Defendant-appellant Brady Lavick Adams was convicted of kidnapping his wife, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1201, as well as using and carrying a firearm during the kidnapping, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c), and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, in *1372 violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(g) and 924(e), by a jury in Federal court. He was sentenced to life in prison for the kidnapping count, as well as five years to be served consecutively for the § 924(c) violation and 30 years to be served concurrently for the §§ 922(g) and 924(e) violation. Adams perfected this appeal, alleging that (1) the indictment handed down by the Federal grand jury in this case does not contain an essential element of the § 1201 kidnapping offense, namely, that the kidnapper hold the victim “for ransom or reward or otherwise,” rendering the indictment fatally defective, and (2) the evidence presented at trial was insufficient to prove this same element. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm his conviction.
The victim in this case, Sharee Lovett Adams, married the defendant in 1991. According to the evidence presented by the government, Mrs. Adams left her husband four or five times, and each time Mr. Adams would find her and threaten her with physical harm in order to force her to return to him. In early 1994, while the couple was living in Brunswick, Georgia, Mrs. Adams left the defendant again, first moving to a women’s shelter and then to the home of the defendant’s sister, from which the defendant had been banned. On this occasion as well, the defendant gained entry into his sister’s house by ruse, physically assaulted his wife and forced her to return with him.
In July of 1994, Mrs. Adams left her husband and moved, in with her cousin, Delores Uwaezuoke, who resides in Atlanta. She left the defendant a letter asking him to file for divorce, and said that she would do so if he did not. Three to four weeks later, the defendant found his wife. He went to Ms. Uwaezuoke’s apartment, but was refused entry on two occasions, first by Ms. Uwaez-uoke, and then by Mrs. Adams, who at that time was in possession of a rifle. When Mr. Adams would not leave, Mrs. Adams grabbed the rifle, drove to a telephone and called police. Mr. Adams refused to leave until forced to do so by police. On the following day, a Sunday, a local judge refused to grant Mrs. Adams a stalking warrant, and told her to return on Monday.
On Monday morning, the defendant returned to Uwaezuoke’s apartment. He threw a brick through a sliding glass door, entered the apartment, and held a handgun he had purchased in Atlanta to Ms. Uwaez-uoke’s head. He ordered Mrs. Adams to come out of hiding. When Mrs. Adams entered the room, the defendant took her and freed Uwaezuoke. As he walked Mrs. Adams out to his car, the defendant said, “Bitch you done fucked up now. You know what I told you I was going to do if you left me.” RII-43.
The defendant tried to force Mrs. Adams into his car, but she fought to free herself. When she did break free and attempt to run away, the defendant shot her in the abdomen, forced her into the car, and sped away. He refused to take her to a hospital, going instead to a hotel in Madison, Florida. There he twice attempted to force Mrs. Adams to have sex with Mm. The F.B.I. eventually convinced Mr. Adams to free Ms wife, and then took Mm into custody. Mrs. Adams eventually underwent five operations to repair the wound inflicted by the defendant.
The sufficiency of the indictment
In the defendant-appellant’s first assignment of error, he insists that the Federal grand jury indictment handed down against him does not include an essential element of the § 1201 Mdnapping offense. That section defines as kidnappers:
Whoever unlawfully seizes, confines, inveigles, decoys, kidnaps, abducts, or carries away and holds for ransom or reward or otherwise any person ... when— ... (1) the person is willfully transported in interstate or foreign commerce ...
18 U.S.C. § 1201 (1994) (emphasis added). The defendant notes that Ms indictment does not contain an allegation that he held his wife “for ransom or reward or otherwise,” and argues that the indictment is therefore fatally defective. 1
*1373
The original version of § 1201, enacted into law in 1932 and known as the “Lindbergh Act,” punished only those who kidnapped another person “for ransom or reward.”
See
18 U.S.C. § 408a (1932),
quoted in Gooch v. United States,
The object of the addition of the word ‘otherwise’ is to extend the jurisdiction of this act to persons who have been kidnapped and held, not only for reward, but for any other reason.
H.R.Rep. 534, 73d Cong., 2d Sess.,
quoted in Gooch,
The Supreme Court has subsequently held that § 1201 is not limited to kidnappings committed for an otherwise illegal purpose.
United States v. Healy,
This contention is without support in the language of the- provision, its legislative history, judicial decisions and reason. The wording certainly suggests no distinction based on the ultimate purpose of a kidnapping ...
Id.
at 82,
A murder committed to accelerate the accrual of one’s rightful inheritance is hardly less heinous than one committed to facilitate a theft; by the same token, we find no compelling correlation between the propriety of the ultimate purpose sought to be furthered by a kidnapping and the undesirability of the act of kidnapping itself.
Id.
at 82,
In
Clinton v. United States,
Adams argues that
Clinton
does not control the result here for two reasons. First, he argues that the holding in
Clinton
stands in contravention of the Supreme Court’s holding in
Chatwin v. United States,
Chatwin holds that, for an act of transporting a person across state lines to constitute kidnapping under the predecessor to § 1201, the victim so transported must be held against his or her will. In this regard, Chat-win is in no way inconsistent with the holding of the court in Clinton. Further, the indictment handed down against Adams clearly states that he “did unlawfully seize, confine, kidnap, [and] carry away” Mrs. Adams and “hold [her] against her will.”
However, part of the dicta in Chatwin relates to Adams’ second argument that Clinton does not control our decision in this case. Adams correctly notes that the court in Clinton upheld an indictment that, although it lacked the words “for ransom or reward or otherwise,” did in fact charge the defendant with “unlawfully and knowingly” transporting the victim in interstate commerce after kidnapping her. The court found that indictment sufficient. Adams argues, in essence, that the indictment handed down against him contains no statement regarding his mens rea because there is no language in it that could serve as a substitute for the purpose requirement of § 1201.
The Supreme Court stated as dicta in
Chatwin
that one of the elements of the Federal kidnapping offense is that the kidnapper act “with a willful intent so to confine the victim.”
Chatwin,
We also readily reject Adams’ claim based on the first Russell criterion. The factual specificity of the indictment more than ade *1375 quately made him aware of the proof against him and the allegations to which he must answer. The incident at issue is clearly defined, down to the date of the alleged offense. The only arguable deficiency in the indictment is a failure to explicitly charge willfulness. Our resolution of this issue is facilitated by the posture in which Adams’ assignment of error is brought to this Court. Adams did not object to the indictment in the district court, but instead makes this argument for the first time on appeal.
When the adequacy of an indictment is challenged for the first time on appeal, this Court “must find the indictment sufficient unless it is so defective that it does not, by any reasonable construction, charge an offense for which the defendant is convicted.”
United States v. Hooshmand,
[P]ractical, rather than technical, considerations govern the validity of an indictment. Minor deficiencies that do not prejudice the defendant will not prompt this court to reverse a conviction.
Hooshmand,
We readily conclude that Adams suffered no actual prejudice as a result of this indictment. In addition to the factual specificity noted above, the indictment specifically refers to § 1201.
See Chilcote,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The indictment states:
That between on or about August 1, 1994, and on or about August 2, 1994, in the Northern *1373 District of Florida and elsewhere, the defendant,
BRADY LA VICK ADAMS
did unlawfully seize, confine, kidnap, carry away and hold against her will Sharee Lovett Adams, and did transport Sharee Lovett Adams in interstate commerce from the state of Georgia to Madison County, Florida;
All in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 1201.
. In
Bonner v. City of Prichard,
. Because the Court's primary concern and holding in Chatwin was that the predecessor to § 1201 required that the restraint applied by the kidnapper be exercised against the victim’s will, the Court did not elaborate on the dicta noted above. The logic of this dicta is that § 1201 should not be construed to punish a person who unknowingly and unintentionally transports across state lines a restrained individual, against that individual’s will. For example, if a trash hauler locks a dumpster, which unknown to him also holds an intoxicated reveler, picks it up and moves it in interstate commerce, he should not be guilty of kidnapping even though he restrained the individual and carried him across state lines, because he did not form the necessary intent to do so.
. Adams’ challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence against him is without merit and warrants no discussion.
