State v. Taylor ( 2017 )


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  •                                         No. 114,779
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
    STATE OF KANSAS,
    Appellee,
    v.
    ALBERT DONETT TAYLOR, JR.,
    Appellant.
    SYLLABUS BY THE COURT
    1.
    To be convicted of theft, the State must establish that the defendant acted "with the
    intent to permanently deprive the owner of the possession, use or benefit of the owner's
    property or services" at issue. Whether a defendant acted "with the intent to" commit a
    theft speaks to whether the defendant had the requisite culpable mental state to commit
    the theft, which is an essential element of the crime.
    2.
    Nothing within the plain language of the theft statute provides that persons who
    are found to be in possession of stolen firearms are guilty of theft regardless of whether
    those persons had knowledge that the firearms they possessed were stolen. Under no
    circumstances is the State relieved of its duty of establishing that the defendant acted with
    the intent to commit theft.
    3.
    A prosecutor who tells the jury that it is the legislature's desire to convict persons
    who possess stolen firearms of theft regardless of whether those persons had knowledge
    that the firearms they possessed were stolen has committed prosecutorial error under the
    standard of review set forth in State v. Sherman, 
    305 Kan. 88
    , 109, 
    378 P.3d 1060
     (2016).
    1
    Such a statement not only misstates the law but also erroneously conveys to the jury that
    the prosecutor is the final arbiter on the legislature's intent.
    4.
    When the State has prosecuted persons for theft based solely upon their possession
    of stolen property, sufficient evidence to support those persons' convictions exists only if
    (1) they provided unsatisfactory explanations for why they possessed the stolen property,
    and (2) the property they possessed had been recently stolen. Stolen property found in the
    possession of a person 14 to 20 months after it has been reported stolen is too remote in
    time to be considered recently stolen.
    5.
    Our Supreme Court's decision State v. Watson, 
    273 Kan. 426
    , 
    44 P.3d 357
     (2002),
    makes clear that because the trafficking in contraband statute does not define what items
    constitute contraband inside correctional institutions, the trafficking in contraband statute
    could lawfully prohibit the introduction or attempted introduction of contraband only if
    the correctional institution's administrator has given notice of what items constitute
    contraband. This notice requirement exists even when the items deemed contraband
    inside a correctional institution are also items that are illegal to possess outside a
    correctional institution.
    6.
    When a person is convicted of trafficking in contraband but was not given notice
    that the item of contraband that he or she was trafficking or attempting to traffic
    constituted contraband, the trafficking in contraband statute has been applied to that
    person in a way inconsistent with constitutional due process, rendering the person's
    conviction invalid.
    2
    Appeal from Johnson District Court; Thomas M. Sutherland, judge. Opinion filed July 21, 2017.
    Reversed.
    Michelle A. Davis, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, for appellant.
    James Crux, legal intern, Shawn E. Minihan, assistant district attorney, Stephen M. Howe, district
    attorney, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, for appellee.
    Before ARNOLD-BURGER, C.J., GREEN and MCANANY, JJ.
    GREEN, J.: Following a jury trial, Albert Donett Taylor, Jr., was convicted of
    theft, trafficking in contraband, possession of marijuana, and driving with a suspended
    license. Taylor appeals his felony theft and trafficking in contraband convictions.
    Regarding his theft conviction, Taylor makes two arguments: (1) that the prosecutor
    committed reversible error during closing arguments by stating the jury could convict
    him of theft of a stolen firearm regardless of whether he actually knew that the firearm
    had been stolen; and (2) that the trial court erred by denying his motion for judgment of
    acquittal because insufficient evidence supported his theft conviction. Regarding his
    trafficking in contraband conviction, Taylor makes four arguments that hinge on his
    belief that he was entitled to receive notice of what items were deemed contraband inside
    the jail. Those four arguments are as follows: (1) The trafficking in contraband statute is
    unconstitutional as applied to him because he received no notice; (2) the evidence was
    insufficient to convict him because he received no notice; (3) the trial court was required
    to give his requested instruction on the notice; and (4) the prosecutor committed error by
    telling the jury the State had no burden to prove notice. Taylor also argues that the trial
    court prejudiced his defense by giving a jury instruction that broadened the culpable
    mental state needed to convict him. Last, Taylor argues cumulative error.
    For reasons set forth below, we need not reach Taylor's cumulative error argument
    because each of Taylor's individual arguments are meritorious. We conclude that the
    3
    prosecutor made a serious misstatement of the law when he stated in his closing argument
    that persons who are charged with theft of a firearm can be convicted of theft of that
    firearm regardless of whether they acted with the intent to permanently deprive the owner
    of the possession, use, or benefit of that firearm. Moreover, we conclude that insufficient
    evidence supported Taylor's theft conviction because there was inadequate evidence
    showing that he knew he was in possession of a stolen firearm. In regards to Taylor's
    trafficking in contraband conviction, Taylor arguments concern the "individualized
    notice" requirement that persons are entitled to notice of what items are prohibited from
    coming within a correctional facility. Our Supreme Court adopted this notice requirement
    in State v. Watson, 
    273 Kan. 426
    , 436, 
    44 P.3d 357
     (2002). Highly summarized, the
    trafficking in contraband statute was unconstitutional as applied to Taylor because he
    never received such notice. In turn, there was insufficient evidence to support Taylor's
    trafficking in contraband conviction. As a result, we reverse Taylor's theft and trafficking
    in contraband convictions.
    Factual Background
    On December 26, 2014, Deputy Christopher Pechnik responded to a car accident
    in Johnson County, Kansas. When Deputy Pechnik arrived at the scene of the accident,
    he found a single overturned car. Taylor, who was not injured, identified himself to
    Deputy Pechnik as the driver of the overturned car. Taylor told Deputy Pechnik that he
    might have fallen asleep while driving. Deputy Pechnik ran Taylor's name through the
    police database and discovered that Taylor was driving on a suspended license. When
    questioned about the status of his license by Deputy Pechnik, Taylor admitted that he
    knew his license was suspended. For this reason, Deputy Pechnik arrested Taylor.
    Following Taylor's arrest, Deputy Pechnik conducted a search of Taylor's car.
    Deputy Pechnik had smelled an odor of marijuana emanating from both Taylor and
    Taylor's car. The search of Taylor's car resulted in police finding marijuana fragments
    4
    and two loaded handguns; one of the loaded handguns, a Smith and Wesson handgun,
    was found behind the driver's seat of Taylor's car. When booking Taylor into jail, Deputy
    Pechnik also discovered a baggie of marijuana inside one of Taylor's shoes. Also, a
    records check revealed that the Smith and Wesson handgun had been reported stolen by
    Michael Brown of Wyandotte County, Kansas.
    Based on the preceding facts, the State charged Taylor with the following: (1)
    theft, a severity level 9 nonperson felony in violation of K.S.A. 2014 Supp. 21-5801(a);
    (2) possession of marijuana, a class A nonperson misdemeanor in violation of K.S.A.
    2014 Supp. 21-5706(b)(3); (3) driving while suspended, a class B nonperson
    misdemeanor in violation of K.S.A. 2014 Supp. 8-262; and (4) trafficking in contraband,
    a severity level 5 nonperson felony in violation of K.S.A. 2014 Supp. 21-5914. The State
    charged Taylor under a theory of theft requiring Taylor to have obtained or exerted
    unauthorized control over the Smith and Wesson handgun with the intent to permanently
    deprive Brown of possession of the handgun on or about December 26, 2014. The State
    charged Taylor under a theory of trafficking in contraband requiring Taylor to have
    intentionally introduced or attempted to introduce marijuana into the Johnson County jail.
    Taylor's jury trial was held on June 1, 2015, and June 2, 2015. The primary
    witness for the State was Deputy Pechnik. Deputy Pechnik testified about his interactions
    with Taylor on December 26, 2014, including discovering that Taylor was driving with a
    suspended license, smelling marijuana on Taylor's person, finding marijuana fragments in
    Taylor's car, and finding the Smith and Wesson handgun in Taylor's car. Deputy
    Pechnik's bodycam video of the search of Taylor's car was admitted into evidence and
    played for the jury. The video showed Deputy Pechnik touching the visor and steering
    wheel of Taylor's car while wearing gloves before picking up and unloading the Smith
    and Wesson handgun. Deputy Pechnik stated that when he asked Taylor about the Smith
    and Wesson handgun, Taylor told him that he was unaware that there were handguns in
    his car.
    5
    Deputy Pechnik testified that following the search of Taylor's car, he arrested
    Taylor for driving with a suspended license and drove him to the jail. Deputy Pechnik
    explained that when he brings a person to the jail, he has to drive through a secured gate,
    then enter a secured parking garage, and then finally enter a secured door which leads to
    the booking area of the jail. Deputy Pechnik testified that there was a sign on the secured
    door that leads to the booking area of the jail that stated "No illegal weapons or drugs."
    Deputy Pechnik explained that when he started the booking process with Taylor, he asked
    Taylor to take off all of his clothes, including his shoes, because all inmates must wear
    the same uniform. Deputy Pechnik stated that Taylor was hesitant to take off his shoes.
    Deputy Pechnik testified that based on Taylor's hesitation and the fact he continued to
    smell marijuana on Taylor while booking him, he decided to immediately search Taylor's
    clothing after admitting him into the jail. Deputy Pechnik explained that he quickly found
    a baggie of marijuana in one of Taylor's shoes. Deputy Pechnik's bodycam video of his
    interactions with Taylor during booking, which were admitted into evidence, establish
    that Taylor was hesitant to surrender his shoes.
    Regarding the Smith and Wesson handgun, Deputy Pechnik testified that a records
    check of the handgun revealed that the handgun belonged to a man named Michael
    Brown who lived in Kansas City, Kansas. Deputy Pechnik explained that he spoke to
    Taylor shortly after December 26, 2014, about the handgun, and Taylor continued to
    deny having any knowledge about any handguns being in his car. Deputy Pechnik also
    explained that he asked Taylor for his DNA at that time because he wanted to see if
    Taylor's DNA was on the handgun. Deputy Pechnik stated that Taylor refused and told
    him the police had already taken a sample of his DNA at booking. Deputy Pechnik got a
    sample of Taylor's DNA after getting a search warrant.
    On cross-examination, Deputy Pechnik testified that in addition to denying any
    knowledge about the handguns, Taylor had told him that there had been three other
    people in his car. When asked about who owned the car Taylor was driving, Deputy
    6
    Pechnik admitted that during his investigation, he learned that Taylor's car was actually a
    rental car that had been rented under Taylor's girlfriend's name.
    Besides Deputy Pechnik, the supervisor of booking at the Johnson County jail and
    a few forensic scientists testified on behalf of the State. Sergeant Shane Thomas, who
    supervises bookings at the Johnson County jail, testified that he did not give Taylor
    permission to bring marijuana into the jail. Sergeant Thomas never testified that he
    personally told Taylor he could not bring the marijuana inside the jail. The forensic
    scientists testified to the following: (1) The Smith and Wesson handgun had Taylor's
    DNA located on its trigger; (2) the Smith and Wesson handgun also had DNA from four
    other individuals on it; and (3) the substance in the clear baggie removed from Taylor's
    shoe was in fact 5.21 grams of marijuana. On cross-examination, the forensic scientist
    who did the DNA testing agreed with Taylor's attorney that a process called "transfer
    DNA," which involves someone touching an item that another person had touched and
    then transferring that other person's DNA onto some other object, was possible.
    Last, Michael Brown testified on behalf of the State. During his testimony, the
    State asked Brown whether the Smith and Wesson handgun disappeared in September of
    2014, to which Brown responded, "I noticed that the box had been pried open, and called
    the police, and made a police report that it had been stolen out of my house." On cross-
    examination, however, when directly asked when he noticed that the Smith and Wesson
    handgun was missing, Brown testified that he believed it was taken from his house in the
    spring or the fall of 2013.
    After the close of the State's evidence, Taylor moved for a judgment of acquittal
    on the theft and trafficking in contraband charges. Taylor's attorney argued that there was
    no evidence that Taylor had committed the theft on or about December 26, 2014, or in
    Johnson County. Regarding the trafficking in contraband charge, Taylor's attorney
    asserted that Kansas caselaw required that people have notice what items constitute
    7
    contraband inside a jail before those people can be charged with trafficking, and the State
    had failed to establish such notice. The prosecutor responded that the State had no burden
    to prove that Taylor knew that the Smith and Wesson handgun was stolen because "[t]he
    legislature in K.S.A. 21-5801 has differentiated why a firearm is different" based on the
    fact there was a penalty provision specifically addressing firearms. The prosecutor also
    responded that notice was not required with cases involving marijuana. Taylor's attorney
    responded that there was no evidence Taylor was involved in the theft. The trial court
    denied Taylor's motion as to the trafficking in contraband charge because it determined
    that the State had no burden of establishing notice for items that were not "intrinsically
    innocent" based on its reading of State v. Conger, No. 92,381, 
    2005 WL 1561369
     (Kan.
    App. 2005) (unpublished opinion). The trial court simply stated that Taylor's motion for
    acquittal of the theft charge was denied.
    Next, Taylor requested that the jury be instructed that Taylor was entitled to notice
    of what conduct was prohibited inside the jail under the trafficking in contraband law
    before he could be convicted of that crime. The trial court denied Taylor's request based
    on its interpretation of Conger. Also, over Taylor's objection, the trial court decided to
    give the jury the State's proposed instruction on the elements of trafficking in contraband,
    which stated Taylor could be convicted if he committed the crime "intentionally,
    knowingly, or recklessly" even though the complaint charged him with only
    "intentionally" committing trafficking in contraband.
    After the jury instruction conference, Taylor presented his evidence, which
    consisted of recalling Deputy Pechnik to testify. While testifying on behalf of Taylor,
    Deputy Pechnik explained that he had went back to the sign on the jail's secured booking
    door after testifying for the State, and he had discovered that the sign on the door does
    not say "No illegal weapons or drugs." Instead, he testified that the sign only says "No
    firearms." Deputy Pechnik also testified that there were no signs in the jail stating that a
    person could not have marijuana in the jail.
    8
    The trial proceeded to closing arguments. During closing arguments, the
    prosecutor repeated his understanding of the theft law as it pertains to firearms, telling the
    jury that people found in possession of a stolen firearm were guilty of committing theft
    even if those people did not know that the firearm they possessed was stolen because this
    was what the legislature wanted. The prosecutor also told the jury that it could convict
    Taylor of trafficking in contraband regardless of whether he had received notice and if it
    believed he had acted intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly. Taylor's attorney's closing
    emphasized that Taylor had consistently denied having any knowledge that handguns
    were located in the rental car. Moreover, Taylor's attorney emphasized that Taylor had
    never intended to traffic the marijuana in jail and that Taylor had no notice that bringing
    the marijuana inside the jail would result in trafficking in contraband charges.
    During jury deliberations, the jury came back with the following question: "What
    is the definition of 'theft' as it relates to the firearm and as related to the charge in
    Instruction No. 9?" Taylor and the State agreed to answer the jury's question by referring
    the jury back to the jury instructions. The jury found Taylor guilty on all counts.
    After trial, Taylor moved for judgment notwithstanding the jury's verdicts or, in
    the alternative, a new trial. In this motion, Taylor argued that there was insufficient
    evidence to support his theft and trafficking in contraband convictions based on the same
    arguments that he had raised at trial. Taylor also argued that the trafficking in contraband
    statute was unconstitutional as applied to him. At the hearing, in addition to repeating the
    arguments made in his motion, Taylor emphasized that the sentencing enhancement
    provision for thefts involving firearms did not otherwise change the culpable mental state
    requirement to establish theft. The trial court denied Taylor's motion as to both his theft
    and trafficking in contraband convictions. Taylor was sentenced to a controlling sentence
    of 42 months' imprisonment followed by 24 months' postrelease supervision. The trial
    court ran Taylor's theft and trafficking in contraband convictions consecutively.
    9
    Did the Prosecutor Commit Reversible Error by Telling the Jury that Kansas Law Does
    Not Require Persons to Know that an Item Was Stolen to be Convicted of Theft?
    Taylor asserts that the prosecutor's statement to the jury that persons can be
    convicted of theft of a firearm even though those persons had no knowledge the firearm
    was stolen was a misstatement of law that constituted error. Taylor further argues that
    this misstatement of law was not harmless (1) because "it lowered the State's burden to
    prove criminal intent" and (2) because the jury's question about "the definition of 'theft' as
    it relates to the firearm" showed the prosecutor's statement confused the jury.
    On the other hand, the State contends that the "State did not have to prove that
    Taylor knew the Smith & Wesson [handgun] was stolen." The State reaches this
    conclusion by considering the elements of theft by obtaining or exerting unauthorized
    control of a handgun and asserting that there is no element requiring "that Taylor knew
    the Smith & Wesson was stolen." The State even asserts that it was Taylor's attorney who
    misstated the law to the jury when he said the State had the burden of proving that Taylor
    knew the firearm was stolen. Last, the State alleges that even if the prosecutor's
    statements constituted error, that error was harmless because sufficient evidence
    supported Taylor's conviction.
    Standard of Review
    In the recent decision State v. Sherman, 
    305 Kan. 88
    , 109, 
    378 P.3d 1060
     (2016),
    our Supreme Court outlined the standard for reviewing prosecutorial error as follows:
    "Appellate courts will continue to employ a two-step process to evaluate claims
    of prosecutorial error. These two steps can and should be simply described as error and
    prejudice. To determine whether prosecutorial error has occurred, the appellate court
    must decide whether the prosecutorial acts complained of fall outside the wide latitude
    10
    afforded prosecutors to conduct the State's case and attempt to obtain a conviction in a
    manner that does not offend the defendant's constitutional right to a fair trial. If error is
    found, the appellate court must next determine whether the error prejudiced the
    defendant's due process rights to a fair trial. In evaluating prejudice, we simply adopt the
    traditional constitutional harmlessness inquiry demanded by Chapman. In other words,
    prosecutorial error is harmless if the State can demonstrate 'beyond a reasonable doubt
    that the error complained of will not or did not affect the outcome of the trial in light of
    the entire record, i.e., where there is no reasonable possibility that the error contributed to
    the verdict.' [Citation omitted.] We continue to acknowledge that the statutory
    harmlessness test also applies to prosecutorial error, but when 'analyzing both
    constitutional and nonconstitutional error, an appellate court need only address the higher
    standard of constitutional error.' [Citation omitted.]"
    Furthermore, to the extent Taylor's argument involves statutory interpretation,
    statutory interpretation is a question of law over which this court exercises de novo
    review. State v. Collins, 
    303 Kan. 472
    , 473-74, 
    362 P.3d 1098
     (2015). The most
    fundamental rule of statutory interpretation is that the legislature's intent governs. State v.
    Jordan, 
    303 Kan. 1017
    , 1019, 
    370 P.3d 417
     (2016). Appellate courts should always
    attempt to ascertain the legislature's intent through the plain language of a statute before
    turning to the cannons of statutory construction. State v. Barlow, 
    303 Kan. 804
    , 813, 
    368 P.3d 331
     (2016).
    Additional Facts
    Shortly after the prosecutor started his closing arguments, the prosecutor told the
    jury that theft of a firearm was a special crime that was different from other thefts.
    Specifically, the prosecutor stated that by looking at the theft elements instruction, the
    jury could "clearly see that the legislature has prescribed that possession of a stolen
    firearm in this case constitutes a theft."
    11
    During Taylor's closing, Taylor's attorney told the jury that it had to make its
    decision on the evidence, and the evidence showed "a gun was found under a floor mat in
    the back seat of Mr. Taylor's car, not that he stole that firearm." Taylor's attorney stated
    that "just because [the Smith and Wesson handgun] was a stolen firearm doesn't mean
    that [Taylor] knew about it."
    During rebuttal, the prosecutor immediately began explaining that to convict
    Taylor of theft, the State was not required to prove that Taylor knew the handgun found
    in his car was stolen. The following are the specific statements made by the prosecutor
    that Taylor takes issue with on appeal:
    "With all due respect to [Taylor's attorney,] in the last 15 minutes, what he is
    asking you to do is find reasonable doubt on elements that don't exist, that aren't required
    of you to look at. He made the statement that the State can't prove that Mr. Taylor stole a
    gun from Michael Brown's house. Totally agree with that[,] that would be a burglary in
    Wyandotte County, which I don't prosecute. I don't charge that. What I charge is
    possessing that gun here in Johnson County, possessing that gun specifically on
    December 26th, 2014, when he had it in the car.
    ". . . I don't care about how he came to have that gun. This isn't possession of
    stolen property, which [Taylor's attorney] mentioned, which requires knowledge that
    property is stolen. This is a different charge because it is a firearm. The State has decided
    that possession of a firearm, you don't have to know it is stolen. You have to have that
    gun, you have to have unauthorized control over that gun, and it has to be a firearm.
    Because firearms are regulated. It is meant to encourage people to go through proper
    channels, register firearms. Buy from a gun retailer. You get that gun through nefarious
    means and it is stolen, tough break. It means you are guilty of theft of a firearm."
    12
    Theft Statutory Background
    The State charged Taylor under a theory of theft which required him to obtain or
    exert unauthorized control over Brown's firearm under K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-5801(a)(1),
    instead of a theory of theft by receiving stolen property under K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-
    5801(a)(4). In relevant part, K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-5801 states:
    "(a) Theft is any of the following acts done with intent to permanently deprive
    the owner of the possession, use or benefit of the owner's property or services:
    (1) Obtaining or exerting unauthorized control over property or services; [or]
    ....
    (4) Obtaining control over stolen property or services knowing the property
    or services to have been stolen by another."
    Subsection (b), the penalty provision of the theft statute, outlines how the severity level
    of the theft varies based on the value of the property stolen and the type of property
    stolen. When the type of property stolen is a firearm valued under $25,000, like the
    handgun at issue in Taylor's case, K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-5801(b)(7) dictates that this theft
    constitutes a severity level 9 nonperson felony.
    The Prosecutor Misstated the Law: The Plain Language of the Theft Statute
    Requires All Thefts to be Committed "With the Intent To" Permanently Deprive the
    Owner of Property
    Taylor's primary argument why the prosecutor's statement to the jury constituted a
    misstatement of law is because the prosecutor's statement lowered the State's burden to
    prove the requisite culpable mental state. When defendants can establish that a
    prosecutor's statement misstated the law, then they have satisfied the first step of the
    prosecutorial error test because our Supreme Court has held that misstatements of law fall
    outside the wide latitude afforded to prosecutors, constituting error. See State v. Phillips,
    13
    
    299 Kan. 479
    , 504-05, 
    325 P.3d 1095
     (2014). A quick analysis of the plain language of
    the theft statute establishes that not only did the prosecutor misstate the law, his
    misstatements conveyed to the jury that the legislature had eliminated the State's burden
    to prove the requisite culpable mental state.
    Subsection (a) of K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-5202, the statute which defines and
    outlines the rules regarding the requisite culpable mental states to commit a crime, states
    that "[e]xcept as otherwise provided, a culpable mental state is an essential element of
    every crime defined by this code." Theft is not a strict liability crime under K.S.A. 2016
    Supp. 21-5203. In fact, the requisite culpable mental state required to commit a theft is
    clearly stated in K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-5801(a), as it states: Theft is . . . done with intent
    to permanently deprive the owner of the possession, use or benefit of the owner's
    property or services." (Emphasis added.) Thus, defendants cannot be convicted of any
    theft unless they acted "with the intent" to permanently deprive. "Intentionally" is the
    highest requisite culpable mental state. K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-5202(b)(1). "A person acts
    'intentionally,' or 'with intent,' with respect to the nature of such person's conduct or to a
    result of such person's conduct when it is such person's conscious objective or desire to
    engage in the conduct or cause the result." K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-5202(h).
    This means that for the State to meet its burden of proving Taylor guilty beyond a
    reasonable doubt, the State was required to prove that Taylor exerted or obtained
    unauthorized control over the firearm, while having the conscious objective or desire to
    permanently deprive Brown from the possession, use, or benefit of the firearm.
    Nevertheless, the State makes two arguments why the prosecutor's statements
    were not erroneous. The State's first argument is that the prosecutor's statements were
    merely made in response to Taylor's attorney's misstatements of law. The State stresses
    that Taylor's attorney told the jury that no evidence showed that the theft occurred in
    Johnson County since the handgun was stolen from Brown's house in Wyandotte County.
    14
    The State also stresses Taylor's attorney's argument that no evidence showed the theft
    occurred on December 26, 2014, since Brown testified it was stolen sometime in 2013.
    Regardless of the legal correctness of Taylor's attorney's arguments, the
    prosecutor's statement that the State did not have to prove that a person knew the
    handgun he or she possessed was a stolen handgun to convict that person of theft went
    well beyond Taylor's attorney's arguments about whether the charges against Taylor were
    otherwise defective. Moreover, even assuming the prosecutor's comments were made in
    response to Taylor's attorney's arguments, our Supreme Court has held that "'a
    prosecutor's improper comment or argument can be prejudicial, even if the [error] was
    extemporaneous and made under the stress of rebutting arguments made by defense
    counsel.' [Citation omitted]." State v. Roeder, 
    300 Kan. 901
    , 934, 
    336 P.3d 831
     (2014),
    cert. denied 
    135 S. Ct. 2316
     (2015).
    This leads to the State's second argument on appeal why the prosecutor's
    statements did not constitute misstatements of law. The State's second argument is that
    the plain language of the theft statute supports the prosecutor's statement that the State
    had no duty to establish that Taylor knew the handgun was stolen given that Taylor was
    charged under K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-5801(a)(1). The State argues that the elements of
    theft by obtaining or exerting unauthorized control of property under K.S.A. 2016 Supp.
    21-5801(a)(1) do not include any language explicitly stating that a person must know the
    property was stolen. Although not clearly explained in its brief, it seems this argument
    relates to the prosecutor's argument below that because Taylor was not charged with theft
    by knowingly obtaining control over stolen property, the State had no burden to establish
    that Taylor knew the property was stolen.
    In making this argument, the State never addresses the fact that K.S.A. 2016 Supp.
    21-5801 explicitly states that persons must have committed theft under subsection (a)(1)
    "with the intent to permanently deprive the owner of possession, use or benefit of the
    15
    owner's property . . . ." Nor does the State address why K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-5202(a)'s
    rule that the stated culpable mental state of a criminal statute is an essential element of
    every crime does not apply in Taylor's case.
    Every theft offense, without exception, involves stolen property. More
    importantly, every theft offense, without exception, requires that defendants know they
    have somehow gained control over stolen property. Consider thefts involving defendants
    actively engaged in stealing the property versus thefts involving defendants who have
    passively received stolen property knowing it was stolen by another. The defendants who
    were actively engaged in stealing the property would have the requisite culpable mental
    state to commit a theft because the act of taking the property from the owner establishes
    that it was their intent to deprive the owner of the possession, use, or benefit of the
    property. The defendants who knowingly received stolen property also have the requisite
    culpable mental state to commit a theft because the act of receiving the property that they
    know is stolen means they also intend to permanently deprive the rightful owner of the
    possession, use, or benefit of the property. Even thefts by deception or threat under
    K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-5801(a)(2) and (a)(3), which are not at issue in this case, involve
    property that was wrongfully taken, i.e., stolen, with the intent to permanently deprive.
    Nevertheless, defendants who have no knowledge that the property they possess was
    stolen could never intend to permanently deprive the actual owner of the property
    because those defendants would believe that they were the actual owners of the property.
    Additionally, although the State on appeal has abandoned the prosecutor's
    argument that the legislature has decided people who possess stolen firearms are guilty of
    theft regardless of whether those people knew the firearm they possessed was stolen, the
    errant reasoning the prosecutor actually used when telling the jury that it could convict
    Taylor of theft cannot be ignored. It is one of the bases for Taylor's prosecutorial error
    challenge and was adopted by the trial court when denying Taylor's motion for judgment
    of acquittal.
    16
    Once again, the prosecutor's argument, which it repeated to the jury during closing
    arguments, was that because K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-5801(b)(7) specifically provides that
    persons convicted of theft of a firearm valued under $25,000 are guilty of a severity level
    9 person felony, the legislature intended to allow the State to prosecute and convict all
    persons who possess stolen firearms of theft regardless of whether those persons knew
    the firearms were stolen. The prosecutor explained that the legislature had decided that
    knowledge that the firearm had been stolen was not required as a way to "encourage
    persons to go through proper channels, register firearms" and to "[b]uy from a gun
    retailer." In essence, the prosecutor's reading of the theft statute makes possession of a
    stolen firearm a strict liability crime.
    Nevertheless, it is readily apparent that the prosecutor's interpretation of the
    legislature's intent within the theft statute is errant for a number of reasons. For starters,
    as already established, theft is not a strict liability crime. Additionally, a fundamental rule
    of statutory interpretation is to look at the plain language of a statute, giving the ordinary
    words within the statute their ordinary meanings. Barlow, 303 Kan. at 813. Another
    fundamental rule is to avoid absurd statutory interpretations that result in the legislature
    enacting meaningless legislation. State v. Frierson, 
    298 Kan. 1005
    , 1013, 
    319 P.3d 515
    (2014). Here, the prosecutor interpreted the theft statute in a manner that ignores the plain
    language requiring that all persons convicted of theft must have acted "with the intent to
    permanently deprive the owner of possession, use or benefit of the owner's
    property . . . ." K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-5801(a). This also means that the prosecutor
    interpreted the theft statute in a manner that renders the legislature's language that
    persons must intentionally commit thefts meaningless.
    Likewise, part of looking to the plain language of a statute involves not reading
    language into a statute that is not readily found therein. Barlow, 303 Kan. at 813. Nothing
    within the theft statute speaks to the legislature's intent to have people buy firearms
    "through proper channels" and only "from a gun retailer." Indeed, it is inconceivable that
    17
    the prosecutor actually believed such legislative intent could be found from the penalty
    provision on theft of firearms, which simply states that thefts involving stolen firearms
    valued under $25,000 constitute severity level 9 person felonies. K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-
    5801(b)(7). Additionally, as Taylor emphasizes in his brief, such an assertion is also
    troubling because Kansas has no law requiring people to buy handguns from gun
    retailers. In fact, with the exclusion of convicted criminals possessing firearms, the
    legislature has generally decided to refrain from regulating firearm ownership. See
    K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 50-1201 et seq.; K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 75-7c01 et seq. Simply put, the
    prosecutor's interpretation of the theft statute was devoid of logic.
    The Prosecutor's Error was Prejudicial
    Because the prosecutor's statements constituted error, we next examine whether
    the erroneous statements affected the outcome of Taylor's trial. Again, under this second
    step, we must reverse Taylor's conviction unless the State can show beyond a reasonable
    doubt that there was no reasonable possibility that the error contributed to the jury's
    guilty verdict. See Sherman, 305 Kan. at 109.
    The extent of the State's argument why any error that occurred was harmless is
    that it presented sufficient evidence at trial to support Taylor's guilt. Specifically, the
    State believes the following evidence was so strong that it outweighs the prosecutor's
    misstatements of law: (1) evidence supported that Taylor knew the firearm was stolen;
    (2) evidence supported that the handgun was found in Taylor's car; (3) evidence
    supported that Taylor's DNA was found on the trigger; (4) evidence supported that Taylor
    refused to give his DNA without a search warrant; and (5) evidence supported that Taylor
    denied knowledge of the firearms. With the State's argument in mind, we turn to the
    persuasiveness of the State's position.
    18
    For starters, the State has asserted that there was evidence Taylor knew the firearm
    was stolen without explaining what evidence supports this conclusion. The State has not
    even cited a place in the record where such evidence was presented. The only direct
    statements made indicating that Taylor might have known the handgun was stolen came
    from the prosecutor during closing arguments: the prosecutor told the jury that Deputy
    Pechnik had testified that Taylor had asked him if the handguns were stolen. Yet, an
    examination of Deputy Pechnik's trial testimony establishes that he never testified that
    Taylor had asked him if the handgun was stolen.
    Next, the evidence certainly supported that the handgun was found in the car
    Taylor was driving. What the State neglects to point out was that (1) Taylor's car was a
    rental car that had been rented under Taylor's girlfriend's name and (2) Taylor had told
    Deputy Pechnik that three other people had been in the car. Thus, the evidence did not
    support that Taylor was the only person who had been in the rental car.
    In making the arguments about DNA, the State further neglects to note
    contradictory evidence. First, while Taylor's DNA was found on the trigger of the
    handgun, the forensic scientist stated that a person's DNA can be placed on an object that
    person did not touch under a process called transfer DNA. Deputy Pechnik's bodycam
    video showing the search of the car establishes that Deputy Pechnik touched the car's
    visor and steering wheel before grabbing the handgun and unloading it. Undoubtedly, as
    a person who drove the car, Taylor had at the very least touched the car's steering wheel.
    Additionally, the State makes no mention of the fact that DNA from four males were
    found on the handgun. Concerning Taylor's refusal to provide Deputy Pechnik with his
    DNA when initially asked, Deputy Pechnik testified that Taylor had told him he did not
    want to give him a DNA sample because he had already given a sample when booked
    into jail. Deputy Pechnik also testified that he did not make a "big deal" about getting the
    DNA sample when he asked.
    19
    Regarding Taylor's denial of knowledge the handgun was in the car, the State has
    assumed that denying knowledge of the handgun is an indicator of Taylor's guilt. Clearly,
    if Taylor honestly had no knowledge that the handgun was in the car, then his denial
    cannot be interpreted as a sign of guilt. This is why appellate courts have emphasized
    whether a defendant's explanation is satisfactory under the circumstances of the
    defendant's case. See, e.g., State v. Atkinson, 
    215 Kan. 139
    , Syl. ¶ 3, 
    523 P.2d 737
     (1974).
    Under the circumstances of Taylor's case, Taylor's denial was not inconsistent with the
    other evidence of his case. It is certainly possible that a person driving a rental car in
    which other people had ridden in might not be aware of all of the contents inside the car.
    Moreover, nothing presented at trial suggested that Taylor ever alleged anything other
    than he did not know the handguns were in the car.
    Accordingly, outside of the fact that Taylor had control over the stolen handgun
    because it was in his car, the evidence did not support that Taylor knew the handgun was
    stolen. Yet, even the inference that Taylor committed the theft because the stolen
    handgun was in his car becomes questionable when one considers the other evidence in
    the record, like the fact the handgun had been stolen from Brown many months before it
    was found in Taylor's possession.
    Moreover, if there was ever a question whether the prosecutor's misstatements of
    law could have been deemed harmless by this court, that question certainly vanished
    when one considers that the jury asked: "What is the definition of 'theft' as it relates to
    the firearm and as related to the charge in Instruction No. 9?" In short, the prosecutor's
    misstatements of law were clearly on the minds of the jurors when they were deciding
    Taylor's guilt, meaning the prosecutor's error almost certainly played a role in the jury's
    guilty verdict. Additionally, in making its arguments, the State fails to consider the
    prosecutor's statements conveyed to the jury that the State was the final arbiter on the
    legislature's intent, giving authority to the prosecutor's statement to which he was not
    entitled. The prosecutor's statements implying that he was the final arbiter on the
    20
    legislature's intent, in and of itself, was a serious error that the State has completely failed
    to take into account in its harmless error analysis.
    Except for strict liability crimes, to be convicted of a crime, people must have the
    requisite culpable mental state outlined by statute. All thefts require that the defendant
    intended to permanently deprive the owner of the possession, use, or benefit of property;
    thus, all thefts require that the defendant know that the property he or she has been
    charged with stealing was in fact stolen. This is an essential element of the theft offense,
    and proof of its existence ensures that innocent people are not convicted of a crime. The
    prosecutor's statement to the jury that the jury could convict people of committing theft
    of a firearm even if those people were unaware that the firearms they possessed were
    stolen was a serious misstatement of law. Moreover, because evidence that Taylor knew
    the firearm was stolen was lacking, the prosecutor's misstatement bolstered the State's
    case where it was the weakest. The jury's question requesting "the definition of 'theft' as it
    relates to the firearm" as well as the prosecutor's decision to act as an authority on the
    legislature's intent merely solidifies the prejudicial effect of the prosecutor's statements.
    As a result, we reverse his theft conviction and vacate his sentence.
    Did the Trial Court Err by Denying Taylor's Motion for Judgment of Acquittal?
    Next, Taylor argues that the trial court erred when it denied his motion for
    judgment of acquittal at the close of the State's case because the State had failed to
    provide sufficient evidence that he had committed the theft. Taylor's argument turns on
    his belief that the State failed to establish that he had intended to permanently deprive
    Brown of the handgun. Although we are reversing Taylor's theft conviction, we will
    address Taylor's insufficient evidence claim because it involves an issue of double
    jeopardy for a defendant cannot be retried for the same crime without violating the
    Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution. See
    State v. Scott, 
    285 Kan. 366
    , 372, 
    171 P.3d 639
     (2007).
    21
    Standard of Review
    "A motion for judgment of acquittal is substantially the same as a motion attacking
    the sufficiency of the evidence." State v. Torrance, 
    22 Kan. App. 2d 721
    , 727, 
    922 P.2d 1109
     (1996). Thus, the standard for reviewing challenges concerning the denial of a
    motion for judgment of acquittal is substantively identical to the standard for reviewing
    challenges concerning the insufficiency of the evidence. See Torrance, 
    22 Kan. App. 2d at 727
    . Appellate courts must consider whether the evidence in the light most favorable to
    the State supports that a rational factfinder could find proof beyond a reasonable doubt as
    to each element of the offense. State v. Ta, 
    296 Kan. 230
    , 236, 
    290 P.3d 652
     (2012).
    While engaging in this analysis, appellate courts must refrain from reweighing the
    evidence, assessing the credibility of witnesses, or resolving conflicting evidence. Ta,
    296 Kan. at 237. Furthermore, appellate courts may uphold a verdict based solely on
    circumstantial evidence, so long as that circumstantial evidence provides a basis for the
    factfinder to make a reasonable inference on the elements at issue. State v. Logsdon, 
    304 Kan. 3
    , 25, 
    371 P.3d 836
     (2016).
    Additional Facts
    Taylor's attorney initially made his motion for judgment of acquittal based on the
    argument that there was jurisdictional defect in the State's case. The prosecutor responded
    by not only providing argument why he believed this argument was wrong but also by
    stating that the legislature had decided that theft of a firearm was a special crime. The
    trial court took the motion under advisement. At the start of the second day of trial, the
    trial judge told the prosecutor that he wanted to better understand the law regarding "theft
    of the firearm, which [he thought the prosecutor] acknowledge[d] . . . ha[d]n't been
    established for part of this case, versus being in possession of the weapon." The trial
    judge quickly clarified that he believed there was sufficient evidence that Brown's
    handgun was in Taylor's car.
    22
    When the prosecutor provided his understanding concerning the theft law when a
    "possession of a weapon" is involved, the prosecutor asserted that sufficient evidence
    supported the State's case because Taylor possessed the handgun and Taylor denied
    knowing that the handgun was in the car. Taylor's attorney then responded that the State
    had provided no evidence that "Taylor was involved in the theft." At which point, the
    prosecutor told the trial court that the "sentencing enhancement" provision in the theft
    statute concerning firearms establishes that the legislature was "encourag[ing] people to
    go through the proper channels to obtain firearms, registration of the firearms, getting
    them from reputable dealers." Then, the prosecutor stated: "If you come into possession
    of a stolen firearm, it doesn't require that you have the knowledge that that firearm is
    stolen. It is different from stolen property where we have to prove you know it is stolen."
    Immediately, after making this statement, the trial court denied Taylor's motion, stating:
    "All right. Motion as to Count 1 is denied. The case will proceed."
    Insufficient Evidence Supported that Taylor Intended to Permanently Deprive the
    Owner of the Handgun
    From the outset, we note that it seems that the trial court was close to granting
    Taylor's motion for judgment of acquittal concerning the theft charge until the prosecutor
    provided his errant analysis of theft of a firearm law. The trial court explicitly stated on
    the record that the State had not proven "theft of a firearm," the crime for which Taylor
    was charged. Moreover, the trial court's clarification that there was sufficient evidence to
    support that Brown's handgun was in Taylor's car only speaks to the prosecutor's errant
    analysis of the "possession of a weapon" law, which the trial judge asked the prosecutor
    to better understand. Also of significance, in recounting the State's evidence, the
    prosecutor told the trial court that Deputy Pechnik had testified that Taylor had asked him
    if the handgun was stolen; once again, no such testimony was ever made. As a result, we
    are presented with the following question: Did the trial court deny Taylor's motion for
    23
    judgment of acquittal because it believed the State had no burden to prove Taylor knew
    he was in possession of a stolen handgun?
    Despite this concerning question, this court's standard for reviewing the denial of a
    motion for judgment of acquittal is whether there was sufficient evidence to support each
    element of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt when viewed in the light most
    favorable to the State. Ta, 296 Kan. at 236. Additionally, if the trial court ultimately
    reached the correct result, appellate courts will uphold a trial court's decision even if that
    decision was based on erroneous grounds. See State v. Overman, 
    301 Kan. 704
    , 712, 
    348 P.3d 516
     (2015). Thus, while the trial court may have denied Taylor's motion based on
    incorrect grounds, if the State had in fact presented sufficient evidence, we may still
    affirm the denial of Taylor's motion for judgment of acquittal.
    Once again, Taylor's sole argument regarding insufficiency of the evidence is that
    the State failed to establish that he had the requisite culpable mental state to commit the
    theft. The State responds that the following circumstantial evidence supports Taylor's
    conviction: (1) that the handgun was found in Taylor's car; (2) that Taylor's DNA was
    found on the trigger of the handgun; (3) that Taylor refused to give Deputy Pechnik his
    DNA when initially asked; and (4) that Taylor denied knowledge that the handgun was in
    his car.
    In the light most favorable to the State, the preceding evidence supports that
    Taylor had touched the handgun; therefore, Taylor knew the handgun was in the car. In
    turn, in the light most favorable to the State, Taylor's denial of having knowledge of the
    handgun, when he had in fact touched the handgun, supports that Taylor had lied. Yet,
    can the inference that Taylor had lied constitute enough evidence to provide a rational
    factfinder proof beyond a reasonable doubt that Taylor knew the handgun was stolen and
    therefore intended to permanently deprive Brown of the handgun?
    24
    Although not addressed by either party in their briefs, our Supreme Court has
    determined that whether a theft can be supported by the mere possession of stolen
    property depends upon the existence of two factors: (1) How believable the defendant's
    explanation is for possessing the stolen property? (2) How recently the property was
    stolen? See Atkinson, 
    215 Kan. 139
    , Syl. ¶ 3. In Atkinson, our Supreme Court explained:
    "The possession of stolen property raises a presumption that the possessor committed a
    burglary or a larceny if the possession is recent thereto and is unexplained or the
    explanation thereof is unsatisfactory." 
    215 Kan. 139
    , Syl. ¶ 3. More recently, this court
    repeated this standard in State v. McCammon, 
    45 Kan. App. 2d 482
    , Syl. ¶ 8, 
    250 P.3d 838
     (2011), when we held: "Possession by an accused of recently stolen property is
    sufficient to sustain a conviction of theft where a satisfactory explanation is not given,
    particularly where the nature of the items and their condition support an inference that
    they have been stolen."
    Here, because we must assume under out standard of review that Taylor lied about
    having no knowledge of the handgun, Taylor's explanation of why there was a stolen
    handgun inside his car was unsatisfactory. Regarding how recently the handgun had been
    stolen, based on Brown's testimony, we note that the handgun was stolen from Brown's
    house in the spring or the fall of 2013. Taylor was found with the stolen handgun on
    December 26, 2014. Assuming that the handgun was stolen from Brown's house in the
    middle of spring or fall 2013, we point out that at least 14 to 20 months had elapsed
    before Taylor was found with handgun on December 26, 2014.
    In the past, our Supreme Court has held that finding the stolen item in the
    defendant's car 7 days after the item was stolen and an unsatisfactory explanation was
    sufficient to support the defendant's guilt. State v. Ulriksen, 
    210 Kan. 795
    , 801, 
    504 P.2d 232
     (1972). Our Supreme Court has held that finding the stolen item in a defendant's car
    6 weeks after the item was stolen and an unsatisfactory explanation was sufficient to
    support the defendant's guilt. Atkinson, 
    215 Kan. at 143
    . This court has held that finding
    25
    the stolen item in the defendant's storage unit 4 to 6 months after the item was stolen and
    an unsatisfactory explanation was sufficient to support the defendant's guilt. McCammon,
    45 Kan. App. 2d at 489-90. Yet, when reviewing the State's appeal from the trial court's
    decision to grant the defendant's motion for judgment of acquittal, our Supreme Court
    held that finding the stolen item in the defendant's car 14 months after the item was stolen
    was too remote in time to support the defendant's guilt. State v. Bamberger, 
    210 Kan. 508
    , 509, 
    502 P.2d 760
     (1972). In Bamberger, Bamberger had told police that he bought
    the item from a friend, whose identity he would not disclose, because he did not "'want to
    rat on a friend.'" 
    210 Kan. at 508
    . While facially it seems this explanation was
    unsatisfactory, the Bamberger court did not comment on whether the explanation was
    believable, focusing instead on the fact that "fourteen months after the theft was too
    remote in point of time to give rise to a presumption of guilt." 
    210 Kan. at 509
    .
    Turning our focus back to Taylor's case, we point out that even though Taylor
    gave an unsatisfactory explanation about why he was in possession of the stolen handgun,
    the evidence was unassailable that the handgun had not been recently stolen. Based on
    our Supreme Court's holding in Bamberger, it seems 14 months, which is the minimum
    amount of time the handgun had been stolen when found with Taylor, is too remote in
    time to be recent. See 
    210 Kan. at 509
    . Moreover, based on our Supreme Court's holding
    in Atkinson, it is clear that without other evidence supporting a defendant's guilt, both an
    unsatisfactory explanation and possession of recently stolen property is required to
    establish that the defendant knew the property was stolen. 
    215 Kan. at 143
    . Here, there is
    only an unsatisfactory explanation. Moreover, there was no evidence presented indicating
    that the property, the handgun in this case, had been stolen as emphasized in McCammon,
    
    45 Kan. App. 2d 482
    , Syl. ¶ 8. For example, the condition of the handgun had not been
    altered, such as removal or alteration of its serial number to prevent authorities from
    tracing the ownership history of the handgun.
    26
    To conclude, when the only evidence supporting a defendant's theft conviction is
    the possession of stolen property, our Supreme Court has held that such convictions may
    be upheld based on possession alone if the defendant provides an unsatisfactory
    explanation about why he or she has the property and the property was recently stolen.
    Atkinson, 
    215 Kan. at 143
    . Here, despite Taylor's unsatisfactory explanation, the handgun
    at issue had been stolen from Brown's house some 14 to 20 months earlier, which is too
    remote in time to be recent under Bamberger. Therefore, even when considered in the
    light most favorable to the State, based on our Supreme Court precedent, there was
    insufficient evidence to support that Taylor knew the handgun was stolen and therefore
    he intended to permanently deprive Brown of the handgun. As a result, the trial court
    erred when it denied Taylor's motion for judgment of acquittal, and Taylor's theft
    conviction is reversed and his sentence is vacated without the possibility of retrial. See
    Scott, 285 Kan. at 372.
    Was Taylor Entitled to Notice of What Items Constituted Contraband Inside the Jail?
    Taylor's next four arguments hinge on whether he was entitled to notice of what
    items constituted contraband inside the jail and could therefore result in additional
    criminal charges. Specifically, these are Taylor's arguments: (1) that the trafficking in
    contraband statute was unconstitutional as applied to him because he had no notice; (2)
    that his conviction was supported by insufficient evidence because he had no notice; (3)
    that he was entitled to an instruction on notice; and (4) that the prosecutor's statement to
    the jury that no notice requirement existed was improper.
    Trafficking in Contraband Background
    K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-5914(a)(1), the section of the trafficking in contraband
    statute that Taylor was convicted of violating, states:
    27
    "(a) Trafficking in contraband in a correctional institution or care and treatment
    facility is, without the consent of the administrator of the correctional institution or care
    and treatment facility:
    (1) Introducing or attempting to introduce any item into or upon the
    grounds of any correctional institution or care and treatment facility."
    Under this statute, outside of the phrase "any item," the term "contraband" is not
    defined. Moreover, the term "any item" is not further defined. Thus, the legislature placed
    correctional institution administrators (hereafter called "administrators") in exclusive
    control of deciding what items are deemed contraband inside their correctional
    institution. "Correctional intuitions" include both prisons and jails. K.S.A. 2016 Supp.
    21-5914(d)(1).
    Subsection (b) of K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-5914 is the penalty provision of the
    statute. K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-5914(b)(2)(A) states that noncorrectional facility
    employees who have been convicted of introducing "firearms, ammunition, explosives, or
    a controlled substance which is defined in K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-5701, and amendments
    thereto" are guilty of committing a severity level 5 nonperson felony. Marijuana
    constitutes a controlled substance under K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-5701. See K.S.A. 2016
    Supp. 65-4105(d)(16). Noncorrectional facility employees convicted of bringing in some
    other item deemed contraband by facility rules are also guilty of committing a severity
    level 5 nonperson felony. K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-5914(b)(2)(B)-(D).
    In State v. Watson, 
    273 Kan. 426
    , 429, 
    44 P.3d 357
     (2002), our Supreme Court
    addressed the constitutionality of the former trafficking in contraband statute under
    K.S.A. 2001 Supp. 21-3826. This statute is substantively identical to the current
    trafficking in contraband statute Taylor challenges. The Watson court explained that
    before 1992 amendments, the trafficking in contraband statute provided "a laundry list of
    items defined as contraband." 
    273 Kan. at 429
    . In 1997, though, the legislature removed
    this list and delegated the authority to determine what items constituted contraband under
    28
    the statute to the administrators. Watson, 
    273 Kan. at 429-30
    . This resulted in the
    legislature enacting broad language stating people could be convicted of trafficking in
    contraband by bringing "'any item without the consent of the administrator'" into a
    correctional institution. Watson, 
    273 Kan. at 429
    .
    The underlying facts of Watson's case were undisputed. Watson had been
    convicted of introducing contraband, which consisted of cigarettes, into jail by bringing
    the cigarettes with her while visiting an inmate. Watson intended to give the cigarettes to
    this inmate. As a visitor of the jail, Watson was not given a list of items that constituted
    contraband inside the jail. Nevertheless, she would have seen a sign outside the jail that
    stated the only items visitors could give inmates were "money, socks, underwear,
    religious articles, [and] needed medication." Watson, 
    273 Kan. at 427-28
    .
    Unlike Taylor in this appeal, Watson did not challenge the constitutionality of
    trafficking in contraband statute as applied to her specifically. Watson, 
    273 Kan. at 435
    .
    Instead, Watson challenged that the trafficking in contraband statute was facially
    unconstitutional because it was vague. 
    273 Kan. at 428
    . Thus, a person could be
    convicted of introducing or attempting to introduce an item into a correctional institution
    without knowing that the item was considered contraband inside the facility. Watson, 
    273 Kan. at 428, 435
    . Watson's argument focused on the fact that contraband was broadly
    defined in the statute as "any item." Watson, 
    273 Kan. at 428-29
    .
    Ultimately, our Supreme Court rejected Watson's argument that the trafficking in
    contraband statute was facially unconstitutional because it was vague. Watson, 
    273 Kan. at 435
    . Yet, in doing so, our Supreme Court emphasized that based on the broad "any
    item" language in the trafficking in contraband statute, the trafficking contraband statute
    could be implemented onto individuals in a manner inconsistent with constitutional due
    process. See Watson, 
    273 Kan. at 434-35
    . This was because the term "any item" can be
    applied without limitation. By not explaining what "any item" was the statute is deficient.
    29
    Persons of common intelligence would be required to guess at the term's meaning. For
    example, the statute contains no guidelines either to assist persons who desire to know
    whether they possess something that is prohibited from being introduced in the
    correctional facility or from attempting to introduce in the correctional facility or to assist
    officials who are charged with enforcement of the "any item" statutory prohibition. In
    reaching this holding, our Supreme Court drew guidance from three decisions dealing
    with the kind of notice necessary to sustain the constitutional validity of a trafficking in
    contraband statute. Watson, 
    273 Kan. at 431-35
    .
    First, our Supreme Court turned to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals case United
    States v. Park, 
    521 F.2d 1381
     (9th Cir.1975). Park had been convicted of trafficking in
    contraband after bringing 30 valium tablets concealed in "a Vaseline coated balloon" into
    a prison while visiting an inmate. Park, 521 F.2d at 1382. Park argued that the federal
    trafficking in contraband statute was unconstitutionally vague because it delegated
    authority to determine what items constitute contraband to the warden. The Ninth Circuit
    Court of Appeals determined that the federal trafficking in contraband statute was
    constitutional as applied to Park because Park had been given notice many times before
    visiting the prison that bringing certain items deemed contraband could result in criminal
    prosecution. Park, 521 F.2d at 1384. Given the Park court's holding, our Supreme Court
    held:
    "[Park] illustrates the general principle that a statute is not necessarily vague or
    overbroad simply because the legislature delegates the authority to determine what items
    constitute contraband to an agent or an agency. Yet, the broad authority granted by this
    type of statute demands that procedural safeguards are in place, i.e., adequate notice to
    prison visitors, in order to ensure that the statute is implemented in a constitutional
    manner." Watson, 
    273 Kan. at 432
    .
    Second, our Supreme Court turned to People v. Holmes, 
    959 P.2d 406
     (Colo.
    1998). Holmes, an attorney, had been charged under the Colorado trafficking in
    30
    contraband statute for bringing cigarettes and a lighter into his meeting with a client in
    jail, but the trial court dismissed the charge because it determined that the contraband
    statute was unconstitutional. The Colorado trafficking in contraband statute delegated the
    authority to determine what constituted contraband to the detention facility administrator.
    The statute also required that the administrator provide notice to persons who enter the
    detention facility of what items the administrator deemed to be contraband. Holmes, 959
    P.2d at 409. While defending against the State's appeal, Holmes argued that the jail failed
    to comply with the trafficking in contraband statute's notice requirement, in part, because
    the signs at the jail stating that contraband was prohibited did not also state that persons
    would face criminal prosecution for bringing contraband inside the jail.
    The Colorado Supreme Court agreed with Holmes, holding that even though the
    plain language of the trafficking in contraband statute did not demand notice that
    bringing in contraband could result in criminal prosecution, for the statute to be
    constitutional, such notice was required. Holmes, 959 P.2d at 415-19. The Colorado
    Supreme Court further held that items that were not specifically defined as contraband in
    the trafficking statute but determined to be contraband by the administrator must be made
    known to persons entering the facility. Holmes, 959 P.2d at 418-19. Given these holdings,
    our Supreme Court held that Holmes stood for the proposition that nondeceptive notice
    that a person would be committing a crime by bringing an item deemed contraband into a
    correctional institution was required to comply with constitutional due process
    requirements. See Watson, 
    273 Kan. at 433
    .
    Last, our Supreme Court turned to People v. Carillo, 
    323 Ill. App. 3d 367
    , 
    751 N.E.2d 1243
     (2001). Carillo had been convicted under the Illinois trafficking in
    contraband statute for having beer in his locked car, which was parked in the prison
    parking lot. The Illinois trafficking in contraband statute listed what items constituted
    contraband, including cannabis, and items that were "intrinsically innocent in nature."
    Carillo, 
    323 Ill. App. 3d at 368, 373
    . The Appellate Court of Illinois, Fifth District,
    31
    ultimately reversed Carillo's trafficking in contraband conviction because it determined
    that for the Illinois trafficking in contraband statute to be held constitutional, the statute
    must be narrowly interpreted in the favor of the accused in a manner that only punishes
    those who intended to violate the statute. Carillo, 
    323 Ill. App. 3d at 373-76
    . The Carillo
    court determined that an ordinary person would not believe he or she was breaking the
    law by keeping items that the statute deemed contraband inside a locked car in the
    prison's parking lot. 
    323 Ill. App. 3d at 375-76
    . As with the Holmes case, our Supreme
    Court held that Carillo stood for the proposition that nondeceptive notice that a person
    would be committing a crime by bringing an item deemed contraband into a correctional
    institution was required to comply with constitutional due process requirements. Watson,
    
    273 Kan. at 434-35
    .
    With the Park, Holmes, and Carillo decisions as guidance, our Supreme Court
    held:
    "It is constitutionally permissible for the legislature to vest the administrators of
    correctional institutions with the authority to determine what items constitute contraband;
    however, adequate safeguards must be in place to ensure that the statute is not
    implemented in an unconstitutional manner.
    "Administrators of correctional facilities must provide persons of common
    knowledge adequate warning of what conduct is prohibited for two reasons: to provide
    fair notice and to safeguard against arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement." Watson,
    
    273 Kan. at 435
    .
    Since Watson, there have been a handful of cases before this court where
    defendants have challenged whether they have received adequate notice that the item they
    brought into the correctional institution constituted contraband that could result in
    trafficking in contraband charges. See, e.g., State v. Garcia, No. 112,397, 
    2015 WL 9455582
     (Kan. App. 2015) (unpublished opinion); State v. Thompson, No. 111,932, 
    2015 WL 9286794
     (Kan. App. 2015) (unpublished opinion); State v. Conger, No. 92,381, 2005
    
    32 WL 1561369
     (Kan. App. 2005) (unpublished opinion). Of importance in this case is this
    court's decision in Conger.
    In Conger, this court considered the State's appeal from the trial court's dismissal
    of Conger's trafficking in contraband charge for introducing contraband into the jail.
    Conger had been arrested and brought to jail. Before being brought to jail, Conger was
    asked if she had any drugs on her person, but she was not asked whether she had any
    drugs on her person when being booked into jail. While changing into inmate clothes
    during booking, Conger handed over her schizophrenia medicine to a police officer; this
    medicine was the basis of Conger's trafficking in contraband charge. The trial court
    dismissed the case because (1) Conger had not been given notice that she was required to
    turn over contraband at booking, and (2) Conger had voluntarily turned over her
    medicine.
    The Conger court upheld the trial court's dismissal. In upholding the dismissal, the
    Conger court found the following facts significant: (1) Conger saw signs in the jail that
    stated bringing contraband inside the jail could result in criminal prosecution, but the
    signs did not define contraband; (2) Conger's schizophrenia medicine was legal for her to
    possess; and (3) Conger was taken to jail involuntarily. 
    2005 WL 1561369
    , at *3. In
    making the finding about Conger's medicine, the Conger court relied on Carillo, noting
    that the Carillo court discussed punishing people for possessing "intrinsically innocent"
    items. 
    2005 WL 1561369
    , at *3. In making the finding about the fact Conger was taken
    to jail involuntarily, the Conger court also emphasized that the Watson court had held
    that persons (1) must be given warning of what conduct is prohibited and (2) must be
    given reasonable time to comply with facility regulations. 
    2005 WL 1561369
    , at *3.
    33
    Taylor Argues that Watson Demands Notice
    Turning our focus back to Taylor's challenge that the State had to establish that he
    received notice of what items, including illegal drugs like marijuana, constituted
    contraband inside the jail, we note that Taylor's challenge requires this court to consider
    both the language within the trafficking statute and its corresponding caselaw. Statutory
    interpretation is a question of law over which this court exercises de novo review. See
    State v. Collins, 
    303 Kan. 472
    , 473-74, 
    362 P.3d 1098
     (2015). Additionally, interpretation
    of prior appellate caselaw is also a question of law over which this court exercises de
    novo review. State v. Key, 
    298 Kan. 315
    , 318, 
    312 P.3d 355
     (2013).
    The gist of Taylor's argument is that Watson demands that he was entitled to
    notice of what items specifically constituted prohibited contraband inside the jail that
    could result in prosecution for trafficking in contraband. Taylor emphasizes that "[t]here
    is a difference between knowing that possessing marijuana is illegal, prohibited by
    statute, and knowing it is an additional separate crime to introduce it into a facility."
    Taylor points out that it is an undisputed fact that the State did not present evidence that
    he received notice regarding the jail's contraband policies and, in fact, the State argued
    that notice was not required at all. Taylor also compares his case to Conger because, like
    in Conger, he was taken to jail involuntarily and not given notice and opportunity to hand
    over any items constituting contraband.
    Indeed, a review of the evidence presented at trial supports that Taylor did not
    receive any notice at any time about what constituted contraband or that introducing
    contraband into the jail could result in a separate criminal prosecution. There was no
    evidence that Deputy Pechnik asked Taylor if he had illegal drugs on his person before
    entering the jail. There was no evidence that Deputy Pechnik or any other person
    provided Taylor with either oral or written warnings that marijuana constituted
    contraband or that the introduction of contraband constituted a crime. Moreover, although
    34
    Deputy Pechnik initially testified that a sign on the jail's secured booking door stated "No
    illegal weapons or drugs," when recalled by Taylor, Deputy Pechnik admitted that the
    sign did not say anything about drugs. Taylor was also arrested following a car accident,
    meaning that he was taken to jail involuntarily.
    The State does not dispute these facts. Instead, as it did below, the State continues
    to argue that notice was not required under the trafficking in contraband statute because
    marijuana is an illegal drug. Nevertheless, on appeal, the State has greatly expanded its
    reasoning why it believes notice was not required. Instead of simply arguing that notice
    was not required because marijuana is an illegal drug, the State now argues that the
    penalty provision of the trafficking in contraband statute makes it clear that controlled
    substances like marijuana are per se contraband. Because the State is making this
    argument for the first time on appeal, nothing within Taylor's brief addresses the State's
    new argument. Also, neither party has addressed the trial court's notice ruling, which was
    that the Conger court held notice was required only for intrinsically innocent items.
    Controlled Substances Are Not Per Se Contraband Under the Statute
    The State's argument about controlled substances being per se contraband under
    the trafficking in contraband statute has not yet been addressed by a Kansas appellate
    court. Summarized, the State's argument is that the trafficking in contraband statute—
    K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-5914—is unambiguous in regards to whether notice is required in
    Taylor's case because the subsection (b)(2)(A) penalty provision states that non-
    employees who bring controlled substances into a correctional facility are guilty of
    committing a severity level 5 nonperson felony. Thus, the State contends that the penalty
    provision provided Taylor with notice that he was violating the trafficking in contraband
    statute. The State also relies on State v. Durst, 
    235 Kan. 62
    , 
    678 P.2d 1126
     (1984), in
    arguing that all items that are illegal to possess constitute per se contraband.
    35
    Yet, the State's argument ignores that the legislature has no role in determining
    what items constitute contraband under the trafficking in contraband statute. Instead, the
    plain language of K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-5914(a) states that persons may be convicted of
    trafficking in contraband when they bring "any item" into a correctional institution
    "without the consent of the administrator of the correctional institution." (Emphasis
    added.) Thus, under the plain language of the statute, the administrators have the
    exclusive say as to which items constitute contraband in their facilities because the
    legislature delegated its power to define contraband to the administrators. See Watson,
    
    273 Kan. at 435-36
     (explaining how the legislature delegated its authority to determine
    what constituted contraband to the administrators).
    Clearly, the K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-5914(b)(2)(A) penalty provision shows that the
    legislature assumed administrators would determine that controlled substances like
    marijuana would constitute contraband inside their correctional institutions. Indeed, even
    if this penalty provision did not exist, it is reasonable to conclude that the legislature
    assumed the administrators would determine that controlled substances constituted items
    of contraband. Further, it goes without saying that it is highly improbable that any
    administrators would determine that controlled substances like marijuana were
    noncontraband items. Nevertheless, the important point is not the high improbability of a
    substance like marijuana being deemed noncontraband by administrators. Instead, the
    important point is that under the statute, administrators have the exclusive power to
    decide what items constitute contraband in their correctional institutions.
    The delegation of power to the administrators has two important consequences.
    First, because the legislature has delegated its authority to the administrators to determine
    what items constitute contraband, the legislature has no control over what the
    administrators ultimately determine constitutes contraband. This means that the K.S.A.
    2016 Supp. 21-5914(b)(2)(A) penalty provision outlining the penalty for trafficking a
    controlled substance only comes into play if the administrators define marijuana as
    36
    contraband in their own regulations. Thus, the fact the legislature has created a penalty
    for persons that have trafficked a controlled substance inside a correctional institution
    does not mean that marijuana as a controlled substance is per se contraband.
    The administrators' exclusive power to decide what items constitute contraband
    leads to the second important consequence of the delegation of power. Because the
    legislature delegated complete authority to define the items that constitute contraband to
    the administrators, the legislature did not provide a list of items that constituted
    contraband in the trafficking in contraband statute. Instead, the legislature simply stated
    that "any item" the administrators determined to be contraband would become
    contraband. This brings us back to our Supreme Court's holding in Watson. The Watson
    court was able to hold that the trafficking in contraband statute was not unconstitutional
    because it made a bright line rule that notice of what items the administrators deemed
    contraband must be provided to people entering correctional institutions so as to provide
    adequate warning to people that they will be engaging in criminal conduct by bringing
    any of those items into the correctional institution. 
    273 Kan. at 434-35
    . This
    individualized notice was required because the plain language of the trafficking in
    contraband statute with its "any items" language was deficient, providing no notice of
    what items constituted contraband. Also, the Watson court stressed that if the evidence
    established that a defendant never received this individualized notice, the trafficking in
    contraband statute as applied to that defendant was not within the confines of due
    process. See Watson, 
    273 Kan. at 434-35
    .
    Thus, the existence of the penalty provision the State relies on does not nullify the
    problems outlined in Watson that resulted in the Watson court holding that individualized
    notice of what constituted contraband was required for the trafficking in contraband
    statute to be applied to persons in a constitutional manner. Furthermore, had the penalty
    provision nullified such problems, one would assume that the Watson court would have
    made its notice requirement holding with an exception that notice was required for all
    37
    items unless listed under the K.S.A. 21-3826(c)(1), now K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-
    5914(b)(2)(A), penalty provision.
    The Trial Court's Interpretation of Conger was Incorrect
    As noted earlier, neither party has addressed the trial court's ruling that Taylor was
    not entitled to notice because it believed the Conger court held that notice was required
    for only intrinsically innocent items. Regardless, given that this was the trial court's
    actual ruling regarding why it determined Taylor was not entitled to notice, we will
    address this ruling.
    To review, the Conger case involved Conger bringing her schizophrenia medicine
    inside the jail following her arrest. In holding that Conger lacked the culpable mental
    state to commit the trafficking in contraband violation, the Conger court noted that "it
    was certainly legal for [Conger] to possess the pill outside the correctional facility." 
    2005 WL 1561369
    , at *3. The Conger court noted that the Watson court cited Carillo
    approvingly, and the Carillo court had held that persons must be made aware that
    "intrinsically innocent items" constitute contraband inside jail so ordinary people do not
    unwittingly violate the Illinois trafficking in contraband statute. 
    2005 WL 1561369
    , at *3.
    In making its ruling against Taylor, the trial court attached great legal significance
    to the phrase "intrinsically innocent," which the Conger court embraced from Carillo.
    The trial court, however, failed to take a few important things into account. First,
    although the Conger court noted that Conger's schizophrenia pills were legal for her to
    possess and noted the unfairness of prosecuting people for possessing items that are
    perfectly legal for people to possess outside the context of jail, the Conger court never
    went so far as to hold notice was only required for items that are legal to possess outside
    the context of a jail. Thus, the Conger court never held that people are entitled to notice
    only when intrinsically innocent items constitute contraband as the trial court ruled.
    38
    Second, although the Carillo court certainly focused on the effect of punishing
    people for bringing "intrinsically innocent" items onto prison property, the Carillo court
    was analyzing a very different trafficking in contraband statute. The Illinois trafficking in
    contraband statute actually defined what items would constitute contraband on prison
    property. 
    323 Ill. App. 3d at 368
    . A review of the Illinois trafficking in contraband statute
    in effect when Carillo was decided shows that "cannabis" as well as many other illegal
    drugs were clearly listed as contraband. See Ill. Comp. Stat. ch 5/31A-1.1(a)-(c) (West
    1996). Moreover, the specific issue the Carillo court addressed was whether people could
    reasonably expect to be punished for trafficking in contraband by leaving legal items
    deemed contraband under the statute in their locked cars parked in the prison parking lot.
    
    323 Ill. App. 3d at 369
    . As a result, the Carillo court was not addressing the same
    statutory issue that the Watson court was addressing. Also, since Carillo, the same
    Appellate Court of Illinois has decided that people could not be convicted of trafficking
    in contraband under the Illinois statute by leaving marijuana in a locked parked car in a
    prison parking lot. See People v. Chrisman, 
    334 Ill. App. 3d 1098
    , 1106, 
    779 N.E.2d 922
    (2002).
    Because of the differences between the Kansas and Illinois trafficking in
    contraband statutes, Kansas courts cannot simply adopt the "intrinsically innocent"
    language from Carillo and expect that it would apply to our trafficking in contraband
    statute.
    Taylor was Entitled to Notice
    Thus, to summarize then, the actual language of the Kansas trafficking in
    contraband statute, which does not define what constitutes contraband outside of stating
    that contraband is "any item" brought into a correctional facility "without the consent of
    the administrator," controls the analysis for notice requirements. In Watson, our Supreme
    39
    Court explained that while it was constitutionally permissible for the legislature to vest
    administrators "with the authority of determining what items constituted contraband," the
    "any item" language of the trafficking in contraband statute did not provide notice to
    ordinary people what conduct would constitute a crime. 
    273 Kan. at 435-36
    . As a result,
    the Watson court held that for the trafficking in contraband statute to be applied in a
    constitutionally permissible manner, administrators must provide people entering a
    correctional institution notice of what conduct they have deemed prohibited under the
    trafficking in contraband statute. 
    273 Kan. at 434-35
    . Without making any exceptions
    regarding the nature of the items deemed contraband, our Supreme Court held that people
    are entitled to adequate notice of what items constitute contraband. This would give
    people adequate notice they could face criminal charges by bringing those items into the
    correctional institution. Watson, 
    273 Kan. at 435
    . The individualized notice rectifies the
    fact notice is otherwise lacking in the trafficking in contraband statute.
    Thus, under the Watson court's construction, the trafficking in contraband statute
    could lawfully prohibit the introduction or attempted introduction of contraband from
    coming within a correctional facility only if the correctional facility's administrator has
    given notice of what items are forbidden. As a result, Taylor was entitled to notice. Here,
    however, the facility's administrator failed to do so.
    Because Taylor was entitled to notice what items constituted contraband inside the
    jail for the reasons outlined in Watson, this court must now consider each of Taylor's
    individual arguments relating to notice and his trafficking in contraband conviction. To
    review, each of Taylor's arguments that turn on whether notice was required are as
    follows: (1) the trafficking in contraband statute is unconstitutional as applied to him; (2)
    the evidence is insufficient to support his conviction given the lack of notice; (3) the trial
    court erred by failing to instruct the jury on the notice requirement; and (4) the prosecutor
    erred by telling the jury there was no notice requirement. Taylor contends that each of
    these alleged errors require reversal of his conviction. Indeed, a finding that the
    40
    trafficking in contraband statute was applied to Taylor unconstitutionally or that
    insufficient evidence supported Taylor's conviction would require reversal of Taylor's
    conviction without the possibility of retrial. Moreover, because a finding that the
    trafficking in contraband statute was applied to Taylor in an unconstitutional manner also
    necessarily speaks to the sufficiency of the evidence supporting Taylor's conviction, we
    have decided to address both issues together.
    Appellate courts exercise de novo review when considering whether a defendant's
    due process rights were violated. State v. Smith-Parker, 
    301 Kan. 132
    , 165, 
    340 P.3d 485
    (2014). When considering sufficiency of the evidence challenges, appellate courts decide
    whether all the evidence when viewed in the light most favorable to the State supports the
    defendant's conviction and if the court is convinced that a rational factfinder could have
    found the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt based on that evidence. State v.
    Laborde, 
    303 Kan. 1
    , 6, 
    360 P.3d 1080
     (2015).
    Taylor contends that the trafficking in contraband statute is unconstitutional as
    applied to him because he was "not provide[d] the procedural safeguard of 'adequate
    warning' that conduct was 'prohibited'" as explained by our Supreme Court in Watson.
    The State responds that this court should not reach this argument because Taylor did not
    raise this argument below and fails to address the fact he is raising this argument for the
    first time on appeal in violation of Supreme Court Rule 6.02(a)(5) (2017 Kan. S. Ct. R.
    34). The State's argument is unpersuasive because Taylor did raise this argument in his
    motion for judgment notwithstanding verdict. Additionally, even if Taylor had not raised
    this argument below, this court would be in a position to address Taylor's argument for
    the first time on appeal because Taylor's argument concerns his fundamental due process
    rights. See State v. Phillips, 
    299 Kan. 479
    , 493, 
    325 P.3d 1095
     (2014).
    Turning our attention back to Taylor's argument, we point out that Taylor's
    argument is the argument that was not raised by Watson before our Supreme Court.
    41
    Watson raised a challenge to the trafficking contraband statute as a whole, arguing that it
    was facially unconstitutional. Our Supreme Court rejected Watson's argument that the
    trafficking in contraband statute was facially constitutional, but in doing so, it discussed
    what would constitute the implementation of the statute in an unconstitutional manner.
    Watson, 
    273 Kan. at 435
    . Taylor's challenge specifically speaks to whether the statute
    was applied to him in an unconstitutional manner.
    Clearly, this inquiry is fact specific. As argued by Taylor in contesting the
    sufficiency of the evidence, "[i]n this case, it is not a question of whether the notice was
    adequate: the State did not present [evidence of] any notice. The prosecutor told the jury
    that notice was not required, arguing that it was Mr. Taylor's burden to obtain prior
    consent." Moreover, the State has not countered this contention in arguing against
    Taylor's challenge to the constitutionality of the statute as applied to him or in arguing
    against Taylor's challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence. Instead, the State repeats its
    arguments that marijuana is illegal per se and that Taylor should have known better. The
    State also stresses the principle that people are presumed to know the law.
    While it is certainly a principle that people are presumed to know the law, the
    State's argument ignores that this presumption cannot exist if the statute at issue does not
    convey to people what the law is. Indeed, the Watson court cited cases noting the
    principle that people are presumed to know the law. 
    273 Kan. at 434
    . And still, the
    Watson court held that administrators had to take the extra step of providing some form
    of individualized notice of what conduct it deemed prohibited under the trafficking in
    contraband statute because the statute alone provided no such notice. 
    273 Kan. at 435
    .
    Failure to comply with the notice rule results in the trafficking in contraband statute being
    implemented on an individual in an unconstitutional manner that does not comply with
    due process of law. As a result, the trafficking in contraband statute was applied to Taylor
    in an unconstitutional manner. The fact Taylor received no notice also necessarily means
    that Taylor's trafficking in contraband statute was supported by insufficient evidence.
    42
    For these reasons, we reverse Taylor's conviction and vacate Taylor's sentence for
    trafficking in contraband. Furthermore, because we have reversed based on the preceding,
    it should go without saying that the trial court's failure to give an instruction on the notice
    requirement and the prosecutor's statement to the jury that no notice requirement existed
    were error.
    Likewise, since we have reversed Taylor's trafficking in contraband conviction
    and vacated Taylor's sentence because the statute was applied to him unconstitutionally
    and insufficient evidence supported his conviction, we need not address Taylor's final
    argument that the trial court committed reversible error by broadening the culpable
    mental states required to convict Taylor of trafficking contraband in the jury instructions.
    We would note, however, that the trial court clearly erred by instructing the jury that that
    it could convict him if it believed he "intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly" committed
    trafficking in contraband given that the State had charged him with only "intentionally"
    committing the crime. Moreover, our review of the parties' arguments and facts of the
    case establishes that Taylor would be entitled to reversal of his trafficking in contraband
    conviction based on the trial court's instruction error because this error seriously
    prejudiced Taylor's defense by lowering the culpable mental state required for conviction.
    Convictions of theft and trafficking in contraband reversed.
    43