Schofield v. State
Annotate this CaseAfter a jury trial, Defendant was convicted of child abuse and first-degree kidnapping in violation of Nev. Rev. Stat. 200.310(1). Section 200.310(1) makes it a category A felony to lead, take, entice, or carry away or detain any minor “with the intent to keep,” imprison, or confine the minor from any person having lawful custody of the minor. Defendant appealed, arguing that the statute’s “intent to keep” language is ambiguous and that, under the proper interpretation of that requirement, there was insufficient evidence to support his kidnapping conviction. The Supreme Court reversed Defendant’s first-degree kidnapping conviction, holding (1) section 200.310(1)’s “intent to keep” language is ambiguous; (2) pursuant to the canons of statutory interpretation, section 200.310(1) requires an intent to keep the minor for a protracted period of time or permanently; and (3) under the proper legal standard, there was insufficient evidence to support Defendant’s kidnapping conviction.
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