DocketNumber: S18A0748
Judges: Hines
Filed Date: 8/14/2018
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
*247**219In 2004, appellant Jessie Mercer was convicted of the kidnapping of Richard Love and his wife, Parchando Love, as well as armed robbery and two counts of aggravated assault. On appeal, appellant challenged the sufficiency of the evidence to support his conviction for kidnapping Mr. Love, but not for kidnapping Mrs. Love. Specifically, he contended that the State failed to prove the element of asportation, but the Court of Appeals rejected that contention. See Mercer v. State ,
1. Under Garza , a court considers four factors in determining whether the movement of the victim constitutes asportation **220sufficient to sustain a kidnapping conviction. Those factors are:
(1) the duration of the movement; (2) whether the movement occurred during the commission of a separate offense; (3) whether such movement was an inherent part of that separate offense; and (4) whether the movement itself presented a significant danger to the victim independent of the danger posed by the separate offense.
Gonzalez v. Hart ,
2. With these principles in mind, we turn now to the evidence of the movement of the Loves and whether it is sufficient to establish asportation for the two kidnapping convictions. The evidence shows that three armed intruders, including appellant and Rasaul Rayshad,
The driver of the intruders' get-away car said that the intruders went to the Loves' house to collect money that the Loves owed Rayshad. The Loves sold cars for a living and, either the day of the intrusion or shortly before it, they sold a Cadillac for $5,000 and *248hid the money under a mattress in their bedroom. According to Mrs. Love, it was not unusual for the couple to have that type of money in the house. At some point during the home invasion, the intruders asked the Loves "where's the money at," and they demanded to know if the couple had a safe in the house. After Mr. Love told them that there was a safe in the house, one of the intruders left the bedroom and attempted to find it. When he could not, an intruder threatened to kill **221Mrs. Love. She then told them that the safe was in a closet on the other side of the bathroom that adjoined the couple's bedroom, and she volunteered to show it to them. She also told them that the safe only had documents in it. Appellant then dragged Mrs. Love 25 to 30 feet to the safe. Finding no money in the safe, appellant dragged Mrs. Love back to the bedroom where Mr. Love and the other intruders were located. At some point, either Mr. or Mrs. Love told the intruders about the money under the mattress, which they took. The record is silent on exactly when the money was taken.
(a) We turn first to whether the movement of Mr. Love, which consisted only of moving him from a standing position to the floor, was sufficient to constitute asportation. Mr. Love's movement, which took place soon after the intruders entered the couple's bedroom, was of an extremely short duration and occurred during the ongoing armed robbery. Moreover, this movement did not present "a significant danger to the victim independent of the danger posed" by the armed robbery, during which the intruders were constantly pointing their handguns at the Loves, and did not serve "to substantially isolate the victim from protection or rescue." Gonzalez,
(b) With regard to Mrs. Love, the record shows that there were several movements of her that are insufficient to establish asportation, **222largely for the same reasons that the evidence was insufficient to establish asportation regarding Mr. Love. Those movements include the intruders placing Mrs. Love on the floor and then pulling her up and pushing her against an aquarium in order to have her turn off the house alarm. Her movement to the safe and back to the bedroom is stronger evidence of asportation, but nevertheless insufficient. First, that movement was of short duration. See Levin v. Morales ,
Moreover, the second element of the Garza test-whether the movement occurred while other crimes were in progress-does not support a finding of asportation. We have held that this element supports asportation when the offenses occur either before or after the movement of the victim. See Upton v. Hardeman ,
Here, there is no evidence that the armed robbery was completed before Mrs. Love was moved to the safe and back to the bedroom. In fact, nothing of value was in the safe, and Mr. Love testified that the intruders did not leave until some point after Mrs. Love was back in the bedroom, making it likely that the intruders took the $5,000 after moving Mrs. Love. Moreover, the record does not show whether, on the one hand, there was a demarcation between that movement and a subsequent taking of the money or whether, on the other hand, the taking of the money occurred immediately after the movement, such that the intruders' threats to kill the Loves, their demands for money, and their movement of Mrs. Love in an attempt to discover money were all part of one violent event that led to the taking of the money. In any event, because the record does not show that the movement occurred before or after the robbery, we cannot weigh this factor in favor of asportation.
Finally, although the movement may not have been an inherent part of either the aggravated assaults or armed robbery, the fourth Garza factor does not support asportation. In this regard, when appellant dragged Mrs. Love from the bedroom to the safe and then back to the bedroom, it cannot reasonably be said that the movement placed her in more danger than if she had stayed in the bedroom. There, she faced three armed intruders who were demanding money and saying things like, if "you don't tell me where the motherf---ing safe at, I'm gonna blow her brains out; you better tell me where the motherf---ing safe is; I'm gonna kill this b----; I'm gonna kill this b----." See Levin , 295 Ga. at 783,
*250For the foregoing reasons, there was insufficient evidence of asportation to support appellant's convictions for kidnapping Mr. and Mrs. Love.
Judgment reversed.
Melton, P.J., Benham, Hunstein, Nahmias, Blackwell, Boggs, and Peterson, JJ., concur.
Although Garza was decided about nine months after the Court of Appeals affirmed Mercer's convictions, it effected a substantive change in the law for determining asportation and thus applies retroactively to appellant's habeas case. See Sellars v. Evans ,
Rayshad was tried separately from appellant and was convicted, among other crimes, of two counts of kidnapping the Loves. The Court of Appeals decided Rayshad's appeal about a month after our Garza decision. Applying Garza , the court reversed both of the kidnapping convictions. See Rayshad v. State ,
In Rayshad's appeal, the Court of Appeals said that the evidence at his separate trial showed that, after Mrs. Love was dragged to the safe and back to the bedroom, she told the intruders about the money under the mattress, which they then took and left the house. See Rayshad ,