No Requirement That The Movement Must “Substantially Increase Risk Of Harm” To The Victim
September 11th, 2015

The Authority section of CC 1203 also states “Movement Must Substantially Increase Risk of Harm to Victim,” citing People v. Dominguez (2009) 39 Cal. 4th 1141.

However, the Legislature in 1997 rewrote the aggravated kidnapping statute to delete the requirement that the movement must substantially increase the risk of injury to the victim over and above the risk inherent in the commission of the underlying crime. (People v. Robertson (2012) 208 Cal. App. 4th 965, 980-82.)

The current version of the aggravated kidnapping statute, PC § 209(b)(2), requires that the prosecution prove beyond a reasonable doubt that a defendant’s movement of the victim “increased the risk of harm to the victim over and above that which is inherent in the sexual offense itself. [But], section 209, subdivision (b)(2) does not require proof that the movement substantially increased the risk of harm to the victim.” (Ibid.)

Thus, Dominguez is not controlling authority on this issue because the kidnapping in Dominguez occurred before the operative date of the 1997 amendment, and hence Dominguez did not apply the amended version of the law. (Ibid.)


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