COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
Present: Judges Chafin, Malveaux and Senior Judge Frank
UNPUBLISHED
Argued at Norfolk, Virginia
JUSTIN LEE LUNCEFORD
MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
v. Record No. 1234-15-1 JUDGE MARY BENNETT MALVEAUX
OCTOBER 25, 2016
COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF CHESAPEAKE
Frederick B. Lowe, Judge
Terence P. Martin, Senior Assistant Public Defender, for appellant.
Stephen L. Forster, Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring,
Attorney General; Kathleen B. Martin, Senior Assistant Attorney
General, on brief), for appellee.
Justin L. Lunceford (“appellant”) was convicted of abduction in violation of Code
§ 18.2-47(A). On appeal, he contends that the evidence was insufficient to prove that he detained
the victim during an argument by means of intimidation. Because the record does not support a
reasonable inference that the victim’s fear of bodily harm overrode her ability to leave, we reverse
his conviction.
I. BACKGROUND
At the time of the incident, appellant had been in a sixteen-year relationship with the
victim, Brandi Jankosky. During their relationship, Jankosky depended on appellant financially.
He is also the father of Jankosky’s son, and they frequently argued when they met to exchange
custody of the child. Typically, the two exchanged custody of the child in public to limit the
possibility of such altercations. During one such exchange on March 15, 2014, appellant took
*
Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
their son to meet Jankosky in a Wal-Mart parking lot. After placing the child in the back of
Jankosky’s vehicle, appellant climbed into the front passenger seat beside her. Although
Jankosky asked him to leave several times, appellant instead pressured her for more than an hour
into having sex at some point in the future. When she tried to get out of the car, appellant
stopped her by telling her not to make a scene.
Their argument was contentious. At times, the tension between Jankosky and appellant
upset their son, who began to cry. This frustrated appellant, who threatened to spank the child if
he did not stop crying.
Jankosky testified at trial, however, that appellant was not forceful during the encounter.
Although he grabbed her arm at one point, she was quick to clarify that she believed he was
trying to get her attention, not hurt her. And while appellant weighed around 260 pounds and
was substantially larger than Jankosky, she testified that she was “not scared of him.” She told
the trial court that if she had wanted to get out of the vehicle, nothing would have stopped her
from doing so.
Nevertheless, Jankosky also testified repeatedly that she felt compelled to remain in the
car out of concern that “the situation would have escalated and become a lot worse.” She
testified that she did not want to risk a public confrontation that might have devolved into an
exchange of blows:
I sat in the vehicle and argued with him because if I got out, it
would have escalated to a big scene. My son would have been in
the middle. I would have hit him and he would have hit me so I
chose to stay in that vehicle to try to keep it from not being a big
ordeal or a big scene.
At the end of their argument, appellant grabbed Jankosky’s phone and exited the car to
call someone who had sent her a text message. Jankosky also left the vehicle, snatched her
phone from appellant, and hit him. The two then left the parking lot separately. Jankosky
-2-
initially called 911 because she was concerned that the situation might have escalated later. She
terminated the call, however, because she did not want appellant to see her speaking with the
police. She reported the incident three months later.
During his bench trial, appellant moved to strike the evidence, arguing that Jankosky felt
constrained “not . . . by force or . . . intimidation” but by her economic concerns and financial
dependence. He renewed his motion during closing arguments, arguing that Jankosky was
“hardly someone being intimidated and hardly someone afraid that force would be used against
her.”
In overruling the motion, the trial court indicated it would have granted the motion to
strike had appellant not detained Jankosky in her own vehicle while their son was present. The
court identified the intimidation as the choice between “being forced to sit in your own vehicle or
get out and leave your own vehicle and abandon that with the child in it.” The judge explained
that “had it not been her vehicle,” he would have “agree[d] with the defense 100 percent.”
II. ANALYSIS
After a bench trial, an appellate court may not set aside the judgment of the trial court
“unless it appears from the evidence that such judgment is plainly wrong or without evidence to
support it.” Code § 8.01-680; Williams v. Commonwealth, 278 Va. 190, 193, 677 S.E.2d 280,
282 (2009). This Court reviews the evidence “in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth,
as the prevailing party at trial, and considers all inferences fairly deducible from that evidence.”
Powell v. Commonwealth, 289 Va. 20, 26, 766 S.E.2d 736, 739 (2015) (quoting Allen v.
Commonwealth, 287 Va. 68, 72, 752 S.E.2d 856, 858-59 (2014)). “[T]he relevant question is
whether ‘any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a
reasonable doubt.’” Williams, 278 Va. at 193, 677 S.E.2d at 282 (quoting Jackson v. Virginia,
443 U.S. 307, 319 (1979)).
-3-
Abduction is the unjustifiable “tak[ing], transport[ing], detain[ing] or secret[ing]” of
another person by means of “force, intimidation or deception” with the specific 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.” Code § 18.2-47(A). In this case, the
Commonwealth concedes that appellant used neither force nor deception to detain Jankosky.
The dispositive question, therefore, is whether he detained her through intimidation.
In Virginia, intimidation has been defined as “putting a victim in fear of bodily harm by
exercising such domination and control . . . as to . . . overbear her will.” Sutton v.
Commonwealth, 228 Va. 654, 663, 324 S.E.2d 665, 670 (1985).1 Intimidation is distinct from
threats in that it can occur without an overt “expression of an intention to do bodily harm.” Id.
Rather, the fear of bodily harm can arise from “the imposition of psychological pressure on one
who, under the circumstances, is vulnerable and susceptible to such pressure.” Id.
In this case, Jankosky’s own testimony, viewed in its entirety, cannot support a
reasonable inference that she was detained through intimidation. There is no evidence that she
remained in her car because she feared appellant would harm her. Jankosky never claimed she
was concerned that appellant might try to hurt her if she attempted to leave. Cf. Sabol v.
Commonwealth, 37 Va. App. 9, 19, 553 S.E.2d 533, 538 (2001) (holding that no evidence in the
record supported the finding that defendant intimidated the victim into sexual intercourse when
the victim “never testified that she was actually in fear for her personal safety, only that she was
1
Although Sutton dealt specifically with the meaning of “intimidation” in Virginia’s rape
statute, see 228 Va. at 662, 324 S.E.2d at 669, “[i]t is a common canon of statutory construction
that when the legislature uses the same term in separate statutes, that term has the same meaning
in each unless the General Assembly indicates to the contrary,” Commonwealth v. Jackson, 276
Va. 184, 194, 661 S.E.2d 810, 814 (2008). Consequently, courts have relied on Sutton to define
intimidation in a variety of contexts. See, e.g., Muhammad v. Commonwealth, 269 Va. 451,
498-99, 619 S.E.2d 16, 42-43 (2005) (applying Sutton for the definition of “intimidate” in a
terrorism statute); Mojaher v. Commonwealth, 40 Va. App. 312, 322-23, 579 S.E.2d 359, 365-66
(2003) (en banc) (applying Sutton to animate object penetration); Harris v. Commonwealth, 3
Va. App. 519, 521-22, 351 S.E.2d 356, 356-57 (1986) (applying Sutton to robbery).
-4-
afraid of losing the lifestyle to which she had become accustomed”). Indeed, she expressly
testified that she “was not scared of him” during their argument.
The closest Jankosky came to expressing any apprehension of bodily harm was her
speculation that an escalating argument might have devolved into her initiation of a physical
fight. The concern she expressed was not that she could have been injured but that such a public
fight would be embarrassing. She testified that she “chose to stay in that vehicle to try to keep it
from not being a big ordeal or a big scene.” She also testified that she and appellant originally
agreed to exchange custody of their son in public specifically to mitigate the likelihood of this
sort of confrontation. Her concern about a potentially embarrassing public fight, however, does
not amount to a fear of bodily harm that was induced by appellant’s domination and that
overbore her will.
The Commonwealth acknowledges that Jankosky testified she was unafraid of appellant.
Nevertheless, the Commonwealth argues that a rational fact-finder could have discredited
Jankosky’s testimony based on speculation about a history of domestic violence between her and
appellant. In principle, the Commonwealth is correct that prior domestic violence by the accused
can support an inference of fear notwithstanding the victim’s denial. A fact-finder need not
accept a victim’s testimony that she was unintimidated during her abduction if other evidence
contradicts her testimony. Cf. Breeden v. Commonwealth, 43 Va. App. 169, 179-80, 596 S.E.2d
563, 568 (2004) (noting that a fact-finder was free to give little weight to the victim’s claim that
she was not threatened, forced, or intimidated into sex when other evidence impeached her
testimony). And past instances of domestic violence by the accused can be probative of “the
victim’s state of mind as to why she did what she did.” Morse v. Commonwealth, 17 Va. App.
627, 631-32, 440 S.E.2d 145, 148 (1994) (quotations omitted).
-5-
The difficulty in applying that principle to this case, however, is that Jankosky testified
only about her willingness to use violence against him. She testified, for instance, that
“numerous times” in the past she had “put [her] hands on Mr. Lunceford to stop him from doing
something.” She speculated that she might have initiated a physical fight if their argument
escalated into a “big ordeal.” She admitted hitting him towards the end of their argument but
acknowledged that he did not hit her back. However, it is the accused’s past acts of domestic
violence that can circumstantially prove fear of bodily harm. In Sutton, for instance, the niece’s
fear of bodily harm was informed by having seen the Suttons use violence against each other and
their son. 228 Va. at 660, 665, 324 S.E.2d at 668, 671. And in Cairns v. Commonwealth, 40
Va. App 271, 295, 579 S.E.2d 340, 351-52 (2003), this Court noted that a father’s physical abuse
of his stepson and his furniture-flipping outbursts informed his stepdaughter’s fear of bodily
harm when he raped her.
The Commonwealth contends that our standard of review requires that we infer any
violence in appellant’s relationship with Jankosky ran in both directions. We note, however, that
inferences are reasonable only if they can be reached “without resorting to speculation or
conjecture.” McGuire v. Hodges, 273 Va. 199, 208, 639 S.E.2d 284, 289 (2007). And while
Jankosky may have referred obliquely to prior assault and battery charges, we can only speculate
as to the circumstances underlying those charges. Appellant apparently was never convicted on
those charges; indeed, Jankosky did not say whether she was the victim, a witness, or even the
accused. All we know for certain is that she exercised her Fifth Amendment right against
self-incrimination in those cases.
Finally, the Commonwealth argued for the first time at oral argument that Jankosky
might have stayed in her car because she feared appellant would harm her son. We presume that
under certain circumstances, a defendant can abduct a parent by threatening to harm her child.
-6-
But the record here is insufficient to support the Commonwealth’s speculation. Jankosky never
testified that she feared appellant would harm their son. She also explained repeatedly that she
remained in the car because she did not want to cause a scene, not because she feared appellant
would become violent. Therefore, we find this contention without merit.
III. CONCLUSION
Even in light of the applicable standard of review, and viewing the record in the light
most favorable to the Commonwealth, we find the evidence insufficient to support appellant’s
conviction for abduction. Thus, we reverse appellant’s conviction.
Reversed and dismissed.
-7-