Appealing from their conviction for kidnaping, 18 U.S.C.A. § 1201(a), 1 defendants Washington and Weems raise two principal contentions for our consideration. They maintain that their cause was unduly prejudiced by references, both in the indictment and at trial, to an assault, rape and other criminal acts committed upon the victim of the kidnap which are claimed by the defendants to be irrelevant to the offense charged. Appellants further contend that the prosecutor, in his summation to the jury, improperly called attention *275 to their failure to testify. We find no merit in either contention. 2
The indictment charged that the accused knowingly kidnaped their victim for “immoral purposes” and that they “did rape, carnally know, beat, injure, bruise, and harm [her], and did not liberate her unharmed.” The defendants maintain that the purpose of the kidnap is immaterial' and, in light of United States v. Jackson,
The answer is found in the statute itself which condemns the knowing transportation in interstate commerce of a person held against her will for “ransom or reward or otherwise.” This court has recognized that “[a]n indictment * * * for a statutory offense * * * may ordinarily be laid in the language of the statute, unless the statute omits an essential element of the offense or includes it only by implication.” United States v. Guthrie,
Moreover, evidence of the criminal acts occurring in the instant kidnap has independent significance of a highly relevant nature and was therefore properly admitted. Foremost, these acts are admissible to show that the victim was held against her will. Holden v. United States,
The second ground of appeal concerns a single statement by the prosecutor, in the course of his closing argument to the jury, to the effect that certain evidence and testimony was “un
*276
contradicted and undisputed.”
3
Relying heavily on Griffin v. State of California,
Defendants, however, registered no objection to the prosecutor’s argument. And in his charge, the trial judge fully and properly instructed the jury that it was to draw no inferences from defendants’ failure to testify. Significantly, no exception was taken to the charge, nor was there any request for additional instructions.
Had defense counsel promptly objected when the prosecutor made the ambiguous remark complained of, and had the judge been afforded an opportunity to rectify the possible harm but declined to do so, we would be confronted with a different case. On this record, however, in the absence of any objection, we are not called upon to rule whether, under the test enunciated by the Tenth Circuit, the “jury would naturally and necessarily take it to be a comment on the failure of the accused to testify.” Knowles v. United States,
We are clearly of the view that in the present circumstances a reversal is not warranted. Without undertaking further to define the proper limits of argument, we take the occasion to admonish United States Attorneys in this circuit to observe the spirit of Griffin and to avoid jeopardizing otherwise certain convictions by arguments that border on forbidden ground. Experienced prosecutors find that avoiding the needless precipitation of issues with possibly constitutional dimensions promotes fairness to the accused and the effectiveness of their own efforts.
Appellant Weems raises a number of additional contentions which we have carefully considered and have found to be without merit.
The judgment of the District Court is
Affirmed.
Notes
. 18 U.S.C.A. § 1201(a) provides:
“Whoever knowingly transports in interstate or foreign commerce, any person who has been unlawfully seized, confined, inveigled, decoyed, kidnaped, abducted, or carried away and held for ransom or reward or otherwise, * * * shall be punished (1) by death if the kidnaped person has not been liberated unharmed, and if the verdict of the jury shall so recommend; or (2) by imprisonment for any term of years or for life, if the death penalty is not imposed.”
. At trial appellants also attacked the constitutionality of the Federal Kidnaping Act. They argued that by providing for the imposition of the death penalty only in those cases where the accused requested a jury, the statute effectively discouraged the exercise of that right.
However, in response to defendants’ motions to dismiss the indictment, the .Government agreed not to seek the death penalty and the court stated that it would not submit the question of capital punishment to the jury. Thus, defendants were in no way restrained from fully ex-erasing their constitutional rights. Subsequent to the filing of appellants’ briefs in this court, in which the same contention was made, the Supreme Court announced its decision in United States v. Jackson,
. The challenged portion of the prosecutor’s summation reads as follows: “The only issue is whether these [Washington and Weems] are the two individuals, and I say to you that from the evidence that you have heard, that you saw Mrs. Moore on the witness stand, you observed the manner in which she testified, you observed her demeanor. * * * The only evidence in the case [other than that presented on behalf of the co-defendant Weems to establish an alibi] is the testimony of Mrs. Moore, uncontradicted and undisputed, that these are the individuals that raped her and kidnapped her and ravished her.”
