Pickett v. State

609 S.E.2d 181, 271 Ga. App. 250, 2005 Fulton County D. Rep. 186, 2005 Ga. App. LEXIS 15
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 7, 2005
DocketA04A2003
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 609 S.E.2d 181 (Pickett v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pickett v. State, 609 S.E.2d 181, 271 Ga. App. 250, 2005 Fulton County D. Rep. 186, 2005 Ga. App. LEXIS 15 (Ga. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Presiding Judge.

A jury found Reginald Renard Pickett guilty of kidnapping with bodily injury, child molestation, and enticing a child for indecent purposes. He appeals from the convictions, contending the trial court erred in denying his motion for a directed verdict of acquittal on the kidnapping with bodily injury charge, and in imposing a life sentence on that charge when a life sentence was not mandatory. He also urges that he was denied effective assistance of trial counsel. None of these contentions has merit, so we affirm his convictions.

1. Pickett contends he was entitled to a directed verdict of acquittal on the kidnapping with bodily injury charge because the state failed to present evidence that the victim was abducted. According to Pickett, the evidence showed that the child was not grabbed or forced into the truck, but entered it voluntarily. Pickett was not entitled to a directed verdict of acquittal.

Viewed in a light most favorable to the verdict, 1 the evidence shows that on June 17, 2000, a man driving a red pickup truck approached the 11-year-old victim and his 14-year-old brother as they walked down the street. The man asked the boys if they wanted a job helping him move some items to a business he was opening. The younger brother agreed, and the older brother stayed behind. The older brother reported the incident to his grandmother, and the grandmother called police.

The man drove the child to a hotel, telling him the items which they were to move were in the hotel room. Once inside the room, the man pulled out a knife and told the child to remove his clothes. The man threatened to kill him if he did not do as he was told. The child tried to use the telephone to call police, but the man ordered him to *251 hang up the phone. The man then forced the child to drink liquor and took him, at knife point, into the bathroom to take a bath. The man removed his own pants, forced the child onto the bed, touched the child’s genitals and buttocks, put petroleum jelly on the child’s anus, and inserted his penis into the child’s anus. The child became sick, and vomited beside the bed.

The man drove the child to a school and dropped him off. The child walked to his grandmother’s house. When he arrived, he was disheveled, intoxicated, and crying. The child told his grandmother that he had been molested and that his rectum hurt. The grandmother called police, and the child was taken to the hospital.

The emergency room physician who examined the child testified that the child was intoxicated, that he reported being molested, and that his rectum hurt, though the physician noted no obvious external trauma to the child’s anus. A blood alcohol test conducted at the hospital showed a result of 0.14. On June 20, a pediatrician specializing in child abuse cases examined the child. She testified that there was redness, tearing and swelling on the child’s anus, findings which were consistent with sexual abuse and penetration that had occurred within 72 hours of the examination. She testified that her examination differed from that conducted in the emergency room in that she used different equipment, including a tool which magnifies the tissue in the area and reveals conditions not apparent to the naked eye.

A police detective testified that the child’s brother had reported to police that the child was taken by a very overweight man in a red pickup truck. Based on what the victim told police about the hotel, the police went to the Master’s Inn in Macon, where they discovered that Pickett had rented room 247 on June 17, that he had shown his driver’s license to the clerk, and that he had described his vehicle as a red pickup truck. Acopy of Pickett’s driver’s license admitted at trial showed his weight as 471 pounds.

Police entered the hotel room and discovered vomit on the floor, and feces on the bed sheets and towels. DNA analysis showed a match between the feces found on the linens in the room and a blood sample taken from the child.

Macon police obtained an arrest warrant for Pickett and arrested him at his home in McDonough. Initially Pickett told police he had never been to Macon. But when police found in Pickett’s home a registration ticket from the Master’s Inn in Macon, and in his truck a parking permit for room 247 of the Master’s Inn, he admitted that he had been at that hotel in Macon. He denied having had any contact with the child, or having had a child in his hotel room. The child picked Pickett’s photograph out of a lineup saying he was positive that he was the perpetrator. The child’s brother also selected Pickett’s photograph out of the lineup without hesitation.

*252 A person commits the offense of kidnapping when he abducts or steals away any person without lawful authority or warrant and holds the person against his will. 2 The state does not dispute Pickett’s claim that the child voluntarily entered the truck. Instead, the state maintains that the abduction element of the kidnapping occurred inside the hotel room, when Pickett forced the child at knife point to go from the bedroom area to the bathroom, and then from the bathroom to the bed. We agree that the kidnapping occurred inside the hotel room. But we disagree with Pickett’s position and the state’s concession that the child’s entry into the truck was voluntary and could not be used to satisfy the abduction element of kidnapping.

As to the asportation requirement of kidnapping, only the slightest movement of the victim is required. 3 There is no minimum requirement as to the distance. 4 For example, we have found the asportation element of kidnapping satisfied where the victims were forced at gunpoint to move to different rooms in a house. 5

Furthermore, the fact that the child entered the truck without physically being forced to do so does not support Pickett’s position that no kidnapping occurred. The abduction required by the kidnapping statute need not be accomplished by force — inducement, persuasion or fraud is sufficient to prove abduction. 6 Thus, whether a taking or abduction is forcible or by enticement is immaterial under the kidnapping statute. 7 In this case, Pickett persuaded the 11-year-old child that he would pay the child to work for him. Pickett’s actions in fraudulently inducing the child to get into his truck and go with him constituted an abduction within the meaning of the kidnapping statute.

We note that Pickett’s argument made in a reply brief that the state also failed to prove bodily injury is belied by the child’s report that Pickett hurt him and by the pediatrician’s findings which were consistent with the child’s report of anal injury. A rational jury could have found from the evidence the essential elements of the crime of kidnapping with bodily injury beyond a reasonable doubt, so a directed verdict was not required. 8

*253 2.

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Related

Reginald Renard Pickett v. State
Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2017
Loyd v. State
705 S.E.2d 616 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2011)
Manning v. State
674 S.E.2d 408 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2009)
Ayers v. State
650 S.E.2d 370 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2007)
Anderson v. State
637 S.E.2d 790 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2006)
Cornelius v. State
616 S.E.2d 148 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2005)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
609 S.E.2d 181, 271 Ga. App. 250, 2005 Fulton County D. Rep. 186, 2005 Ga. App. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pickett-v-state-gactapp-2005.