Commonwealth, Aplt. v. Rushing, R.

                                  [J-42-2014]
                   IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
                               MIDDLE DISTRICT

   CASTILLE, C.J., SAYLOR, EAKIN, BAER, TODD, McCAFFERY, STEVENS, JJ.


COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, :              No. 3 MAP 2014
                              :
               Appellant      :              Appeal from the Order of Superior Court
                              :              dated June 28, 2013 at No. 898 MDA
                              :              2011 affirming/reversing and vacating in
           v.                 :              part the judgment of sentence of the Court
                              :              of Common Pleas of Lackawanna County,
                              :              Criminal Division, dated October 4, 2010
RANDAL R. RUSHING,            :              at No. CP-35-CR-2572-2008
                              :
               Appellee       :              ARGUED: May 7, 2014


                                       OPINION


MADAME JUSTICE TODD                                   DECIDED: August 18, 2014

      In this appeal by allowance, we consider the offense of kidnapping as set forth in

Pennsylvania’s Crimes Code, 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 2901(a), and address the singular

question of whether the victims herein were confined in a “place of isolation” to support

a conviction under that statute. For the reasons that follow, we find that the victims,

although imprisoned in their home, nevertheless, were confined in a place of isolation,

thereby satisfying our Commonwealth’s definition of kidnapping. Thus, we reverse the

order of the Superior Court and reinstate Appellee Randal Rushing’s judgments of

sentence.

      The facts underlying the disturbing events in this case, which involve three

murders, are lengthy and complex, but a recitation of them is necessary to the

resolution of this appeal. By way of background, Wes and Cynthia Collier lived in a
home in Scranton, Pennsylvania with their children and step-children: 16-year-old Leslie

Collier; 19-year-old Samantha Hintz; 22-year-old Dustin Hintz; and 22-year-old Matthew

Collier, who was handicapped and could not walk.

      Appellee, then 25-years-old, moved into the Collier home on January 1, 2008. At

the time, he and Samantha were boyfriend and girlfriend, and they lived in her bedroom.

Between May and June 2008, Samantha and Appellee were no longer getting along, so

Appellee was given his own bedroom in the basement.

      The events leading to the murders began on July 12, 2008. On this date, five

days before the murder, Appellee became angry when he found Justin Berrios, age 22,

Samantha’s former boyfriend and the father of her 2-year-old child Tristan, sitting on

Samantha’s bed with her. Four days later, on July 16, 2008, Cynthia Collier drove

Appellee to T.J. Maxx in Pittston, Pennsylvania, his place of employment, to work his

6:00 p.m. to 4:30 a.m. shift. Samantha worked the same shift, but drove herself to

work. After working their shifts, Samantha gave Appellee a ride home. At 10:30 p.m.,

Appellee left for a friend’s house, and Cynthia retired for the evening at 11:00 p.m. This

evening, Justin was at the Collier home watching Tristan.

      In the early hours of July 17, 2008, Appellee returned to the Collier home and

stabbed Justin to death. Later, it was determined that Justin had died due to 14 stab

wounds, 7 of which were to the neck. Thereafter, between 4:00 a.m. and 4:30 a.m.,

Leslie awakened his mother Cynthia, and told her that someone had run into his room

and stabbed him, and that he was bleeding profusely. Cynthia went to the kitchen to

call 911 when she discovered the telephone was not in the kitchen. Dustin ran up from

the basement after hearing his mother, and helped his brother to the floor in the




                                     [J-42-2014] - 2
hallway. Appellee then appeared from the living room with a gun and ordered everyone

onto the floor. When Cynthia asked Appellee what he was doing, he replied “I’m giving

Samantha something she’ll remember.” N.T., 9/27/10, at 185. Appellee took Leslie into

the kitchen, where he ultimately died from his wounds, while Cynthia and Dustin were

on the floor of the hall holding one another. Appellee returned and ordered Cynthia into

her son Matthew’s room. Appellee ordered Cynthia to lie on the floor, which she did.

Appellee then handcuffed Cynthia’s hands behind her back. Appellee also ordered

Dustin into Cynthia’s bedroom and told him to lie on the floor. Cynthia could hear

Appellee beating Dustin. Cynthia began to vomit, and Appellee reentered Matthew’s

bedroom, put a gun to her head, and told her to “shut the fuck up” or he would kill her.

Id. at 193. He then tightened her handcuffs. Appellee then took a shirt from Matthew’s

dresser and tied Matthew’s hands with the shirt and his feet with a computer cable.

Cynthia observed Appellee take a red hammer from a toolbox, then leave Matthew’s

bedroom, then she heard Appellee began to strike Dustin with the hammer. Ultimately,

Dustin died of blunt force trauma to the head. Appellee returned numerous times to

Matthew’s room to check on Matthew and Cynthia.

      After showering, Appellee came back into Matthew’s room and obtained

Cynthia’s and Matthew’s bank cards and PIN numbers and Cynthia’s ring. He also

turned on the air conditioner and covered Cynthia and Matthew with blankets,

threatening them that they better be quiet when Samantha returned home.

      Samantha arrived home at approximately 5:40 a.m. Appellee greeted her and

told her to go to her son’s room for a surprise. Samantha checked on her son, and then

Appellant instructed her to go to her bedroom. Upon entering the bedroom, Appellee




                                    [J-42-2014] - 3
forced her onto the bed and lifted up a sheet and displayed Justin’s dead body, which

was lying next to the bed. Appellee stated, “Do you know what happened to Justin? He

didn’t make it.” N.T., 9/28/10, at 59. Appellant then tried to force Samantha onto her

stomach on the bed, and, when she resisted, he put his gun to her head and told her to

“get on [your] fucking stomach.” Id. at 56. Appellee tied Samantha’s hands behind her

back with a necktie and tied her feet with a belt. He climbed on top of Samantha, kissed

her, ran his fingers through her hair, and told her that he loved her. After leaving and

then returning to the bedroom, Appellee said that he should rape her. He sat next to

her and grabbed her left breast and gave her a “hickey” on the right side of her neck.

         Subsequently, Appellee took Samantha’s car keys. Before leaving, he remarked:

“Well, I’ve already bodied some other people and now I’ve just bodied some more.” Id.

at 70.    He indicated that if the police did not find him, he was going to kill three

individuals from work. At some point, Appellee also entered Matthew’s room and told

Matthew and Cynthia that Wes Collier would be the next person in the house and that

they could yell for help when he arrived. He then stated, “No, fuck it. It’s six o’clock

now. If I ain’t back by 6:30 you guys can do whatever the hell you want.” N.T., 9/27/10,

at 209.

         Samantha, by sliding her cell phone off of Justin’s body with her feet and onto the

floor, and after multiple tries, was able to call 911 by dialing with her toe. When the

police arrived at 6:53 a.m., Samantha, Cynthia, and Matthew were still bound. Leslie,

Justin, and Dustin were dead. The police ultimately located Appellee, who was charged

with three counts of first-degree murder, second-degree murder, and third-degree

murder in conjunction with the killing of Justin, Leslie, and Dustin. He also was charged




                                       [J-42-2014] - 4
with multiple counts of kidnapping and robbery, and one count of indecent assault. The

Commonwealth’s charging of Appellee with second-degree murder was based upon the

kidnappings, not the robbery charges, as the underlying felonies.

      After Appellee waived his right to a jury trial, and the Commonwealth withdrew its

notice to seek the death penalty, on September 13, 2010, a bench trial commenced in

the Court of Common Pleas of Lackawanna County. Appellee was convicted of three

counts each of first-degree murder, second-degree murder, and third-degree murder;

three counts each of kidnapping and robbery; and one count of indecent assault.

      The trial court, inter alia, found the evidence at trial sufficient to convict Appellee

of kidnapping and second-degree murder based upon the kidnapping conviction, as

Appellee tied the victims, and the victims were not able to leave the residence or call for

help without endangering their lives or the lives of others. Even though in their own

home, the court concluded that the victims were nevertheless confined for a substantial

period “in a place of isolation,” thus, satisfying the offense of kidnapping. 18 Pa.C.S.A.

§ 2901(a).     The court sentenced Appellee to an aggregate sentence of three

consecutive life sentences followed by a minimum of 43 years and 9 months to a

maximum of 87 years and 6 months incarceration.

      A three-judge panel of the Superior Court, in relevant part, unanimously

determined the facts were insufficient to sustain the kidnapping charge, and, as a result,

the second-degree murder convictions. Commonwealth v. Rushing, 71 A.3d 939 (Pa.

Super. 2013). Specifically, the court first noted that it was required to strictly construe

criminal statutes in favor of a defendant, and reasoned that kidnapping did not include

the incidental movement of a victim during the commission of a crime that did not




                                      [J-42-2014] - 5
substantially increase the risk of harm to the victim, and did not apply to situations

where confinement was a subsidiary incident to another crime. The court, finding the

victims’ confinement in this matter was incidental to Appellant’s crimes of murder,

robbery, and indecent assault, as they were not secreted in, for example, an attic,

closet, or basement, and as they were aware that Wes Collier would be arriving at the

residence, concluded Appellee’s convictions for kidnapping and second-degree murder

could not be sustained. The Superior Court found it unnecessary to remand the case

for resentencing, however, as the trial court sentenced Appellee for kidnapping and did

not impose any sentence on the felony murder convictions, as it was foreclosed from

imposing sentence on both crimes under the merger doctrine, and since Appellee had

been sentenced to three consecutive life sentences, vacating his kidnapping sentence

would not, in practice, affect the overall sentence imposed.1

       Our Court granted the Commonwealth’s petition for allocatur, limited to the

following issue:

              Whether the Superior Court erred in finding that the victims
              were not confined in a “place of isolation” to warrant the
              kidnapping convictions and the second degree murder
              convictions for which the underlying felony was kidnapping.

Commonwealth v. Rushing, 84 A.3d 699 (Pa. 2014) (order).

       In one respect, this appeal raises the pure legal question regarding the proper

interpretation of the statutory phrase “place of isolation.” As the proper interpretation of

a statute is a pure question of law, our standard of review is de novo and our scope of

1
  Then-President Judge, now-Justice Stevens and Judge Strassburger authored
concurring opinions, focusing upon the question of whether probable cause was
necessary before the government could utilize real time cell phone tracking, an issue
not before us in this appeal.



                                      [J-42-2014] - 6
review is plenary. Commonwealth v. Daniels, 963 A.2d 409, 417 (Pa. 2009). Yet, the

appeal also presents the question of whether there was sufficient evidence to support a

conviction for kidnapping, as that crime is properly interpreted. Thus, with respect to

our sufficiency review, our standard of review is de novo, however, our scope of review

is limited to considering the evidence of record, and all reasonable inferences arising

therefrom, viewed in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth as the verdict

winner. Commonwealth v. Diamond, 83 A.3d 119, 126 (Pa. 2013); Commonwealth v.

Robinson, 864 A.2d 460, 478 (Pa. 2004).

         The focus of this appeal is on Pennsylvania’s kidnapping statute which provides

that a person is guilty of kidnapping if he, inter alia, “unlawfully confines another for a

substantial period in a place of isolation” to facilitate commission of any felony or flight

thereafter or to inflict bodily injury on or to terrorize the victim or another. 18 Pa.C.S.A.

§ 2901(a) (emphasis added).2

         The Commonwealth maintains that the Superior Court erred in finding that the

Commonwealth did not establish that the victims were in a “place of isolation” in their

own home, and, in doing so, contends that the court misinterpreted the kidnapping

statute.     According to the Commonwealth, Appellee confined his victims for a

substantial period of time in a place of isolation to further the commission of other

felonies, and to further his own flight, as well as to terrorize the victims. Noting that the

Crimes Code tracks the Model Penal Code (“MPC”), the Commonwealth offers that

even “one’s own apartment in a city might be regarded as a ‘place of isolation,’ if the

circumstances of detention make discovery or rescue unlikely.” Commonwealth’s Brief

2
    The kidnapping statute is quoted in full below.



                                        [J-42-2014] - 7
at 12 (quoting MPC § 212.1, cmt. 3). Consistent with this understanding of the offense,

the Commonwealth points to Commonwealth v. Markman, 916 A.2d 586 (Pa. 2007),

wherein the victim was transported 25 miles to a trailer park, placed in a trailer’s living

room, bound, and then strangled.        The Commonwealth stresses that the Markman

Court noted there was evidence of unlawful confinement as well, as the victim’s hands

and feet were bound and her mouth gagged so that she could not cry out, and, thus,

she was confined in a place of isolation as she was separated from the normal

protections of society in a manner that made discovery or rescue unlikely. Id. at 600;

see also Commonwealth v. Jenkins, 687 A.2d 836 (Pa. Super. 1996) (finding, where

elderly woman and great grandson held at knifepoint inside own home for five hours,

victims were unreachable, and the fate of both victims was exclusively in the hands of

defendant, the victims were effectively isolated from rescue or the usual protections of

society, and, thus, were in a place of isolation).

       The Commonwealth then engages in a detailed recitation of the facts and

maintains that, because the three kidnapping victims were exclusively within Appellee’s

control until the time he left, were bound for 1-2 hours, and were subjected to threats,

sexual assault, and paralyzing fear, they were sufficiently isolated from rescue and the

usual protections of society, and, thus, these facts satisfied the requisite elements of

kidnapping.

       Finally, the Commonwealth distinguishes Commonwealth v. Hook, 512 A.2d 718

(Pa. Super. 1986), in which the court concluded kidnapping does not apply to situations

where confinement is subsidiary to another crime, as being limited to its facts. The

Commonwealth explains that, in Hook, the victim, who lived above a clothing store, was




                                       [J-42-2014] - 8
followed into her apartment by the defendant.          The victim fled to a neighboring

apartment, but was followed and sexually assaulted until the defendant passed out.

According to the Commonwealth, because the apartment was located above an open

business, frequented by relatives and business contacts, she was not held in a place of

isolation.

       Here, and in contrast to Hook, the Commonwealth maintains others did not have

access to the Collier home, arrival of another was not imminent, and Appellee’s purpose

in confining Cynthia and Matthew was to commit other felonies without interference and

to flee. The Commonwealth urges that, rather than being incidental to the commission

of other crimes, the victims were confined with the intention of committing the other

crimes, and the victims’ rescue or discovery was unlikely during the relevant time frame,

regardless of where in the house they were confined. Thus, the Commonwealth argues

that the Superior Court erred in failing to uphold Appellee’s convictions for kidnapping

and second-degree murder.

       Appellee counters that the kidnapping statute must be strictly construed to avoid

its application to detentions that occur incidental to the commission of other crimes,

such as sexual assault, robbery, or murder. Here, according to Appellee, the matter

involved a boyfriend’s revenge against Samantha Hintz and Justin Berrios and a

robbery, and these were the core crimes.

       Appellee maintains that the drafters of the MPC wrote the statute restrictively to

prevent its use where the detention and movement of the victim was incidental to the

commission of another crime, citing Hook, and that a “place of isolation” is where the

victim is kept from the usual protections of society such that others could not rescue him




                                     [J-42-2014] - 9
or her, citing Jenkins.    Indeed, Appellee compares and contrasts various cases,

including Jenkins, in which the victims were held hostage for five hours and a

kidnapping was held to have occurred, as the detention effectively isolated the victims

from rescue, and Hook, where no kidnapping was found to have occurred, as there was

no overt hostage situation, others could access the house, and the detention was

incidental to a rape. See also Commonwealth v. Mease, 516 A.2d 24 (Pa. Super. 1986)

(finding basement, where victim was placed and beaten for several hours, and,

ultimately, shot in the back of the head, was a place of isolation because victim was

moved there by force and no one but defendant and his friends would go there).

      Finally, Appellee distinguishes Markman, where the defendant lured the victim to

a trailer, bound and gagged her, and ultimately murdered her, as focusing on whether

the defendant had participated in the unlawful movement of the victim through

deception. According to Appellee, that issue is not present in this appeal; further, he

contends that Markman concerned whether the victim was held for a substantial period

of time, and not whether the victim was in a place of isolation, which is at issue in this

appeal. In any event, Appellee finds Markman to be distinguishable as the victim was

brought to a trailer without any evidence that anybody would come to her assistance.

According to Appellee, the victims in the matter sub judice, in contrast to the victim in

Markman, were not held in a place of isolation, but held in their own home; it was

anticipated that at least one family member would return; and the victims were told they

were free to do whatever they wanted if Appellee had not returned in a half hour.

Additionally, Appellee argues that the victims’ confinement was incidental to the

committing of other “core crimes.” Thus, Appellee contends the Superior Court properly




                                    [J-42-2014] - 10
found the evidence to be insufficient to establish the elements of kidnapping.         As

kidnapping was the predicate offense to the second-degree murder convictions,

Appellee submits the Superior Court properly reversed these convictions as well.

       To determine the legislature’s intent with respect to the phrase “place of

isolation,” 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 2901(a), we necessarily turn to the Statutory Construction Act.

1 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 1501 et seq. The objective of all interpretation and construction of

statutes is to ascertain and effectuate the intention of the General Assembly.         Id.

§ 1921(a). The best indication of the legislature’s intent is the plain language of the

statute. When considering statutory language, “[w]ords and phrases shall be construed

according to rules of grammar and according to their common and approved usage.” Id.

§ 1903(a). Further, when the words of a statute are clear and unambiguous, there is no

need to go beyond the plain meaning of the language of the statute “under the pretext of

pursuing its spirit.”    Id. § 1921(b).   Thus, only when the words of a statute are

ambiguous, should a reviewing court seek to ascertain the intent of the General

Assembly through considerations of the various factors found in Section 1921(c). Id. §

1921(c); see generally Bayada Nurses Inc. v. Com. Dept. Labor and Indus., 8 A.3d 866,

880-81 (Pa. 2010).

       As summarized above, the Pennsylvania Crimes Code defines the offense of

kidnapping as follows.

              Offense defined.-- Except as provided in subsection (a.1),          a
       person is guilty of kidnapping if he unlawfully removes another            a
       substantial distance under the circumstances from the place where he      is
       found, or if he unlawfully confines another for a substantial period in    a
       place of isolation, with any of the following intentions:
              (1) To hold for ransom or reward, or as a shield or hostage.
              (2) To facilitate commission of any felony or flight thereafter.



                                      [J-42-2014] - 11
              (3) To inflict bodily injury on or to terrorize the victim or another.
             (4) To interfere with the performance by public officials of any
       governmental or political function.

18 Pa.C.S.A. § 2901(a) (emphasis added). The phrase “place of isolation” can be

viewed as being relatively straightforward, as to “isolate” is commonly defined “[t]o

separate from a group or whole and set apart,” or “[t]o place in quarantine,” American

Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Houghton Mifflin Morris 694 (ed. Boston

1996). However, the history of the crime of kidnapping, the Model Penal Code, on

which Section 1209(a) is based, and our Court’s decisions all suggest some ambiguity

in the language, and have given context and a distinct meaning to the phrase. See 1

Pa.C.S.A. § 1921(c) (1), (2) and (5) (offering considerations in discerning legislative

intent include the occasion and necessity for the statute, the circumstances under which

it was enacted, and the former law on the same or similar subjects). Indeed, “[a]lthough

kidnapping is an infamous crime, perceived by the public with both dread and morbid

curiosity, and the subject of fine literature, it is also a crime that has eluded meaningful

definition.” John L. Diamond, Kidnapping: A Modern Definition, 13 Am. J. Crim. L. 1, 1

(1985). Thus, we turn to examine these aspects of our canons of statutory construction.

       Of common law origin, the offense of kidnapping was historically narrow in scope

and light in penalty.     Originally, the key to kidnapping was the requirement of

asportation, i.e., the carrying away of the individual.         See William Blackstone, 4

Commentaries 219 (defining kidnapping as “the forcible abduction or stealing away of

man, woman or child from their own country, and sending them to another”).               At

common law, the crime was, in essence, an aggravated form of false imprisonment and

carried with it the status of a misdemeanor. Over time, kidnapping became codified, but



                                      [J-42-2014] - 12
as ransom kidnappings across state lines, not covered by existing statutes, became

more common in the early twentieth century, broader definitions and harsher penalties

ensued. Indeed, the offense of kidnapping was so toothless that, in light of the famed

Lindbergh infant kidnapping and murder of March 1, 1932, the kidnapper, Bruno

Richard Hauptmann, was not prosecuted for kidnapping; rather, for the felony murder

rule to apply, the prosecutor was forced to seek another crime which would supply the

necessary felony — the stealing of the infant’s sleeping suit — which ultimately led to

Hauptmann receiving the death penalty. State v. Hauptmann, 180 A. 809, 818 (N.J.

1935).

         Subsequent legislative enactments, sparked by outrage over the Lindbergh

kidnapping, expanded the accepted meaning of asportation to encompass the removal

of an individual within the country or state; even simple detention satisfied this new

understanding of the element. Further, expansion of the common-law offense involved

the substitution of asportation with the intent to cause the victim to be secretly confined.

Thus, statutory codification of the common-law crime, conceptually, reflected two

kidnapping contexts: the seizure of the victim and his or her removal to another place,

or the confining of the victim to a place of isolation. Further, the expansion of the scope

of the crime of kidnapping was coupled with an increase in sanctions. What was once a

misdemeanor became one of the most serious crimes, with 44 of 48 states permitting

punishment by death or life imprisonment for kidnapping by 1952.            See generally

Comment, Two Crimes for the Price of One: The Problem With Kidnapping Statutes in

Tennessee and Beyond, 76 Tenn. L. Rev. 789 (Spring 2009); Recent Developments,




                                     [J-42-2014] - 13
Hines 57: The Catchall Case to the Texas Kidnapping Statute, 35 St. Mary’s L. J. 397

(2004); Note, A Rationale of the Law of Kidnapping, 53 Colum. L. Rev. 540 (1953).

       Over time, this significant expansion of the concept for kidnapping, considered by

some to be extraordinarily broad, became a cause of concern, as relatively “trivial

restraints carried authorized sanctions of death or life imprisonment.” MPC § 212.1,

Introductory Note, at 208.      As a result of the potential of unwarranted severe

punishment, and a call for restricting kidnapping statutes, in 1962, the drafters of

Section 212.1 of the MPC (“Kidnapping and Related Offenses; Coercion”) sought to

affect a significant restructuring of the law of kidnapping. In this respect, the definition

of kidnapping was narrowed to the most serious forms of unlawful restraint.            The

challenge, as viewed by the drafters, was to “restrict the drastic sanctions authorized for

this offense to instances of misbehavior warranting such punishment.” Id., cmt. 2, at

220.

       With respect to the aspect of kidnapping that goes to the unlawful confinement of

another for a substantial period of time in a place of isolation, the drafters of the MPC

noted that this variation of kidnapping, in contrast to the crime’s common-law origins,

required no asportation:    “Thus, for example, a man might be confined in his own

mountain resort and held there for ransom.”             Id., cmt. 3, at 224.      Likewise,

“[c]onceivably, one’s own apartment in a city might be regarded as a ‘place of isolation,’

if the circumstances of detention made discovery or rescue unlikely.” Id. Thus, the

drafters of the MPC provided a fuller understanding of the simple phrase “place of

isolation,” and in doing so have emphasized the segregation and remoteness aspects of

the victim’s confinement over any geographic concern. As aptly summarized by the




                                     [J-42-2014] - 14
drafters, “[t]he essential concept is not geographical location but rather effective

isolation from the usual protections of society.” Id.

       As our Commonwealth’s statute is based in great part on the MPC’s statement of

the law of kidnapping, and employs the identical language at issue in this appeal —

“unlawfully confines another for a substantial period in a place of isolation” — our Court

has, not surprisingly, followed the drafters’ understanding of the requirement that the

victim be confined in a “place of isolation.” See Commonwealth v. Housman, 986 A.2d

822, 832 (Pa. 2009) (finding that, in kidnapping/murder, while victim’s confinement in

living room of trailer in busy trailer park in early evening arguably preserved the usual

protections of society, her binding and gagging operated to confine her in a place of

isolation “separated from the normal protections of society in a manner which made

discovery or rescue unlikely,” citing MPC § 212.1, cmt. 3, 224); Markman, 916 A.2d at

600 (same, in prosecution of codefendant in Housman).

       Based upon the statutory language, the history of the crime of kidnapping, the

Model Penal Code on which Section 1209(a) is based, and our Court’s decisions

interpreting the kidnapping statute, we take this opportunity to reaffirm that, for purposes

of Pennsylvania’s kidnapping statute, a “place of isolation” is not geographic in nature,

but contemplates the confinement of a victim where he or she is separated from the

normal protections of society in a fashion that makes discovery or rescue unlikely.

       Our Commonwealth’s courts have consistently applied this definition to disparate

circumstances, in varied challenges to convictions under the kidnapping statute. For

example, and as noted above, in Housman and Markman, which both arose in the

context of the same underlying circumstances, our Court concluded the place-of-




                                      [J-42-2014] - 15
isolation requirement was met when the victim was bound and gagged and left alone in

the living room of a trailer, even though located in a busy trailer park in the early

evening.   Similarly, in Mease, the Superior Court determined that the defendant’s

basement constituted a “place of isolation” as the victim, being confined there for

several hours, beaten, stabbed, and ultimately shot in the back of the head, had been

confined where discovery and rescue were unlikely and isolated from the usual

protections of society. 516 A.2d at 26. More recently, in Jenkins, the Superior Court

concluded that the victims were confined in a place of isolation from rescue and the

protections of society where a 70-year-old woman and her 4-year-old great-grandson

were held at knifepoint inside the grandmother’s home for five hours, police had

surrounded the residence, the victims were unreachable and locked inside the home,

and the fate of both victims was exclusively in the hands of the defendant.

       These decisions can be contrasted with the circumstances in Hook, in which the

victim, who resided in an apartment located above a clothing store, opened the door

expecting a dry cleaning delivery, but, instead, was confronted by the defendant. After

the defendant threatened to rape the initial victim, placed his hand over her mouth, told

her to be quiet, and following a brief struggle, she was able to escape from her assailant

and enter an elderly neighbor’s apartment, but was caught by the defendant.            The

defendant threw both women onto a bed and again verbalized his intent to rape the first

victim, but passed out due to intoxication before being able to act upon his threat.

       The Superior Court in Hook determined the evidence was insufficient to prove

confinement in a place of isolation, as the defendant’s presence outside the victim’s

apartment made it clear there was open access to the area, the one victim was




                                     [J-42-2014] - 16
expecting a delivery from a dry cleaning service, the victims’ apartments were

frequented by business associates and relatives, an open business was located

beneath the apartments, and the police arrived at the scene three minutes after

receiving a telephone call from the clothing store. 512 A.2d at 720. The Superior Court,

therefore, determined that the mode of confinement did not render discovery or rescue

of the victims unlikely, and found that the confinement was incidental to the underlying

offense of attempted rape.

       While the circumstances before the above tribunals are obviously disparate, the

degree of isolation from discovery and rescue and the usual protections of society

remain the touchstone in determining whether the statutory element of confinement in a

place of isolation is satisfied. Applying the facts of this appeal to the definition of place

of isolation, we have no hesitancy in determining that, although imprisoned in their own

home, the victims were confined by Appellee in a place of isolation.

       Appellee held the fate of the victims in his exclusive control during the entire

ordeal until he left the home and the subsequent arrival of the police. For at least two

hours, the victims were handcuffed and bound, threatened repeatedly to be quiet, one

was sexually assaulted, and all were placed in great fear. Specifically, Cynthia Collier,

while attempting to telephone for help, was handcuffed behind her back, forced onto the

floor of her son’s bedroom, threatened at gunpoint with death if she did not shut up,

endured hearing her son Dustin being murdered by blows from a hammer, was

frequently checked on, and was threatened to be silent if she wanted to live, especially

upon Samantha’s arrival to the home. Both Cynthia and her son Matthew, who was

also bound, remained restrained while Appellee stole their bank cards and a ring from




                                      [J-42-2014] - 17
Cynthia’s finger. Repeatedly returning to check on Cynthia and Matthew, Appellee only

later in the ordeal indicated that Wes Collier would be the next person in the home, and

that they could yell for assistance at that time, and then, after considering the time,

informed them that they could do what they wanted if Appellee was not back by 6:30

a.m.   Similarly, Appellee confined Matthew, even though handicapped and using a

wheelchair, to a bed by tying his hands and legs, rendering him unable to seek

assistance by escape or telephone. Again, Matthew was checked on multiple times to

prevent his escape or calls for assistance during the early morning events.

       Finally, with respect to Samantha, upon her arrival at the home, she was directed

into her bedroom, shown the dead body of her son’s father, forced onto her stomach at

gunpoint while her hands were tied behind her back and her feet bound with a cable.

She was forced to remain on her bed under threat of rape, indecently assaulted, was

checked on multiple times, and her cell phone was removed, and then thrown on

Justin’s dead body. Samantha’s car keys were taken, and Appellee indicated that he

had already killed, and would kill more individuals if the police did not find him.

Samantha was bound such that she could not free herself and was only able to call for

assistance after retrieving her phone from Justin’s dead body and dialing with her toe,

reaching the police only after numerous attempts.

       In short, while confined in their own home, the victims were nevertheless tightly

bound and unable to seek discovery or rescue. Indeed, the victims were threatened

with death if they attempted to obtain help from neighbors or the police. There is no

evidence that others had access to the home, other than Wes, whose return was

expected, but the time of his arrival was uncertain and not imminent. Rather than being




                                    [J-42-2014] - 18
incidental to the other crimes, Appellee’s confinement of the victims was with the intent

to commit those other crimes, and to facilitate Appellee’s escape. Thus, based upon

these facts, we believe the Commonwealth established that the victims were confined in

a place of isolation which rendered them separated from the normal protections of

society in a fashion that made their discovery or rescue unlikely, thus satisfying the

requirements of the kidnapping statute.

      In summary, we reaffirm that the statutory requirement of confinement in a “place

of isolation” is not geographic in nature, but contemplates the confinement of a victim

where he or she is separated from the normal protections of society in a fashion that

makes imminent discovery or rescue unlikely. Moreover, considering the evidence of

record, and all reasonable inferences arising therefrom, viewed in the light most

favorable to the Commonwealth as the verdict winner, we hold the Superior Court erred

in its sufficiency determination, and we conclude that, in the circumstances of this case,

the victims were confined in a “place of isolation,” thereby establishing Appellee’s

culpability for the kidnapping offenses, and for his second-degree murder convictions

based on those predicate offenses.

      Accordingly, the order of the Superior Court is reversed, and we reinstate

Appellee’s judgment of sentence for kidnapping and second-degree murder.

      Jurisdiction relinquished.

      Mr. Chief Justice Castille and Messrs. Justice Saylor, Eakin, Baer, McCaffery

and Stevens join the opinion.




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