IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 21-1206
Filed February 22, 2023
STATE OF IOWA,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
vs.
SAUL SANTOS VASQUEZ MARTINEZ,
Defendant-Appellant.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Black Hawk County,
Bradley J. Harris, Judge.
A defendant appeals his conviction for kidnapping in the second degree.
AFFIRMED.
Ronald W. Kepford, Winterset, for appellant.
Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Martha E. Trout, Assistant Attorney
General, for appellee.
Considered by Bower, C.J., and Greer and Badding, JJ.
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BADDING, Judge.
In a frightening disruption to an otherwise idyllic summer day, Saul Santos
Vasquez Martinez grabbed a girl from the sidewalk outside of his house and pulled
her inside where he attempted to sexually abuse her. Following a bench trial, he
was convicted of kidnapping in the second degree and assault with intent to
commit sexual abuse. On appeal, Vasquez Martinez only challenges the
sufficiency of the evidence supporting his kidnapping conviction. He claims
evidence that he moved his victim “from an outside public area to a location inside
a private residence” was insufficient to prove that he confined or removed “a
person from one place to another.” Iowa Code § 710.1 (2019).
I. Background Facts and Proceedings
On July 23, 2019, sixteen-year-old C.D. was working at her summer job
babysitting for a family with one child. After the child got done with her chores, she
and C.D. ran an errand and then went outside to play. C.D. thought this was
around noon. They sprayed some silly string, dumped water on each other, tried
to climb a tree in the front yard of the child’s house, and wrote on the sidewalk with
chalk. Then they decided to go for a walk around the block.
As they passed by a house two doors down from the child’s, they saw a
man—later identified as Vasquez Martinez—drinking on his front porch steps. He
mumbled something at them, but C.D. told the child “to ignore him and let’s just
keep going.” The two kept playing outside the child’s house after their walk, while
the man stayed on the steps of his front porch. C.D. heard him say something to
them again, but she didn’t respond.
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Sometime before 3:00 p.m., when C.D. had to drop the child off at her
mother’s work, the child went inside to get a drink and watch a show. C.D. stayed
outside to clean up their toys. She noticed that they had left a pink bucket near
the house where Vasquez Martinez was standing. C.D. went over to get the bucket
and heard him say something again. She thought that he “seemed frantic . . . like
he needed something.” So she walked over and asked if everything was okay.
Vasquez Martinez grabbed her arm and starting pulling her into the house. C.D.
told him to let her go and tried to pull away, repeating to him: “I’m babysitting. I
need to go. You need to let me go.” But he kept dragging her inside. They went
through a living room with a blow-up mattress in the corner, into a hallway, and
then back to a bedroom. As they moved through the hallway, Vasquez Martinez
was holding her in a “bear hug,” with her arms pinned to her side.
Once inside the bedroom, which also had a blow-up mattress in the corner,
Vasquez Martinez pushed C.D. up against a wall and began kissing her chest area
and touching her breasts. She was able to get his hands out from under her shirt,
but then he grabbed her hands and started kissing her neck. C.D. said that she
was “crying and telling him to stop,” but he kept kissing and touching her. She was
somehow able to push him away and get into the living room. Vasquez Martinez
caught up with her, grabbed her upper arm, and pulled her back into the bedroom,
where he pushed her up against the air mattress and tried to stick his hands down
her pants. He then pushed C.D. onto the mattress, but she “bounced back up,”
pushed him away again, and ran to the house where she was babysitting.
Once there, C.D. grabbed her cell phone and called the mother of the child
she was babysitting. The child’s mother had been worried about them when they
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didn’t arrive at her work by 3:00 p.m., testifying: “I just knew something wasn’t right
because she always answers her phone and she is always on time.” So around
3:30 p.m., the child’s mother started gathering her things to go home to see what
was wrong when she got the call from C.D., sometime between “3:30, quarter to
4.” C.D. was hysterical while telling the child’s mother what happened, though she
kept assuring her the child was fine. The child’s mother told her to stay inside the
house and lock the doors while she called 911.
Police were dispatched to the child’s house just before 4:00 p.m. The first
officer on the scene spoke with C.D., who gave them a description of Vasquez
Martinez and his location two houses away from them. That officer knocked on
Vasquez Martinez’s door for ten or fifteen minutes, but no one answered. Once
other officers arrived on the scene, they kept knocking on the door until Vasquez
Martinez came out, about an hour later. He was arrested and charged by trial
information with second-degree kidnapping in violation of Iowa Code sections
710.1 and 710.3 and assault with intent to commit sexual abuse causing bodily
injury in violation of section 709.11(2).
Vasquez Martinez waived his right to a jury, and the case proceeded to a
bench trial in March 2021. In its written verdict, the court found Vasquez Martinez
guilty of second-degree kidnapping and the lesser-included offense of assault with
intent to commit sexual abuse. Vasquez Martinez appeals.
II. Standard of Review
“We review a claim of insufficient evidence in a bench trial just as we do in
a jury trial.” State v. Myers, 924 N.W.2d 823, 827 (Iowa 2019). “If the verdict is
supported by substantial evidence, we will affirm.” Id. (citation omitted). In making
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that determination, we review “all the evidence and the record in the light most
favorable to the trial court’s decision.” Id. (citation omitted). Because the question
is simply whether the evidence was sufficient to support the conviction, “our review
of challenges to the sufficiency of the evidence is for errors at law.” Id.
III. Analysis
To prove second-degree kidnapping, the State needed to establish that
Vasquez Martinez confined or removed C.D., who was under eighteen years old,
from one place to another without her consent and with the intent to subject her to
sexual abuse. See Iowa Code §§ 710.1(3), .3(1). Vasquez Martinez challenges
the often-disputed confinement-or-removal element of this crime, claiming that his
act of moving C.D. “from an outside public area to a location inside a private
residence” was not sufficient evidence that she was confined or removed. We
disagree.
In State v. Rich, 305 N.W.2d 739, 745 (Iowa 1981), our supreme court
adopted the incidental rule for kidnapping offenses. State v. Albright, 925
N.W.2d 144, 152 (Iowa 2019), abrogated on other grounds by State v.
Crawford, 972 N.W.2d 189, 198 (Iowa 2022). This rule requires the confinement
or removal to be more than what is an inherent incident of the commission of the
underlying crime, in this case intent to commit sexual abuse. Rich, 305 N.W.2d
at 745. The supreme court reexamined the rule in State v. Robinson, 859
N.W.2d 464, 469 (Iowa 2015), where it explained:
The general notion is that when confinement or removal is
part-and-parcel of an underlying crime such as robbery or sexual
abuse, such removal or confinement is considered incidental to the
underlying crime and does not provide a basis for a separate
kidnapping prosecution. In order for an accused to be charged with
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both kidnapping and the underlying felony, the confinement or
removal must be in excess or beyond that normally associated with
the underlying crime.
Accord Rich, 305 N.W.2d at 745 (noting the rationale for the rule “is that we do not
believe the legislature intended to afford the prosecution a choice of two penalties
of such a disparate nature for the typical crime of sexual abuse”).
After Rich, we have applied a “three-prong test to determine whether
confinement or removal can support a conviction of kidnapping.” Albright, 925
N.W.2d at 152. Those three prongs “include confinement or removal that (1)
substantially increases the risk of harm to the victim, (2) significantly lessens the
risk of detection, or (3) significantly facilitates escape of the perpetrator.” Id.
at 152–53 (cleaned up). “One prong must be present to support a kidnapping
conviction alongside the underlying crime.” Id. at 153.
Turning to those prongs, Vasquez Martinez argues that because “the
duration of C.D.’s confinement did not significantly exceed the time required for
[him] to commit the underlying” offense, the State presented insufficient evidence
of confinement or removal. See Robinson, 859 N.W.2d at 478 (“Our cases have
generally held that the substantially-increased-risk-of-harm prong of the Rich
tripartite test may be satisfied if the duration of confinement substantially exceeded
that of the underlying crime.”). But “[n]o minimum period of confinement is required
to convict a defendant of kidnapping.” State v. McGrew, 515 N.W.2d 36, 39
(Iowa 1994); accord State v. Bitzan, No. 12-0551, 2013 WL 3273813, at *4 (Iowa
Ct. App. June 26, 2013) (finding confinement where it “lasted only about ten
minutes”). Instead, the relevant inquiry remains whether the confinement or
removal “exceed[ed] that normally incidental to the commission of sexual abuse.”
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Rich, 305 N.W.2d at 745. “If the defendant merely ‘seizes’ the victim, this does not
rise to the level of kidnapping.” Bitzan, 2013 WL 3273813, at *3 (citing State v.
Mead, 318 N.W.2d 440, 445 (Iowa 1982)). The evidence here showed more than
a seizure.
Vasquez Martinez grabbed C.D. from off the sidewalk in front of his house,
pulled her into the house, through the living room, and into a back bedroom, where
he began kissing and touching her. When C.D. tried to escape, Vasquez Martinez
dragged her back into the bedroom, and continued his attempts to sexually abuse
her until she was able to escape again. This was not a momentary seizure like in
Mead, 318 N.W.2d at 442, where the defendant followed his victims into their home
uninvited, held a knife to the neck of one of the victims, struck the second victim in
the face after the first got away, ripped the second victim’s purse away from her,
and then ran out the back of the house. Nor is it like State v. Marr, 316 N.W.2d
176, 177–78, 180 (Iowa 1982), where the court found the confinement or removal
did not exceed that normally incidental to the commission of sexual abuse when
the victim was moved from the sidewalk in front of her apartment building to a
gangway separating the building from a neighboring house. It is also unlike
Robinson, in which the victim’s confinement was limited to her removal from the
hallway into the defendant’s bedroom, which he then locked from the inside. 859
N.W.2d at 481–83 (noting “some reluctance to find the independent crime of
kidnapping when the additional confinement or removal occurs within an enclosed
structure”); accord State v. Buggs, 547 P.2d 720, 731 (Kan. 1976) (“The removal
of a rape victim from room to room within a dwelling solely for the convenience and
comfort of the rapist is not a kidnapping; the removal from a public place to a place
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of seclusion is.” (emphasis added)). But see State v. Jackson Thomas, ___
N.W.2d ___, ___, 2022 WL 10827015, at *5 (Iowa Ct. App. 2022) (“Robinson . . .
does not foreclose the possibility that someone can be kidnapped when being
confined or removed to a room in the same enclosed structure already occupied.”);
Harper v. State, No. 17-0435, 2018 WL 4360892, at *6 (Iowa Ct.
App. Sept. 12, 2018) (finding that moving of victim to more secluded area within
home had independent significance because it significantly lessened risk of
detection, substantially increased risk of harm, and significantly facilitated escape).
As the State argued in closing:
This happened in a residential neighborhood on a well-traveled
street in Cedar Falls. An assault occurring outside of [Vasquez
Martinez’s] residence is far more likely to draw the attention of
neighbors or concerned passersby and substantially limit the time he
has with C.D. and his ability to sexually abuse her. . . . He specifically
waited until he saw [the child that C.D. was babysitting] go inside her
house before frantically yelling out to C.D. and gaining her attention.
But for C.D.’s escape from the defendant’s residence, no one would
have known where she was or where to begin looking for her.
(Emphasis added.)
We agree with the State. Had the assault taken place outside Vasquez
Martinez’s home, C.D.’s chances of escape would have increased, as would the
risk to Vasquez Martinez that his acts would be discovered. See Albright, 925
N.W.2d at 156 (“If Albright had not confined K.H. to the house, she would have
been free to leave and further injury would have been prevented. . . . Moreover,
the secluded nature of the home significantly decreased the likelihood of
detection.”). But because C.D. was confined in the house, Vasquez Martinez was
able to prevent her first attempt to escape, and he eluded detection from the police
for more than an hour after the attempted sexual abuse. See State v. Davis, 584
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N.W.2d 913, 917 (considering evidence that the defendant decreased the victim’s
chances of escape by dragging her back to the apartment). Even though no
weapon was used, cf. Robinson, 859 N.W.2d at 479, we find these facts show that
C.D.’s removal from the sidewalk into the bedroom of Vasquez Martinez’s home
significantly increased the risk of harm to her and lessened the risk of detection.
See, e.g., State v. Hardin, 359 N.W.2d 185, 187, 190 (Iowa 1984) (affirming
kidnapping conviction where, after the victim drove the defendant home from a bar,
the defendant “hit the victim in the face, dragged her out of the vehicle, and forced
her inside where he raped her”); State v. Newman, 326 N.W.2d 796, 801–02 (Iowa
1982) (concluding there was sufficient evidence of confinement when a student
walking home from a friend’s house was enticed into the defendant’s truck,
sexually assaulted, and then driven to a road where there were no houses); State
v. Knupp, 310 N.W.2d 179, 182–83 (Iowa 1981) (finding sufficient evidence of
confinement and removal where the “defendant pulled the victim into his vehicle,
drove away before she could escape, and took her six or seven blocks to a point
under a bridge” and then sexually assaulted her); Bitzan, 2013 WL 3273813, at
*3–4 (finding kidnapping when defendant forced victim from the sink area to behind
a stall in rest stop).
Considering the totality of the facts in the light most favorable to the trial
court’s decision, we find substantial evidence to support the second-degree
kidnapping conviction.
AFFIRMED.