crime against one victim to convict him of another offense against the other victim. The trial court, applying
State
v.
Boscarino,
supra,
The Appellate Court concluded that consolidation of the offenses was improper because the factual scenarios as to each victim were so similar that consolidation “would impair the defendant’s right to the jury’s fair and independent consideration of the evidence in each case.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
State
v. Sanseverino, supra,
*628
General Statutes § 54-57
17
and Practice Book § 41-19
18
permit a trial court to join similar charges in pending cases against a common defendant. Our prior decisions have made clear that the trial court enjoys broad discretion in this respect and that its decision to consolidate will not be disturbed in the absence of manifest abuse of that discretion.
State
v.
McKenzie-Adams,
“Where evidence of one incident can be admitted at the trial of the other, separate trials would provide the defendant no significant benefit. It is clear that, under such circumstances, the defendant would not ordinarily be substantially prejudiced by joinder of the offenses for a single trial.”
State
v.
Pollitt,
Accordingly, we first must determine whether the trial court abused its discretion when it determined that the evidence of either assault would have been cross admissible at separate trials to prove a common plan or scheme.
State
v.
Jacobson,
There are “two separate and distinct categories of cases in which we have applied the common scheme or plan exception. In the first category, which consists of what most accurately may be described as ‘true’ common scheme or plan cases, the nature of the charged and uncharged crimes combined with connecting evidence, if any, gives rise to a permissive inference that an overall scheme or plan existed in the defendant’s mind, and that the crimes were executed in furtherance of that plan. In the second category of cases, which consists of what most accurately may be described as ‘signature’ cases, the charged and uncharged crimes
*631
appear to be separate and discrete criminal acts, but the method of commission exhibits the existence of a ‘modus operandi,’ ‘logo,’ or ‘signature,’ which, when considered in combination with other factors, such as the proximity of time and place of commission, gives rise to a permissive inference that the crimes were executed in furtherance of an overall common scheme or plan.”
State
v.
Randolph,
Thus, to establish a common scheme, “[i]t is not enough that the two offenses are similar. . . . [Rather], the characteristics of the two offenses must be sufficiently distinctive and unique as to be like a signature.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
State
v.
Morowitz,
supra,
With regard to the first factor, we have acknowledged that “increased remoteness in time does reduce the probative value of prior misconduct evidence . . . [but], [e]ven a relatively long hiatus between . . . misconduct ... is not, by itself, determinative of the admissibility of common plan or scheme evidence . . . .” (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)
State v. Jacobson,
supra,
With regard to the second and third factors, in the present case, the events were not merely similar; rather, the type of victim and the method of attack were substantially identical in both cases. First, both C and G are women whom the defendant had hired to work in his bakery. Second, the place where the assault occurred (the bakery’s back room), the method of restraint (pushing the victims up against an object and pinning them down), the method of sexual attack (vaginal intercourse or attempted vaginal intercourse), and the use of threats to dissuade the victim from reporting the assault (assertions of police or Mafia contacts) were all substantially the same in the cases of both victims. The similarities between the two attacks are, indeed,
*633
so striking that we have little trouble concluding, particularly under our more liberal sex crime admissibility rules, that the attacks were relevant to prove a common plan or scheme on the part of the defendant to sexually assault his female employees. See
State
v.
Sawyer,
supra,
We next must determine whether the prejudicial effect of the evidence outweighed its probative value. In so doing, “every reasonable presumption should be given in favor of the trial court’s ruling. ... Of course, [a]ll adverse evidence is damaging to one’s case, but it is inadmissible only if it creates
undue
prejudice so that it threatens an injustice were it to be admitted. . . . [Accordingly] [t]he test for determining whether evidence is unduly prejudicial is not whether it is damaging to the [party against whom the evidence is offered] but whether it will improperly arouse the emotions of the jur[ors].” (Emphasis in original; internal quotation marks omitted.)
State
v.
Jacobson,
supra,
Under these circumstances, it is difficult to imagine that G’s testimony unduly aroused the emotions of jurors anymore than C’s testimony and vice-versa— particularly given the strong similarities in the details of the incidents. Any trial at which a sexual assault victim has to relate intimate details of the assault is an emotional affair; we cannot conclude in the present case, without more, that evidence of such a common plan or scheme was unduly prejudicial.
The defendant contends that he was unduly prejudiced because, in consolidating the cases, the trial court *634 permitted the jury to hear and consider more details than were necessary to prove a common plan or scheme. Specifically, the defendant points to the admission of the evidence regarding the victims’ hesitation in coming forward and their general emotional reaction to the assault. Although the details concerning the state of mind and conduct of both victims after the assault were not relevant to a common plan or scheme, we disagree that the details of what happened to the victims after their assaults—such as, C’s emotional state—subjected the defendant to any undue prejudice. We cannot find, and the defendant has not directed us to, anything shocking or unusual about the victims’ emotional or psychological reactions to the assaults that would have so inflamed the passions and prejudices of the jury that separate trials would have afforded the defendant any substantial benefit. For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in determining that the evidence of each assault would have been cross admissible to prove a common plan or scheme. Thus, separate trials would have afforded the defendant no substantial benefit. Accordingly, the Appellate Court improperly concluded that the defendant was entitled to new trials.
Ill
Pursuant to the Practice Book § 84-11 (a), 21 the defendant offers an alternate ground to affirm the Appellate Court’s judgment reversing his convictions: the trial court’s decision to permit his former wife to testify as a rebuttal character witness constituted harmful error. We are not persuaded.
*635 The following additional procedural history is relevant to our consideration of this issue. At trial, the defendant called various friends and acquaintances to testily that he was a person of good character and that he was not the kind of person who would commit a crime like sexual assault. 22 At the close of the defendant’s case, the state sought to call Robin Sanseverino, the defendant’s former wife, to testify to incidents of sexual assault against her by the defendant during their thirteen year marriage. The defendant objected to this evidence on the basis that: (1) he was not given sufficient time to prepare to rebut it; and (2) the testimony itself would be more prejudicial than probative. The state contended that this testimony was admissible as rebuttal evidence of the character traits that the defendant had opened the door to during his presentation of evidence. The trial court agreed with the state and permitted Robin Sanseverino to testify as a rebuttal witness.
Thereafter, she testified that she had been sexually abused by the defendant on nearly a daily basis during their marriage. She testified as to specific incidents of this sexual abuse, such as when the defendant had forced her to have sex with him while she was sick with influenza, during which assault the victim swallowed her own vomit. She also testified as to prior incidents of domestic abuse that were nonsexual, such *636 as when the defendant threw a child’s high chair at her for not having dinner ready on time. In surrebuttal of this evidence, the defendant called members of his family and his divorce attorney to testify that they had no knowledge of the alleged sexual abuse of Robin Sanseverino by the defendant during the marriage.
The prosecutor did not mention Robin Sanseverino’s testimony in his summation to the jury. In its jury charge, the trial court instructed the jury that it could consider her testimony only as evidence of a common scheme or plan to commit sexual abuse, not as evidence of the defendant’s bad character or propensity to commit criminal acts. 23 The court did not give a charge on character evidence in this regard, and defense counsel stated on the record that he had no objection to the charge as given.
The defendant submits that the trial court improperly admitted Robin Sanseverino’s testimony as evidence of a common scheme or plan under the test set forth previously and that the impropriety was harmful. The state admits that it improperly had inquired into specific *637 instances of sexual abuse during its direct examination of Robin Sanseverino, 24 but contends that the defendant’s claim on appeal must be limited to the objection he raised at trial that the evidence was unduly prejudicial. The state maintains that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the testimony because it was not more prejudicial than probative, and that, in any event, any error was harmless.
Even if we were to assume, without deciding, that the trial court improperly admitted the evidence as evidence of a common scheme or plan, we conclude that the defendant failed to meet his burden of providing that such impropriety was harmful. When an evidentiary error is nonconstitutional in nature, as in the present case, the defendant bears the burden of showing it was harmful.
State
v.
Sawyer,
supra,
“[W]hether [the improper admission of a witness’ testimony] is harmless in a particular case depends upon a number of factors, such as the importance of the witness’ testimony in the prosecution’s case, whether the testimony was cumulative, the presence or absence of evidence corroborating or contradicting the testimony of the witness on material points, the extent of cross-examination otherwise permitted, and, of course, the overall strength of the prosecution’s case. . . . Most importantly, we must examine the impact of the [improperly admitted] evidence on the trier of fact and the result of the trial.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id., 358.
The state’s evidence independent of Robin Sanseverino’s testimony provided a strong case against the defendant. The fact that C and G gave nearly identical accounts of the sexual assaults by the defendant within one year of each other significantly enhanced the inference of guilt and strengthened the state’s case. Both victims were adults and had a good memory of the key details of the assaults. Moreover, the fact that Robin Sanseverino’s testimony was offered by the state in rebuttal to earlier character evidence that the defendant had presented conveyed to the jury its limited importance to the state’s case. Thus, we conclude that the state’s case was strong and that it reasonably could have supported a guilty verdict independent of the contested testimony. See id. (strength of state’s case was key factor in determining harmfulness of error in admission of uncharged misconduct in sex crimes case).
Three other factors influence our determination that the error was not harmful. First, the defendant had, and took full advantage of, the opportunity to present *639 evidence in surrebuttal of his former wife’s testimony. Specifically the defendant’s brother, Joseph Sanseverino, his nephew, Pasquale Serino, and his sister, Angela Sanseverino testified that they had never observed any signs of abuse between the defendant and his former wife while they were married. The defendant’s divorce attorney, Marcus Bordiere, also testified that no allegations of sexual abuse had surfaced during the course of the dissolution proceedings. Moreover, the defendant had, prior to Robin Sanseverino’s testimony, called four witnesses to testify to his good character in relation to his treatment of women. Second, any prejudice the defendant suffered was mitigated in part by the fact that he was the party who opened the door to the character evidence and thus it would have been entirely proper for the state to have called Robin Sanseverino to give her opinion as to the defendant’s violent character in rebuttal to the defendant’s evidence of his good character. Third, the state’s attorney did not rely on or mention Robin Sanseverino’s testimony during his summation to the jury, thus confining its effect to the rebuttal portion of his case.
The defendant claims, however, that we should find harmful error for the same reason that we did in
State
v.
Ellis,
supra,
In the present case, we previously have determined that allegations of sexual assault against C and G would have been cross admissible at separate trials. Thus, in contrast to the facts in Ellis, wherein the allegations of three additional victims improperly had been admitted, we do not conclude that the jury would have been overwhelmed by the testimony of the defendant’s former wife in the same way as it would have been had multiple additional victims come forward.
The defendant contends that, although Robin Sanseverino was the only witness who testified as to prior uncharged conduct, the magnitude of the abuse that she described was so much greater than that described by C and G that the effect was the same as in
Ellis.
We have trouble with this comparison, however, because Robin Sanseverino’s testimony did not bear on guilt in the same way. As we have stated, C and G’s allegations, in combination, fit a common pattern and modus operandi of sexual abuse of employees and thereby enhanced the inference of guilt.
State
v.
McKenzie-Adams,
supra,
The judgment of the Appellate Court is reversed and the case is remanded to that court with direction: (1) to reverse the judgment of the trial court with respect to the conviction of kidnapping in the first degree and to remand the case to the trial court with direction to render judgment of not guilty on that charge; and (2) to affirm the judgment of the trial court in all other respects.
In this opinion ROGERS, C. J., and NORCOTT and PALMER, Js., concurred.
dissenting. The majority observes that its decision is compelled by
State
v.
Salamon,
I
To explain fully my concerns with the direction that this court has taken concerning our restraint-based crimes, I begin with a description of the seven Salamon/Sanseverino precepts on which the law of kidnapping is now based.
First, when a defendant is charged with the crime of kidnapping and another assault-type crime, that is, one that necessitates restraint of the victim, the state must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the act of restraint on which the kidnapping is based is not merely incidental to the acts necessary for commission of the other crime. See id., 542.
Second, when a defendant is charged with the crime of kidnapping but not with an underlying assault-type crime, even though the factual circumstances suggest that he could have been charged with such a crime, he is entitled to a jury instruction on that noncharged crime, and the state must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the act of restraint on which the kidnapping *643 charge is based is not merely incidental to the acts necessary for commission of that noncharged crime. See id., 550 n.35.
Third, the question of whether the restraint on which a kidnapping charge is based is merely incidental to another crime is a factual question for the jury to determine. Id., 547-48.
Fourth, our well settled principle that the crime of kidnapping does not require any asportation of the victim or any minimum length or degree of confinement remains unchanged. Id., 546.
Fifth, a defendant may be convicted of unlawful restraint when the restraint on which the charge is based is merely incidental to the commission of another assault-type crime. See id., 548.
Sixth, there exists an ambiguity in the language of the statutory scheme as to the requisite mental state required to commit an unlawful restraint and that required to commit a kidnapping. This ambiguity makes it difficult to ascertain at what point an unlawful restraint crosses the line to become a kidnapping. Id., 534.
Seventh, unlawful restraint and kidnapping are both specific intent crimes. Id., 542 n.28.
I first discuss the unintended “merger effect” that I perceive will result from the application of these principles. The majority opinion in Salamon did not employ the word “merger,” and the majority in the present case merely likens the analysis it conducts to that used under the merger doctrine. Footnotes 9 and 10 of the majority opinion. I suggest, however, that the effect of the Salamon kidnapping construction is to take conduct that, by itself, would support a conviction for kidnapping and, in situations in which the defendant perpetrated *644 another assault-type crime, merge the would be kidnapping offense into that other crime. The following hypothetical illustrates my concerns.
Assume that a defendant, intending to commit a sexual assault, abducts a victim by threatening to hurt her if she tries to leave the room in which she is restrained. 2 The defendant leaves the room to draw the shades in a front window. Upon returning to the room in which the victim had been restrained, the defendant discovers that the victim had managed to escape, thus thwarting the intended sexual assault. Under these facts, the Salamon “incidental” rule would not apply because there is no underlying assault against which to measure the incidental nature of the restraint. 3 Therefore, the defendant could be charged and convicted of kidnapping. 4 Under the facts of the present case, however, Salamon dictates that, because the defendant was not thwarted but succeeded in sexually assaulting his victim, the state is faced with the additional burden of demonstrating that the restraint had legal significance independent of the assault in order to obtain a kidnapping conviction. The majority concludes that the state could not possibly meet this burden, and, therefore, only a sexual assault and no kidnapping occurred. My hypothetical illustrates that, in light of this Salamon/Sanseverino approach, a defendant who successfully sexually assaults and abducts his victim may be convicted of sexual assault only, whereas a defendant who restrains a victim intending to sexually assault her but never accomplishes the sexual assault, faces conviction for kidnapping. In *645 other words, the kidnapping, a more serious crime, merges into the sexual assault, a less serious crime.
Neither the majority in Salamon nor the majority in Sanseverino expressly adopts by name a merger doctrine. Thus, I assume that they would argue that there is no merger effect because, unless the state proves that the restraint in connection with the kidnapping was not merely incidental to an assault, there are not two distinct crimes capable of being merged. I suggest, however, that this argument is illogical because it depends on acceptance of the premise that conduct that alone may constitute the crime of kidnapping is somehow no longer sufficient to prove that same crime under factual circumstances that may give rise to a conviction for another assault-type offense. 5 If the conduct is kidnapping in one circumstance and not kidnapping in another, I conclude that the only rational viewpoint is to recognize that the kidnapping has, in effect, been merged into the underlying crime.
My concern about this probable result is exacerbated by the fact that we repeatedly and expressly have rejected the merger doctrine in the context of kidnapping.
State
v.
Amarillo,
I acknowledge that the present case and Salamon address only the situation in which a defendant is charged with kidnapping and the facts support a charge for another underlying crime. This court has not yet encountered a case post-Salamon like my hypothetical, which presents only a kidnapping conviction for our review. I expect that such a case will illustrate that my concerns about this unintended “merger” effect are justified and may result in differing criminal liability for the same or similar conduct. See F. Parker, “Aspects of Merger in the Law of Kidnapping,” 55 Cornell L. Rev. 527, 530 (1970) (comparing New York cases that sustained kidnapping conviction when single crime charged with cases in which kidnapping conviction was reversed because restraint was merely incidental to another crime, and concluding that “the only time the kidnapping charge will be subjected to severe judicial scrutiny is when another felony is also corhmitted”). I consider such a result in conflict with our existing jurisprudence and likely to result in injustice to defendants and victims.
A further question raised by this Salamon/Sanseverino paradigm is whether the crime of attempted kidnapping is still a viable offense under certain circumstances. General Statutes § 53a-49 (a) defines criminal attempt and provides in relevant part that “[a] person *647 is guilty of an attempt to commit a crime if, acting with the kind of mental state required for commission of the crime, he . . . (2) intentionally does or omits to do anything which, under the circumstances as he believes them to be, is an act or omission constituting a substantial step in a course of conduct planned to culminate in his commission of the crime.” I suggest that the incidental rule announced in Salamon may effectively make it impossible for a defendant to be guilty of an attempted kidnapping when the attempt is accomplished through a physical assault and the victim manages to thwart the defendant’s plan. Salamon overruled, in situations in which an assault-type crime accompanied the restraint of a victim, our long-standing precedent that the proper focus for a jury is on whether a defendant possessed the necessary intent for kidnapping and dictates, instead, that a jury must determine whether the act of restraint is incidental to the commission of the assault-type crime. Our existing interpretation of attempt crimes, however, would dictate that if the defendant acted with the intent for kidnapping, then the assault could be viewed as a “substantial step” toward commission of the crime. 6
Lastly, I note that both
Salamon
and the majority’s decision in the present case describe a perceived “ambiguity” in the different intent requirements for kidnapping and unlawful restraint that makes it difficult to determine “how the intent to prevent [a victim’s] liberation . . . that is, the intent necessary to establish an
*648
abduction, differs from the intent to interfere substantially with [a victim’s] liberty . . . .” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Majority opinion, p. 622, quoting
State
v.
Salamon,
supra,
II
I now turn to my disagreement with the majority’s decision in the present case to direct a judgment of acquittal without providing the parties an opportunity to
*649
alter or supplement their arguments in light of
Salamon.
See
Franc
v.
Bethel Holding Co.,
I disagree with this approach, first, because I consider the more appropriate characterization of the defendant’s claim,
post-Salamon,
to be that the jury was improperly instructed on the elements of kidnapping.
7
As I previously noted,
Salamon
overruled this court’s
*650
prior interpretation of the kidnapping statutes, pursuant to which we consistently had rejected the claim that a defendant could not be convicted of kidnapping if his restraint of the victim was merely incidental to the restraint necessary to commit another crime. Thus,
Salamon
introduced a new element to the crime of kidnapping. In the present case, the trial court did not instruct the jury on that element. Moreover, no objection to the trial court’s instructions was likely even contemplated because the court, the state and the defendant reasonably believed that the court’s instructions were legally correct. Indeed, the trial court’s instructions were in keeping with this court’s well settled,
pre-Salamon
interpretation of the kidnapping statutes. It is clear, therefore, that, in light of
Salamon,
the trial court’s instructions prejudiced the defendant because, in the absence of an instruction in accordance with this court’s decision in
Salamon,
it was easier for the jury to find the defendant guilty of kidnapping. The proper remedy for a harmful instructional error, including one involving the failure to charge on an essential element of a criminal offense, is a new trial, not a judgment of acquittal.
8
See, e.g.,
State
v.
Desimone,
The majority’s election to treat the defendant’s challenge to his kidnapping conviction as a claim for “insufficiency of evidence,” rather than “instructional error,” and its conclusion that the evidence is insufficient,
*651
requires a judgment of acquittal, however, because doublejeopardy principles preclude the retrial of the defendant when his conviction is reversed due to insufficiency of the evidence.
9
E.g.,
Burks
v.
United States,
In
Burks,
the United States Supreme Court recognized an exception to the general rule that the proper remedy for an error at trial is to grant the defendant a new trial. See
Burks
v.
United States,
supra,
“The same cannot be said when a defendant’s conviction has been overturned due to a failure of proof at trial, in which case the prosecution cannot complain of prejudice, for it has been given one fair opportunity to offer whatever proof it could assemble.” (Citations omitted; emphasis added; internal quotation marks omitted.) Id. In Burks, the court dealt only with a sufficiency of evidence claim.
Ten years later, the United States Supreme Court confronted the issue of whether the double jeopardy clause similarly bars retrial of a defendant “when a reviewing court determines that a defendant’s conviction must be reversed because evidence was erroneously admitted against him, and also concludes that without the inadmissible evidence there was insufficient evidence to support a conviction . . . .”
Lockhart
v.
Nelson,
In
Gray,
this court observed the rationale underlying the approach that the United States Supreme Court subsequently adopted in
Lockhart.
We quoted the Supreme Court of Missouri with approval: “When the trial court erroneously admits evidence resulting in reversal . . . the [s]tate should not be precluded from retrial even though when such evidence is discounted there may be evidentiary insufficiency.
The prosecution in proving its case is entitled to rely upon the rulings of the court and proceed accordingly. . . .
[T]he [s]tate is not obligated to go further and adduce additional evidence that would be . . . cumulative. Were it otherwise, the [s]tate, to be secure, would have to assume eveiy ruling by the trial court on the evidence to be erroneous and marshall and offer every bit of relevant and competent evidence. The practical consequences of this would adversely affect the administration of justice . . . .” (Emphasis added; internal quotation marks omitted.)
State
v.
Gray,
supra,
In the present case, the majority analyzes the sufficiency of the evidence against the law as it was announced in
Salamon
after the defendant’s trial. In concluding that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the defendant’s kidnapping conviction, the majority presumes that the jury properly was instructed on the law when it determined the defendant’s guilt. The majority may be correct that, on the basis of the facts presented at the defendant’s trial, the state did not demonstrate that the defendant perpetrated a restraint of the victim that has legal significance independent of the sexual assault. The state, however, had no knowledge when presenting its case to the jury that it was necessary to make such a showing. Our law consistently has rejected such a construction of the crime of kidnapping. Arguably, the majority’s approach is inconsistent with the
Gray
and
Lockhart
line of cases. These cases recognize that the state reasonably may rely on the rulings of the trial court in presenting its case. Under the law existing at the time of trial, the evidence clearly was sufficient for a reasonable jury to find the defendant guilty of kidnapping. See, e.g.,
State
v.
Luurtsema,
262 Conn.
*655
179, 202-203,
In support of drawing this analogy between the
Gray
and
Lockhart
line of cases and the present case, I note that the court in
Burks
included instructional error in its examples of “trial error” that may warrant a new trial.
Burks
v.
United States,
supra,
Not surprisingly, because of the extremely startling 180 degree reversal that this court performed in
Salomon,
my research has revealed no authority from Connecticut that addresses whether
Gray
and
Lockhart
should inform our review of a sufficiency of evidence claim when it arises in conjunction with a complete
*658
reversal of well settled criminal law. For the foregoing reasons, I conclude that the parties should be given the opportunity to argue that the evidence introduced at trial was sufficient when considered against the trial court’s instructions to the jury and that, because
Salamon
rendered those jury instructions improper, the defendant deserves a readjudication of his guilt, free from error, and the state deserves its “one fair opportunity” to prosecute the defendant.
Burks
v.
United States,
supra,
In addition to any argument that the state or defendant could advance with respect to whether the defendant should be entitled to a judgment of acquittal on the kidnapping charge or whether the case should be remanded for a new trial, my review of our case law and relevant case law in other jurisdictions strongly suggests that, if given the opportunity to file a supplemental brief, the state could request that this court modify the judgment by directing the trial corut to convict the defendant of a lesser included offense. The state, in the present case, charged the defendant with kidnapping in the first degree, and the defendant was convicted on that charge. In light of
Salamon,
as the majority in the present case has concluded, there is some doubt as to whether the evidence was sufficient to sustain a conviction of kidnapping in the first degree. We nevertheless have concluded previously that kidnapping in the second degree and unlawful restraint in the second degree are always lesser included offenses of kidnapping in the first degree. See General Statutes §§ 53a-92, 53a-94 and 53a-96; see also
State
v.
Dahlgren,
The weight of our prior cases modifying a judgment for the purpose of convicting a defendant of a lesser included offense indicates that, to so modify the judgment, a jury must have been properly instructed on that lesser included offense, and, when a conviction of the greater offense is reversed due to insufficient evidence, the jury must have found that the state proved the elements constituting the lesser offense beyond a reasonable doubt. See
State
v.
Grant,
In
State
v.
McGann,
Our modification of the judgment of conviction in
State
v.
Greene,
As in Greene, in which we observed that the jury’s verdict of guilty of manslaughter in the first degree with a firearm required the jury first to find beyond a reasonable doubt that all the elements of manslaughter in the first degree had been proven, in the present case, the jury found the defendant guilty of kidnapping in the first degree, an abduction crime that is predicated on a finding first that the defendant had committed an *662 unlawful restraint. Thus, Greene arguably suggests that this court, even in the absence of an express jury instruction on unlawful restraint in the second degree, 11 could modify the judgment by directing the trial court to convict the defendant of that lesser included offense.
Additionally, I note that the circumstances under which an appellate court may modify a judgment vary among different jurisdictions and never have been expressly decided by this court. Compare
United States
v.
Hunt,
Finally, I make no assertion, at this point, as to the rule that this court should or would adopt; rather, I maintain that the parties in this case deserve an opportunity to argue the merits of each position as it relates to the appropriate course of action that this court should take in light of Salamon. The majority’s only response to this point is that the state did not ask this court to modify the judgment of conviction. Perhaps, if the state were omniscient and, thus, capable of predicting the overruling of years of settled precedent, the majority’s approach would be procedurally correct. I believe, however, that the better course would be to request supplemental briefs and then consider and decide the issue. Requiring the state to file a motion for reconsideration—a motion which could be denied— is hardly a solution to this court’s deciding an issue in a legal vacuum. See footnote 16 of the majority opinion.
At best, I would renounce the problematic construction of our kidnapping statutes that this court adopted in Salamon. Absent that, I maintain that the correct *664 application of this new construction dictates, at a minimum, that the parties in the present appeal be given an opportunity to consider its impact and advocate for the most lawful course of action to follow.
Notes
General Statutes § 53a-92 (a) provides in relevant part: “A person is guilty of kidnapping in the first degree when he abducts another person and ... (2) he restrains the person abducted with intent to (A) inflict physical injury upon him or violate or abuse him sexually . . . .”
General Statutes § 53a-70 (a) provides in relevant part: “A person is guilty of sexual assault in the first degree when such person (1) compels another person to engage in sexual intercourse by the use of force against such other person or a third person . . . which reasonably causes such person to fear physical injury to such person or a third person ...”
We note that § 53a-70 (a) was amended in 2000, however, the changes made are not relevant to this appeal. See Public Acts 2000, No. 00-161, § 1. For purposes of convenience, we refer to the current revision of the statute.
In accordance with the policy of protecting the privacy interests of victims of sexual abuse, we do not identify the victim or others through whom the victim’s identity may be ascertained. See General Statutes § 54-86e.
General Statutes § 53a-49 (a) provides in relevant part: “A person is guilty of an attempt to commit a crime if, acting with the kind of mental state required for commission of the crime, he . . . (2) intentionally does or omits to do anything which, under the circumstances as he believes them to be, is an act or omission constituting a substantial step in a course of conduct planned to culminate in his commission of the crime.”
The defendant originally was charged with unlawful restraint in the first degree as to C. On or about April 5, 2004, the state filed a substitute long form information charging the defendant with kidnapping in the first degree as to C. The defendant filed a motion to dismiss the kidnapping count on the ground that the kidnapping charge “broaden[ed] or substantially amend[ed] the charge of [ujnlawful [Restraint in the [f]irst [d]egree made 'in the first information, such that the defendant has been called upon to address factual allegations by the [sjtate beyond those already charged in the first information” and, therefore, was a new charge brought beyond the five year statute of limitations. In response to the defendant’s motion, the state withdrew the kidnapping charge prior to trial and, on or about April 21, 2004, the state filed another substitute long form information charging the defendant with sexual assault in the first degree and attempt to commit sexual assault in the first degree as to C; and kidnapping in the first degree and sexual assault in the first degree as to G.
Practice Book § 41-18 provides: “If it appears that a defendant is prejudiced by a joinder of offenses, the judicial authority may, upon its own motion or the motion of the defendant, order separate trials of the counts or provide whatever other relief justice may require.”
In this respect, we note the following points. The defendant asserted at trial that he had dated C, but that she ultimately was fired for giving away pastries and for stealing money. The defendant adduced testimony from one of his employees that C had returned to the bakery on occasion after *617 the alleged assault to ask the defendant for bus fare. With respect to G, the defendant asserted that they had dated for a short period of time, and that she did not quit within one week after the alleged incident, but continued to work at the bakery until sometime later when the defendant sold the bakery to G’s brother-in-law. The defendant also asserted that G and her brother-in-law had offered to drop the charges in exchange for money. G testified that her brother-in-law had approached her about taking money from the defendant to drop the charges, but that she had refused to do so.
In
State
v.
Luurtsema,
supra,
In
State
v.
Jones,
supra,
Although at oral argument before this court, the defendant stated that he was not asking us to reconsider our position on the merger doctrine, we note that under either the merger doctrine or the void for vagueness framework we are required to consider the relationship between the sexual assault and the restraint and to determine whether, under the specific facts of the case, one was so incidental and necessary to the other that kidnapping may not he as a separate offense. The defendant addresses this aspect in his void for vagueness claim, and the state has responded. For these reasons, we conclude it is appropriate to examine the defendant’s contentions within the Salamon framework.
We may apply the rule announced in
Salamon
to the present case because this court long has stated that a rule enunciated in a case presumptively applies retroactively to pending cases.
Marone
v.
Waterbury,
“Abduct” is defined under General Statutes § 53a-91 (2) as “to restrain a person with intent to prevent his liberation by either (A) secreting or holding him in a place where he is not likely to be found, or (B) using or threatening to use physical force or intimidation.”
“Restrain” is defined under General Statutes § 53a-91 (1) as “to restrict a person’s movements intentionally and unlawfully in such a manner as to interfere substantially with his liberty by moving him from one place to another, or by confining him either in the place where the restriction commences or in a place to which he has been moved, without consent. . . .”
In
State
v.
Salamon,
supra,
The dissent suggests that our holding in the present case, and in Salamon, merely have replaced the issues created by our previous interpretation of the kidnapping statute with a host of new ones. For all of the reasons set forth in Salamon, we believe that our interpretation of the kidnapping statute is sound. Additionally, although we recognize that other issues may arise as a result of the decisions in Salamon and the present case, we leave those issues for another day when they are appropriately before us.
Contrary to the dissent’s assertion that the state
“could have proffered"
additional evidence in the present case to support the kidnapping charges had it had knowledge of the rule announced in
Salamon,
we have found nothing in the record to indicate that there was any such evidence. (Emphasis in original.) In the absence of any such evidence, it strains the imagination to conceive of a situation in which the state would decline to proffer relevant and material evidence in a criminal prosecution wherein it bears the burden
*626
of proving every element of the crimes charged beyond a reasonable doubt. See
State
v.
Perkins,
General Statutes § 54-57 provides: “Whenever two or more cases are pending at the same time against the same party in the same court for offenses of the same character, counts for such offenses may be joined in one information unless the court orders otherwise.”
Practice Book § 41-19 provides: “The judicial authority may, upon its own motion or the motion of any party, order that two or more informations, whether against the same defendant or different defendants, be tried together.”
Section 4-5 of the Connecticut Code of Evidence provides in relevant part: “(a) Evidence of other crimes, wrongs or acts inadmissible to prove character. Evidence of other crimes, wrongs or acts of a person is inadmissible to prove the bad character or criminal tendencies of that person.
“(b) When evidence of other crimes, wrongs or acts is admissible. Evidence of other crimes, wrongs or acts of a person is admissible for purposes other than those specified in subsection (a), such as to prove intent, identity, malice, motive, common plan or scheme, absence of mistake or accident, knowledge, a system of criminal activity, or an element of the crime, or to corroborate crucial prosecution testimony. . . .”
“That rationale rests, in part at least, on the notion that, when human conduct involves sexual misconduct, people tend to act in generally consistent patterns of behavior, and that it is unlikely (although, of course, not impossible) that the same person will be falsely accused by a number of different victims.”
State
v.
Sawyer,
Practice Book § 84-11 (a) provides in relevant part: “Upon the granting of certification, the appellee may present for review alternative grounds upon which the judgment may be affirmed provided those grounds were raised and briefed in the appellate court. . . The defendant did raise and brief his alternate ground for affirmance before the Appellate Court, but the court did not reach the issue in rendering its decision.
Specifically, Barbara Pleasent, the defendant’s friend, employer and former girlfriend, testified that the defendant had a reputation in the community for truthfulness and that she believed he never would force himself on anyone sexually. Grace Cilio, a friend who had helped out in the defendant’s bakery, and her husband, Geraldo Cilio, also a close friend of the defendant, testified that they believed that the defendant had a reputation in the community for truthfulness and that he never would force himself on anyone. Both of the Cilios testified, however, that they might change their opinion of the defendant if they knew that he had sexually assaulted someone. Finally, 1he defendant’s current girlfriend, Elizabeth Solak, testified that she did not believe that the defendant would sexually assault anyone.
The trial court specifically had stated: “In this case, the defendant’s [former wife], Robin Sanseverino, testified that the defendant compelled her to have sexual intercourse against her will and that he abused her sexually and mentally during the pendency of their marriage. This evidence offered by the state of prior acts of misconduct by the defendant is not being admitted to prove the bad character of the defendant or the defendant’s tendency to commit criminal acts. Such evidence is being admitted solely to show or establish a common scheme in the commission of criminal acts or the existence of the intent which is a necessary element of the crime charged.
“You may not consider such evidence as establishing a predisposition on the part of the defendant to commit any of the crimes charged or to demonstrate a criminal propensity. You may consider such evidence, if you believe it and further, find it logically, rationally, and conclusively supports the issues for which it is being offered by the state but only as it may bear here on the issues of establishing a common scheme in the commission of criminal acts or the existence of the intent which is a necessary element of the crime charged.”
Specifically, the state admits that it “more properly should have simply . . . had [the defendant’s former wife] offer her opinion regarding whether, based on her knowledge of the defendant’s character, she believed he would force someone to engage in sexual intercourse, and . . . asked the defendant’s four character witnesses if their opinion, that based on their knowledge of the defendant they did not believe he would forcibly restrain or compel another to engage in sex, would have been altered if they were aware that the defendant, during his marriage to his [former wife], repeatedly forced her against her will to engage in sex.” Without passing judgment on these specific contentions, we note that it long has been our rule that evidence of prior specific acts may not be used as rebuttal evidence when a defendant has put his character at issue.
State
v.
Martin,
The majority observes that “[w]e may apply the rule announced in
Salamon
to the present case because this court long has stated that a rule enunciated in a case presumptively applies retroactively to pending cases.” Footnote 11 of the majority opinion. I agree with the majority that retroactive application of
Salamon
to this case is appropriate but would elaborate on the majority’s statement by noting that we have recognized that judicial construction of a statute can operate like an ex post facto law and thus violate a criminal defendant’s due process right to fair warning as to what conduct is prohibited. See, e.g.,
State
v.
James G.,
General Statutes § 53a-91 (2) defines “abduct” in relevant part: “[T]o restrain a person with intent to prevent his liberation by . . . (B) using or threatening to use physical force or intimidation.” (Emphasis added.)
See second Salamon/Sanseverino precept in the text of this opinion.
The majority opinion in this case and Salamon reaffirmed our longstanding principle that the crime of kidnapping does not require asportation of a victim or a restraint for any minimum length of time. See fourth Salamon/ Sanseverino precept in the text of this opinion.
See second Salamon/Sanseverino precept in the text of this opinion.
See
State
v.
Carroll,
It is axiomatic that criminal defendants have a constitutional right to a trial by a properly instructed jury. See, e.g.,
State
v.
Padua,
I note that, on retrial, the defendant would be entitled to an instruction consistent with the narrower construction of the kidnapping statutes announced in Salamon, and if the minority's assessment that there is insufficient evidence is correct, then the state simply may elect to stop pursuing prosecution for the kidnapping charge.
I acknowledge that, if the parties were given, as I urge, an opportunity to file supplemental briefs, and the defendant raised an actual sufficiency of the evidence claim, it is well settled that we would resolve that claim prior to addressing any claims of trial error, including instructional impropriety, to avoid any double jeopardy issues. See
State
v.
Padua,
Significantly, I note that, if this case were remanded for a new trial, as I maintain is the proper action, the state would have an opportunity to consider the relevant facts in light of the incidental restraint rule adopted in
Salamon,
as well as the new principle that
Salamon
adopts with respect to the crimes of unlawful restraint and kidnapping. In
Salamon,
the court noted that it did not “retreat from the general principle that an accused may be charged with and convicted of more than one crime arising out of the same act or acts, as long as all of the elements of each crime
are
proven. Indeed, because the confinement or movement of a victim that occurs
*656
simultaneously with or incidental to the commission of another crime ordinarily will constitute a substantial interference with that victim’s liberty, such restraints still may be prosecuted under the unlawful restraint statutes. ”
State
v.
Salamon,
supra,
Furthermore, I conclude that, under the facts elicited at the defendant’s trial in the present case, not only would a charge of unlawful restraint be proper, but a charge of kidnapping in the second degree also may be supported. The majority correctly notes that the defendant was convicted of kidnapping in the first degree pursuant to General Statutes § 53a-92 (a) (2) (A). To be guilty of this crime, the state had to prove that the defendant restrained the victim not only with the intent to prevent her liberation but also with the intent to “inflict physical injury upon [her] or violate or abuse [her] sexually . . . .” General Statutes § 53a-92 (a) (2) (A). In light of
Salamon’s
dictate that the restraint to support the kidnapping charge be more than merely incidental to the sexual assault and the lack of evidence that the defendant maintained an intent to abuse the victim sexually after the assault ended, I acknowledge that the state may not be able to meet its burden of proving that the defendant is guilty of kidnapping in the first degree. Kidnapping in the second degree, however, a lesser included offense, does not require the additional intent element. See General Statutes § 53a-94; see also
State
v.
Dahlgren,
The majority’s conclusion that no reasonable jury could find a restraint of independent significance to support a conviction of kidnapping in the first degree appears to be premised on the notion that the restraint began and ended with the defendant’s physical hold on G, one of the victims. According to the majority, the restraint and the sexual assault ended when
*657
the defendant released his hold on G. Our statutory scheme governing restraint, however, is broader than the majority’s analysis might suggest. A victim may be abducted not only by the imposition of physical force but also by the threat of physical force or intimidation. General Statutes § 53a-91 (2). In the present case, G testified that, after the sexual assault, the defendant released her arms, and she locked herself in the store bathroom until someone else entered the bakery, which is when she “knew she’d be safe.” Furthermore, G testified that the defendant had threatened to hurt her and her family if she told anyone about the sexual assault. The majority concludes that
Salomon
dictates a finding that no reasonable jury could find the defendant guilty of kidnapping because the restraint clearly was incidental to the sexual assault. I am inclined, however, to consider the fact that G locked herself in the bathroom after the sexual assault because she may have been threatened by the defendant and afraid of further physical assault, especially in light of the jury’s clear determination that the defendant possessed the requisite intent to prevent G’s liberation. On this basis, I would suggest that the matter is worthy of further exploration as to when the restraint of G actually ended. See, e.g.,
State
v.
Montgomery,
We note that, even though the trial court in the present case did not expressly instruct the jury on the lesser included offense of unlawful restraint in the second degree, because that crime is a lesser included offense of kidnapping in the first degree and because the trial court instructed the jury on the elements of kidnapping in the first degree, it implicitly instructed the jury on the lesser offense inasmuch as the trial court necessarily instructed the jury on all of the elements comprising the crime of unlawful restraint in the second degree.
