COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
Present: Judges Humphreys, Russell and Athey
UNPUBLISHED
Argued by teleconference
BENJAMIN DAVID CHASTANG
MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
v. Record No. 1285-18-3 JUDGE WESLEY G. RUSSELL, JR.
APRIL 21, 2020
COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF ROANOKE
David B. Carson, Judge1
Dirk B. Padgett (Dirk Padgett Law PLLC, on brief), for appellant.
Leah A. Darron, Senior Assistant Attorney General (Mark R.
Herring, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.
In addition to other charges,2 a jury found Benjamin David Chastang, appellant, guilty of
three counts of abduction in violation of Code § 18.2-47 and three counts of use of a firearm as a
second or subsequent offense in the commission of abduction in violation of Code § 18.2-53.1.
On appeal, appellant assigns error to the trial court “not granting a motion to strike as to the charges
of abduction and possession of a weapon while committing abduction as the evidence was
insufficient as a matter of law.” Specifically, appellant asserts that the trial court erred in refusing
*
Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
1
Judge Designate Jonathan M. Apgar presided over the trial of this matter, and thus,
denied the motions to strike made prior to the submission of the case to the jury. Judge Carson
presided over appellant’s reconvened sentencing proceeding at which appellant renewed his
challenge to the abduction and related firearm convictions.
2
The jury also convicted appellant of robbery in violation of Code § 18.2-58; entering a
bank while armed with the intent to commit larceny in violation of Code § 18.2-93; use of a
firearm in the commission of robbery in violation of Code § 18.2-53.1, and wearing a mask in
public in violation of Code § 18.2-144. These convictions are not before us on appeal.
to dismiss the abduction and related firearm charges (collectively “the abduction related
charges”) because the evidence established that his detention of the victims was inherent in his
commission of the underlying robbery, and thus, his actions did not constitute independent
offenses. The Commonwealth contends that appellant has failed to preserve this argument for
our consideration. For the following reasons, we find that appellant’s argument is properly
before us and affirm the judgment of the trial court.
BACKGROUND
We review the facts in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth because it was the
prevailing party below. Gerald v. Commonwealth, 295 Va. 469, 472 (2018). Accordingly, we
discard any of appellant’s conflicting evidence and regard as true the credible evidence favorable
to the Commonwealth as well as any inferences that can reasonably be drawn from such
evidence. Id. at 473.
On the morning of January 30, 2017, Walker Holcomb was working as a teller at BNC
Bank in Roanoke and had just received a $7,000 cash deposit from a customer when appellant,
wearing a mask and sunglasses, entered the bank. Appellant approached Holcomb with a gun
and demanded, “[G]ive me it all, no alarms.” Holcomb, who was processing the large cash
deposit, surrendered several thousand dollars to appellant. Appellant placed the money in the
front of his pants. After taking the money, appellant ordered Holcomb to lie on the ground and
“count.” Holcomb could not recall the number to which appellant ordered him to count, but he
did remember that appellant told him if he “g[o]t up before [reaching the number], I’m going to
come back and shoot you, kill you.” At no time after he had given the money to appellant did
Holcomb attempt to retrieve the money or interfere with appellant’s movements.
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A short time after appellant left the bank, Holcomb got up from the ground. He was
uncertain how long he had remained on the floor but estimated that he could have been there for
several minutes. After he got up, Holcomb hit the silent alarm button twice and called 911.
Two other bank employees, Stephanie Hay and Calvin Bannister, were in a side office
with a glass wall when appellant entered the bank with the gun. Hay testified that they saw
appellant before appellant saw them. She whispered to Bannister to press the silent alarm and
believes that the noise they made in trying to do so caused appellant to turn around and notice
them. Appellant appeared “startled” and then pointed his gun at Hay and Bannister. Appellant
instructed them to put their hands up. As appellant brandished the gun back and forth between
Holcomb, Hay, and Bannister, he warned the employees “not to press any alarms” and to “keep
[their] hands up.” Hay testified that appellant “told us all to get down on the ground . . . [a]nd
not to call anyone for five minutes or he would come back and shoot us.” “[T]errified” and
believing that she was going to die, Hay complied. While she was face down on the floor in the
office with Bannister, she was unable to see whether appellant remained in the building.3
Hay and Bannister did not leave the side office while appellant was in the bank. Hay and
Bannister remained on the floor for approximately three minutes before Hay turned her head
toward Bannister and told him that they “needed to lock the doors.” After Bannister got up and
locked the door, Holcomb and Hay also stood. Pursuant to bank policy, Hay called their
supervisor who arrived shortly thereafter.
Officer Brokaw responded to the bank alarm. He testified the “tone” from the bank went
out at 10:23 a.m. and he arrived at the bank around 10:27 a.m. At trial, the Commonwealth
3
Hay could not remember whether she pressed the alarm; Bannister, however, recalled
that Hay had pressed the button when she first saw appellant. Although the three victims’
testimony had inconsistencies on minor points such as this and how much time transpired
between various events during and after the robbery, the testimony was largely consistent
regarding the substance of the events.
-3-
introduced surveillance footage from the bank that depicted appellant approaching Holcomb at
10:17:48 a.m. and leaving the bank at 10:18:37 a.m.
At the conclusion of the Commonwealth’s evidence, appellant moved to strike the evidence.
He moved to strike “all of the charges” arguing that the evidence was insufficient to establish that
he was the criminal agent. He asserted that “there is no direct evidence [that] puts [appellant] in the
bank.”
He also made an argument that concerned only the abduction related charges. Citing our
decision in Hoyt v. Commonwealth, 44 Va. App. 489 (2004), he argued that there was insufficient
evidence to support the independent abduction charges. In essence, he argued that any restriction on
the victims’ freedom of movement was inherent in the robbery, and thus, could not establish
abduction as a matter of law. The Commonwealth responded to this argument by asserting that
appellant ordering the bank employees to the ground and demanding that they stay there was not
a necessary component of robbery. The Commonwealth reasoned that the commands and threats
appellant made after having obtained the money were made “to allow [appellant] to get away[,]”
and as such, constituted restrictions on movement independent of the robbery.
The trial court denied the motion to strike regarding the issue of identity, finding that
“there’s enough circumstantial evidence” to create a jury issue regarding whether appellant was
the perpetrator.4 However, the trial court did not immediately rule on the portion of the motion
to strike challenging whether any restriction on the victims’ freedom of movement was inherent in
the robbery. The trial court informed the parties that it was “taking under advisement the abduction
[argument] because that’s . . . a question of law” and the trial court wished to review the caselaw.
(Emphasis added). Because the hour was late, the trial court then recessed for the evening.
4
Because appellant does not argue on appeal that he was not the perpetrator, we have not
recited the evidence that the Commonwealth offered to establish identity at trial.
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When the proceeding resumed the next morning, the trial court, also citing our decision in
Hoyt, denied the motion to strike the abduction related charges. In rendering its decision, the trial
court concluded that the Commonwealth’s evidence, if credited, established that appellant’s alleged
restriction of the victims’ movements was more than what was necessary “to actually perpetrate the
robbery[,]” and thus, could constitute independent abductions.
With all arguments he had made in support of his motion to strike now denied, appellant
proceeded to put on evidence. At the conclusion of his evidence and before the case was submitted
to the jury, appellant renewed his motion to strike. He again argued that the evidence failed to
establish that he had been the perpetrator. He also stated, in reference to his earlier argument that
any detentions were inherent in the robbery, that he “renew[ed] the [m]otion on the [a]bduction[s]. I
know you have previously ruled on that.”
The trial judge then engaged in a colloquy with appellant’s counsel. The trial court asked
appellant to concede that he was not contesting that the Commonwealth had established that the
events described by the witnesses had occurred, but rather, was arguing that the evidence did not
establish that he was the perpetrator. In doing so, the trial court specifically limited its inquiry to
factual issues, prefacing its ultimate question to appellant with the limitation that “the only issue that
the [j]ury has to resolve is whether identity has been proven beyond a reasonable doubt.”
(Emphasis added). After appellant responded in the affirmative, the trial court denied the motion
finding that the evidence was sufficient to present a jury question on identity.
The jury returned guilty verdicts on all charges, including the charges that are the subject of
this appeal, and also rendered its decisions regarding sentencing. The trial court dismissed the jury
and continued the sentencing portion of the proceedings to allow for the preparation of a
presentence report.
-5-
At the reconvened sentencing hearing, the trial court received the presentence report and
heard testimony from three witnesses, the probation officer who prepared the presentence report and
two bank employees. After the trial court received the evidence, appellant again raised the issue
related to the abduction related charges. He noted that he was “renew[ing] the objection . . .
made at trial.” He argued that “the robbery encompassed whatever limitations of liberty were
used[,]” and therefore, any abductions were “encompassed [by] the robbery.” He asked the trial
court to “dismiss” the abduction related charges.
In response, the Commonwealth expressly addressed what it characterized as appellant’s
“renewed motion to dismiss the abduction charges.” The Commonwealth argued that the
restraints on liberty were “unnecessary to complete the robbery” and were designed to allow
appellant to escape after the robbery had been completed.
Although not expressly addressing the arguments of the parties, the trial court implicitly
rejected appellant’s argument by sentencing him on all of the charges, including the abduction
related charges. For each offense, the trial court imposed what it characterized as the jury’s
“recommended” sentence.
Appellant noted an appeal challenging decisions of the trial court regarding a motion to
suppress, a motion for a mistrial, and for concluding that the evidence was sufficient to support
convictions for “the charges of abduction and possession of a weapon while committing
abduction” as opposed to any restriction on liberty having been subsumed within the robbery.
We granted him an appeal on the issue of whether the evidence established abductions
independent of the robbery.
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ANALYSIS
I. Standard of review
Ordinarily, in reviewing a trial court’s denial of a motion to strike, we apply a deferential
standard of review. See Moore v. Commonwealth, 59 Va. App. 795, 804 n.4 (2012)
(recognizing that we are required to “uphold the judgment of the trial court [denying a motion to
strike] unless it is plainly wrong or without evidence to support it”). We do so because
“[w]hether the evidence adduced is sufficient to prove each of [an offense’s] elements is a
factual finding” that can be set aside only if “it is plainly wrong.” Linnon v. Commonwealth,
287 Va. 92, 98 (2014) (quoting Lawlor v. Commonwealth, 285 Va. 187, 223-24 (2013)).
Although raised as part of his motion to strike, appellant’s challenge to the abduction
related charges is a variation on the ordinary theme. He does not challenge that the events
occurred or that the evidence establishes that there was a limitation on the victims’ liberty;
rather, he argues that any such restrictions did not constitute independent abductions but were
inherent in the underlying robbery. In such cases, “whether the detention established by the
evidence is ‘the kind of restraint which is an intrinsic element of crimes such as rape, robbery,
and assault,’ is a question of law to be determined by the court.” Lawlor, 285 Va. at 229
(quoting Brown v. Commonwealth, 230 Va. 310, 314 (1985)). Accordingly, the trial court’s
judgment in this regard is subject to de novo review on appeal. Epps v. Commonwealth, 66
Va. App. 393, 402 (2016) (citing Smith v. Commonwealth, 56 Va. App. 711, 721 (2010)).
II. Commonwealth’s procedural default argument
Before turning to the merits of appellant’s argument, we address the Commonwealth’s
contention that appellant’s argument is procedurally defaulted. The Commonwealth argues that
“while it is plain at the end of the Commonwealth’s case the defense alleged that the evidence
failed to show abduction” as an independent offense, he put on additional evidence and thereafter
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“made no claim regarding the legal sufficiency of the evidence to prove abduction[.]” The
Commonwealth asserts that this constitutes a waiver of the argument, preventing appellant from
“pursu[ing] it on appeal.” We disagree.
As noted above, appellant did renew his argument that the evidence did not establish
independent abductions at the close of all of the evidence. His counsel explicitly stated that
“we . . . renew the [m]otion on the [a]bduction[s]. I know you have previously ruled on that.”
Although it would have been preferable for counsel also to restate his reasons, this statement was
sufficient in this case because appellant had raised only one abduction specific argument, namely
that any restrictions on liberty were inherent in the robbery, and thus, did not constitute independent
abductions.
The Commonwealth contends that, despite having made this statement, appellant waived the
argument when, in response to a question from the trial court, he “agreed that the only issue for the
jury to decide was identity.” Although appellant agreed when the trial court asked if “the only
issue that the [j]ury has to resolve is whether identity has been proven beyond a reasonable
doubt[,]” his agreement did not waive his argument that the evidence did not establish independent
abductions. (Emphasis added).
As the trial court noted when it first heard appellant’s argument, the question of whether the
limitations on liberty in this case were inherent in the underlying robbery or constituted independent
abductions is not a question for the jury, but rather, is “a question of law[.]” (Emphasis added).
Virginia’s appellate courts repeatedly have held that such a determination is for the trial court to
resolve and is not a question to be submitted to the jury. See, e.g., Lawlor, 285 Va. at 229; Vay v.
Commonwealth, 67 Va. App. 236, 255 (2017). It should go without saying that appellant’s
concession that the only question for the jury to decide was identity did not waive his challenge
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on an issue that is committed not to the jury, but to another decisionmaker, the trial court.
Accordingly, the Commonwealth’s waiver argument is without merit.
Moreover, appellant raised the argument a third time at the reconvened sentencing
proceeding, where he expressly asked the trial court to “dismiss” the abduction related charges
because “the robbery encompassed whatever limitations of liberty were used[,]” and therefore,
any abductions were “encompassed [by] the robbery.” In doing so, appellant effectively asked
the trial court to set aside the verdicts of guilt on the abduction related charges. As the Supreme
Court has recognized, such a motion to set aside a verdict can be sufficient to preserve appellate
arguments encapsulated by the motion. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Bass, 292 Va. 19, 33
(2016).
Here, appellant argued on multiple occasions in the trial court that any restriction on
liberty was inherent in the underlying robbery. He never waived or abandoned that argument,
the Commonwealth addressed it, and the trial court rejected it. Thus, the argument was squarely
before the trial court, the trial court had a full and fair opportunity to consider the argument, and
the trial court did so. Accordingly, the Commonwealth’s procedural default argument is without
merit, and we now turn to the substance of appellant’s appeal.
III. Abduction as an independent offense
Statutory abduction is defined in Code § 18.2-47. Code § 18.2-47(A) provides that
[a]ny person who, by force, intimidation or deception, and without
legal justification or excuse, seizes, takes, transports, detains or
secretes another person with the intent to deprive such other person
of his personal liberty or to withhold or conceal him from any
person, authority or institution lawfully entitled to his charge, shall
be deemed guilty of “abduction.”
Standing alone, a criminal ordering his victims to the ground at gunpoint and ordering
that they remain there for a specified period of time under penalty of death satisfies all of the
elements found in Code § 18.2-47. Appellant, while acknowledging he placed significant
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restrictions on the victims’ liberty, argues that the detentions and restrictions on liberty he
imposed did not stand alone; rather, they were inherent in the underlying robbery.
In enacting “the abduction statute the General Assembly did not intend to make the kind
of restraint which is an intrinsic element of crimes such as rape, robbery, and assault a criminal
act, punishable as a separate offense.” Brown, 230 Va. at 314; accord Hoyt, 44 Va. App. at
492-93. If the restriction on liberty imposed upon a victim is inherent in one of the listed
underlying crimes, there is no violation of the abduction statute. Id. In determining whether a
particular restriction on liberty constitutes the independent crime of abduction or is merely
inherent in an underlying offense, the “issue . . . is whether any detention exceeded the minimum
necessary to complete the required elements of the other offense.” Lawlor, 285 Va. at 225.
Accordingly, in this case, we must determine what actions were necessary to complete
the robbery and when the robbery ended. To do so, we necessarily turn to the elements of
robbery.
The elements of robbery are longstanding and familiar. Robbery requires the taking of
the personal property of another, from his person or in his presence, by means of threat, force or
intimidation with the intention to permanently deprive the person of that property. See, e.g.,
Fagan v. Commonwealth, 63 Va. App. 395, 398 (2014); Adeniran v. Commonwealth, 63
Va. App. 617, 624 (2014). The person from whom the property is taken need not own the
property but must have a “right of possession [in the property that] is superior to that of the
robber.” Johnson v. Commonwealth, 215 Va. 495, 496 (1975). Particularly important here,
neither escape nor other attempts to avoid detection or capture are elements of robbery. Cf.
Haskell v. Commonwealth, 218 Va. 1033, 1043 (1978) (holding that “escape is not an element of
the crime of attempted robbery”).
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Here, appellant unquestionably committed a robbery. Threatening Holcomb with a gun,
appellant demanded that Holcomb give him the bank’s money. As one of the bank’s tellers,
Holcomb had a right of possession superior to appellant. Because of appellant’s threatening
conduct, Holcomb surrendered the money.5 Appellant evinced his intention to permanently
deprive Holcomb of the money through his conduct in general and the specific act of placing the
money in the front of his pants. Consequently, as soon as appellant tucked the money into his
waistband, all of the elements of robbery had been satisfied and the crime was completed. If
appellant had taken no further action and simply had waited for the police to arrive, he would
have been guilty of robbery.
Appellant, of course, did take additional action. Having already taken the money,
appellant ordered Holcomb, Hay, and Bannister to the floor and commanded them to stay there
for a definite period. Appellant argues that this was part of the robbery. We disagree.
Unlike cases in which theft victims have attempted to recover the property that had just
been seized by a thief, none of the bank employees made any attempt to repossess the money or
otherwise interfere with appellant’s movements or continued possession of the money. This
distinguishes this case from instances where violence used to subdue victims who attempt to
reassert possession or otherwise interfere with the thief’s custody of the stolen property has been
deemed to be part of a robbery. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Jones, 267 Va. 284, 290 (2004)
(recognizing that violence used against a victim who “interposed himself to prevent the theft”
5
Holcomb’s liberty was restricted when appellant pointed the gun at him and demanded
the money. This restriction on liberty was inherent in the robbery, and therefore, could not
support an independent abduction charge. See Wiggins v. Commonwealth, 47 Va. App. 173,
180 (2005) (“[A]n abduction generally inheres in a robbery because ‘there is usually some
detention, and often a seizure, of the victim’” to accomplish the taking. (quoting Scott v.
Commonwealth, 228 Va. 519, 526 (1984))). The Commonwealth’s abduction theory as it relates
to Holcomb centers on the restrictions on his liberty that appellant imposed after Holcomb had
surrendered the money. Accordingly, our analysis focuses on those restrictions.
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after the thief had seized the property in question was part of a robbery); Durham v.
Commonwealth, 214 Va. 166, 169 (1973) (holding that when an “owner of personal property, or
another having custody or constructive possession of the same, interposes himself to prevent a
thief from taking the property, and the force and violence used to overcome the opposition to the
taking is concurrent or concomitant with the taking, the thief’s action constitutes robbery”).
Here, with no such interference by the bank employees, appellant achieved complete
possession, as opposed to mere custody, of the money when he stuffed it into his pants.
Accordingly, his commands to the bank employees to lie on the floor and remain there were
extraneous to and not in support of his efforts to take the money, and thus, occurred after the
robbery had been completed.
Given that it did not advance his acquisition and continued possession of the stolen
money, the purpose behind appellant’s commands to the bank employees becomes clear. His
orders and threats were made to facilitate his escape and to allow him to avoid detection and
capture. As noted above, escape is not an element of robbery. Haskell, 218 Va. at 1043.
Additionally, a detention or other restriction on liberty that is designed to assist the perpetrator
evade detection as opposed to accomplish an element of the underlying crime is not inherent in
the underlying crime, but rather, constitutes an independent abduction. See, e.g., Vay, 67
Va. App. at 252 (detention and asportation of rape victim that was designed to help perpetrator
evade detection represented an independent offense); Bell v. Commonwealth, 22 Va. App. 93, 98
(1996) (same); Coram v. Commonwealth, 3 Va. App. 623, 626 (1987) (holding that “asportation
to decrease the possibility of detection is not an act inherent in or necessary to the restraint
required in the commission of attempted rape”).
Because the commands appellant issued and the threats he made after he obtained
unquestioned possession of the money were designed to facilitate his escape and to assist his
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evasion of capture and detection, they were not inherent in the underlying robbery. Accordingly,
these actions were sufficient to constitute independent abductions, and the trial court did not err
in refusing to strike or dismiss the abduction related charges.6
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
6
Appellant’s challenge to the firearm charges related to the abductions is premised on
there having been no independent abductions. Accordingly, our conclusion that the evidence
established independent abductions is fatal to his challenge to the related firearm charges.
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