State v. Elder ( 2022 )


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  •                     IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NORTH CAROLINA
    2022-NCSC-142
    No. 276A21
    Filed 16 December 2022
    STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
    v.
    MICHAEL STEVEN ELDER
    Appeal pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7A-30(2) from the decision of a divided panel of
    the Court of Appeals, 
    278 N.C. App. 493
    , 2021-NCCOA-350, finding no error, in part,
    and reversing and remanding, in part, judgments entered on 3 April 2019 by Judge
    Josephine Kerr Davis in Superior Court, Warren County, based upon defendant’s
    convictions for felonious breaking and entering, common law robbery, assault
    inflicting serious injury, second-degree sexual offense, first-degree rape, and two
    counts of first-degree kidnapping. Heard in the Supreme Court on 31 August 2022.
    Joshua H. Stein, Attorney General, by Benjamin O. Zellinger, Special Deputy
    Attorney General, for the State-appellant.
    Law Offices of Bill Ward & Kirby Smith, P.A., by Kirby H. Smith, III, for
    defendant-appellee.
    ERVIN, Justice.
    ¶1         The issue before the Court in this case is whether the trial court erred by
    denying defendant’s motion to dismiss the second of two first-degree kidnapping
    charges which rested upon an allegation that defendant had “unlawfully confin[ed],
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    Opinion of the Court
    restrain[ed,] and remov[ed] [the victim] from one place to another without her
    consent” for the purpose of facilitating the commission of a first-degree rape even
    though the record evidence tended to show that one of the alleged kidnappings had
    occurred after the commission of the rape had concluded. A majority of the Court of
    Appeals held, in reliance upon State v. Morris, 
    147 N.C. App. 247
     (2001), aff’d per
    curiam, 
    355 N.C. 488
     (2002), that the second of defendant’s first-degree kidnapping
    convictions lacked sufficient record support. State v. Elder, 
    278 N.C. App. 493
    , 2021-
    NCCOA-350, ¶¶ 35–37. The dissenting judge, on the other hand, concluded that the
    second of defendant’s first-degree kidnapping convictions should be upheld on the
    basis of State v. Hall, 
    305 N.C. 77
     (1982), overruled on other grounds by State v. Diaz,
    
    317 N.C. 545
     (1986). Elder, ¶¶ 90–94 (Tyson, J., concurring, in part, and dissenting,
    in part). After careful consideration of the parties’ arguments in light of the record
    and the applicable law, we conclude that the Court of Appeals’ decision should be
    affirmed and remand this case to the Court of Appeals for further remand to Superior
    Court, Warren County, for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
    I.    Factual Background
    A. Substantive Facts
    ¶2         On 7 July 2007, A.H.,1 who was 80 years old and lived alone, was tending to
    the flower garden in front of her residence when she noticed a light-colored
    1   We will refer to the victim by her initials in order to protect her identity.
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    Opinion of the Court
    automobile driving slowly past her house. Upon hearing the car turn and begin
    moving back in her direction, the victim entered her residence and locked the storm
    door behind her. After the vehicle parked in the driveway, a man carrying a black
    satchel approached the victim’s house and knocked on the door. Although the victim
    opened the main door to speak with the man, she left the storm door locked. The man
    offered to demonstrate a rug cleaning product that he claimed to want to sell to her,
    but the victim informed the man that she was not interested in his proposal. As a
    result, the man wrote his contact information on a piece of paper, which he presented
    to the victim for the purpose of making sure that she would be able to get in touch
    with him if she changed her mind.
    ¶3         When the victim unlocked and opened the screen door in order to retrieve the
    paper, the man grabbed the victim’s wrist, pushed the door open, and entered the
    house, at which point he demanded to know where the victim kept her money. After
    the victim told the man that she did not have any money, the man forced the victim
    into her bedroom, pushed her onto the bed, and began removing her clothes.
    Although the victim begged the man not to harm her, he forcibly engaged in vaginal
    intercourse with her before putting his penis into her mouth and attempting to make
    her perform oral sex upon him.
    ¶4         After sexually assaulting the victim, the man began rifling through the
    drawers in the victim’s dresser while demanding to know “where [the victim] kept
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    her good stuff.” At the conclusion of his search for items of value, the man took
    approximately $450 in cash from one of the victim’s pocketbooks along with the
    victim’s food stamps, Medicaid card, and driver’s license.           Although the victim
    informed the man that her daughter was on the way, the man replied that he would
    kill the victim if her daughter arrived before his departure.
    ¶5          After tying the victim up and placing her in her bedroom closet, the victim told
    the man that she could not breathe. At that point, the man moved the victim to the
    closet in a smaller, adjacent bedroom and tied her to a chair,2 told the victim that he
    was going to take a shower, and warned the victim not to leave the room while he
    was there. Following the man’s departure, the victim could hear water running in
    the bathroom.
    ¶6          After some period of time had passed, the victim was able to untie herself.
    Although the victim could still hear the sound of running water, she made her way to
    the front window of the house, from which she could see that the intruder’s
    automobile had departed.       At that point, the victim entered the bathroom and
    2 The record contained conflicting testimony concerning whether defendant placed the
    victim in the second bedroom or in a closet within the second bedroom. Although this
    discrepancy does not seem to us to have any material impact upon the manner in which the
    case should be resolved, the fact that the verdict sheet upon which the jury recorded its
    verdict indicates that the jury convicted defendant of first-degree kidnapping based upon his
    actions in “moving [A.H.] from the bedroom to bedroom to a closet” leads us to conclude that
    the jury found beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant placed the victim in a closet in the
    second bedroom.
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    discovered that it was empty despite the fact that the water was continuing to run in
    the shower.
    ¶7         Upon attempting to telephone her daughter, Linda Carter, the victim reached
    Ms. Carter’s husband, Harry Carter, whom she told that she had been raped and
    robbed and from whom she pleaded for assistance. When the Carters arrived at the
    victim’s residence a few minutes later, they discovered that the storm door had been
    partially torn away from the door jam. According to Mr. Carter, the victim was “a
    nervous wreck,” “very upset,” and “hysterical,” prompting Ms. Carter to call for
    emergency assistance.
    ¶8         After emergency medical services personnel and officers from the Warren
    County Sheriff’s Office arrived at the victim’s residence, the victim was transported
    to Maria Parham Hospital in Louisburg. Due to the fact that Maria Parham did not
    have a rape kit and was not staffed by personnel trained to administer one, the victim
    was transferred to WakeMed Hospital, where she was seen by Sexual Assault Nurse
    Examiner Cindy Carter.      Nurse Carter performed a rape kit examination and
    delivered the completed rape kit and other items of evidence that had been collected
    from the victim to Detective Sergeant Ben Jackson of the Warren County Sheriff’s
    Office, with the evidence in question having later been submitted to the State Crime
    Laboratory for processing. In addition, Sergeant Jackson interviewed the victim
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    before she was transferred to WakeMed, at which point she described the assault that
    had been committed against her.
    ¶9           Special Agent Russell Holley of the Forensic Serology Unit of the State Crime
    Laboratory examined samples that had been derived from the rape kit and detected
    the presence of sperm cells in smears that had been collected from the victim and on
    a cutting that had been taken from the underwear that the victim had been wearing
    at the time of the assault. In addition, Forensic Scientist Supervisor Timothy Baize
    of the State Crime Laboratory detected a DNA mixture on the victim’s underwear
    that was consistent with that of the victim and an unknown male contributor.
    ¶ 10         At the time of the victim’s death on 18 December 2015, the perpetrator of the
    assault that had been committed against her had not been identified. On 12 April
    2016, Sergeant Jackson contacted the Forensic Investigations Division of the New
    York City Police Department at the suggestion of the State Crime Laboratory. After
    making contact with the New York City Police Department, Sergeant Jackson sought
    and obtained a bill of indictment from the Warren County grand jury against Stephen
    Davis charging him with having assaulted the victim, only to learn later that Mr.
    Davis had been incarcerated on the date of the assault.3             After further
    communications with the New York City Police Department, Sergeant Jackson
    obtained a search warrant authorizing the seizure of a DNA sample from defendant.
    3   The charges against Mr. Davis were later dismissed.
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    On 18 July 2016, Sergeant Jackson traveled to Winston-Salem, where defendant was
    living at the time and, along with officers from the Forsyth County Sheriff’s Office,
    executed the search warrant and obtained a DNA sample from defendant. Sergeant
    Jackson also interviewed defendant, who told Sergeant Jackson that he had not
    assaulted the victim, that he was not familiar with Warren County, and that he was
    willing to submit to a polygraph examination in order to prove his innocence.
    ¶ 11         On 19 July 2016, Sergeant Jackson submitted the DNA sample that had been
    obtained from defendant to the State Crime Laboratory for comparison with the DNA
    samples that had been obtained from the rape kit that had been administered to the
    victim. According to Mr. Baize, “the DNA profile obtained from the sperm fraction of
    the cutting from the [victim’s underwear]” was “consistent with the DNA profile
    obtained from [defendant],” with the probability that the DNA profile of an unrelated
    and randomly selected individual would be consistent with the DNA profile that had
    been obtained from the sperm fraction that had been found on the victim’s underwear
    being “approximately 1 in 10.7 trillion in the Caucasian population, one in 63.0 billion
    in the African-American population, and one in 312 billion in the Hispanic
    population.”
    B. Procedural History
    ¶ 12         On 17 January 2017, the Warren County grand jury returned bills of
    indictment charging defendant with felonious breaking and entering, common law
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    robbery, assault with a deadly weapon inflicting serious injury, first-degree sexual
    offense, first-degree rape, and two counts of first-degree kidnapping. The grand jury
    alleged with respect to one of the two counts of first-degree kidnapping that defendant
    had “unlawfully confin[ed], restrain[ed,] and remov[ed] [the victim] from one place to
    another without her consent” by “moving [the victim] from the kitchen to the back
    bedroom” and alleged with respect to the second of the two counts of first-degree
    kidnapping that defendant had “unlawfully confin[ed], restrain[ed,] and remov[ed]
    [the victim] from one place to another without her consent” by “moving [the victim]
    from the back bedroom to another bedroom and put[ting] her into a closet.” The grand
    jury alleged that, in both instances, defendant had kidnapped the victim “for the
    purpose of facilitating the commission of a felony, first[-]degree rape.”
    ¶ 13         The charges against defendant came on for trial before the trial court and a
    jury at the 27 March 2019 criminal session of Superior Court, Warren County. At
    the conclusion of the State’s evidence and after declining to present evidence in his
    own defense, defendant unsuccessfully moved that the charges against him be
    dismissed for insufficiency of the evidence.      On 3 April 2019, the jury returned
    verdicts convicting defendant of felonious breaking and entering, common law
    robbery, assault inflicting serious injury, second-degree sexual offense, first-degree
    rape, and two counts of first-degree kidnapping. After accepting the jury’s verdicts,
    the trial court consolidated defendant’s convictions for felonious breaking or entering,
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    second-degree sexual offense, common law robbery, and assault inflicting serious
    injury for judgment and entered a judgment sentencing defendant to a term of 84 to
    110 months imprisonment.       In addition, the trial court consolidated defendant’s
    convictions for first-degree rape and two counts of first-degree kidnapping and
    entered a judgment sentencing defendant to a consecutive term of 240 to 297 months
    imprisonment. Defendant noted an appeal to the Court of Appeals from the trial
    court’s judgments.
    C. Court of Appeals Decision
    ¶ 14         In seeking relief from the trial court’s judgments and related orders before the
    Court of Appeals, defendant argued, among other things, that the trial court had
    erred by denying his motions to dismiss the first-degree rape, first-degree
    kidnapping, and common law robbery charges for insufficiency of the evidence. In
    support of his contention that the trial court had erred by failing to dismiss the second
    of the two first-degree kidnapping charges that had been lodged against him,
    defendant argued that there was “no evidence [that] the second kidnapping was
    committed for the purpose of facilitating rape.”
    ¶ 15         In rejecting defendant’s challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence to support
    his convictions for first-degree rape, first-degree kidnapping, and common law
    robbery, the Court of Appeals unanimously held that the record contained sufficient
    evidence to support defendant’s rape and robbery convictions. State v. Elder, 278
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    N.C. 493, 2021-NCCOA-350, ¶¶ 30, 42, 87. On the other hand, a majority of the Court
    of Appeals concluded that the trial court had erred by denying defendant’s motion to
    dismiss the second of the two first-degree kidnapping charges, holding that, while “an
    indictment under [N.C.G.S.] § 14-39(a)(2) need not allege the exact type of felony
    furthered by the restraint or confinement,” the State was required to provide that
    “the felony that is the alleged purpose of the kidnapping must occur after the
    kidnapping.” Id. ¶ 34 (quoting State v. Jordan 
    185 N.C. App. 576
    , 584 (2007), disc.
    rev. denied, 
    362 N.C. 241
     (2008)). In addition, the majority held that, even though
    N.C.G.S. § 14-39(a)(2) allows a defendant to be convicted of first-degree kidnapping
    “where the defendant committed the kidnapping either for the purpose of facilitating
    the commission of a felony or for the purpose of facilitating flight of any person after
    the commission of a felony, the State is obliged to prove the allegations made in the
    indictment.” Id. ¶ 35 (emphasis in original) (citing State v. Morris, 
    147 N.C. App. 247
    , 251–53 (2001) (reversing a defendant’s first-degree kidnapping conviction in a
    case in which the State had alleged that the defendant had kidnapped the victim for
    the purpose of facilitating the commission of a rape where the evidence tended to
    show that the defendant had kidnapped the victim for the purpose of facilitating his
    flight after committing the rape), aff’d per curiam, 
    355 N.C. 488
     (2002)). According
    to the majority, “Morris controls the outcome here” given that, in this case, “the State
    alleged that [d]efendant committed [the second count of first-degree kidnapping]
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    Opinion of the Court
    when he moved [the victim] ‘from the back bedroom to another bedroom and put her
    into a closet[,]’ which the parties agree occurred after [d]efendant committed first-
    degree rape.” 
    Id.
     ¶¶ 36–37 (fourth alteration in original). However, the majority
    continued, “because ‘the felony that is the alleged purpose of the kidnapping must
    occur after the kidnapping,’ we must reverse [d]efendant’s first-degree kidnapping
    charge on [the second count.]” 
    Id.
     (first alteration in original) (quoting Jordan, 186
    N.C. App. at 584).      As a result of the fact that both of defendant’s first-degree
    kidnapping convictions had been consolidated for judgment with his first-degree rape
    conviction, the Court of Appeals remanded that judgment to the trial court for
    resentencing. Id. ¶ 38 (citing State v. Wortham, 
    318 N.C. 669
    , 674 (1987) (holding
    that, because “it is probable that a defendant’s conviction for two or more offenses
    influences adversely to him the trial court’s judgment on the length of that sentence
    to be imposed when the offenses are consolidated for judgment,” “the better procedure
    is to remand for resentencing when one or more but not all of the convictions
    consolidated for judgment has been vacated”)).4
    4  In addition, the majority held that the trial court had erroneously sentenced
    defendant for both first-degree rape and the remaining charge of first-degree kidnapping.
    Elder, ¶ 74. In reaching this conclusion, the majority determined that, since kidnapping “is
    elevated from the second degree to the first when ‘the person kidnapped either was not
    released by the defendant in a safe place or had been seriously injured or sexually
    assaulted,’ ” id.¶ 75 (quoting N.C.G.S. § 14-39(b) (2007)), a defendant “may not be punished
    for both the first-degree kidnapping and the underlying sexual assault,” id. (quoting State v.
    Daniels, 
    189 N.C. App. 705
    , 709 (2008)). That is the case, the majority explained, because
    “[N.C.G.S.] § 14-39, [which] defin[es] first-degree kidnapping, reflects the General Assembly’s
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    Opinion of the Court
    ¶ 16          In a separate opinion concurring with the majority’s decision, in part, and
    dissenting from that decision, in part, Judge Tyson expressed disagreement with his
    colleagues’ conclusion that the trial court had erred by failing to dismiss the second
    of the two first-degree kidnapping charges. Id. ¶ 86 (Tyson, J., concurring, in part,
    and dissenting, in part). In rejecting defendant’s contention that he could not have
    moved the victim from one bedroom to another “for the purpose of facilitating the
    commission of” first-degree rape when the rape was already over at that point, Judge
    Tyson reasoned that “[t]he occurrence of all essential elements of a crime does not
    mean the commission of a crime ceases.” Id. ¶ 88–89 (citing State v. Hall, 
    305 N.C. 77
    , 82–83 (1982) (holding that the fact that “the crime was ‘complete’ does not mean
    it was completed”), overruled on other grounds by State v. Diaz, 
    317 N.C. 545
     (1986)).
    intent that ‘a defendant could not be convicted of both first-degree kidnapping and a sexual
    assault that raised the kidnapping to first degree.’ ” 
    Id.
     (quoting State v. Freeland, 
    316 N.C. 13
    , 23 (1986)). Given that the jury had convicted defendant of first-degree kidnapping
    without specifying whether it found that defendant failed to release the victim in a safe place,
    that the victim had been seriously injured, or that the victim had been sexually assaulted,
    the majority concluded that it was “required to assume that the jury relied on defendant’s
    commission of the sexual assault in finding him guilty of first-degree kidnapping.” Id. ¶ 76
    (quoting Daniels, 189 N.C. App. at 710). As a result, the Court of Appeals held that, when it
    resentenced defendant, “the trial court may 1) arrest judgment on the first-degree kidnapping
    conviction and resentence defendant for second-degree kidnapping, or 2) arrest judgment on
    the first-degree rape conviction and resentence defendant on the first-degree kidnapping
    conviction.” Id. ¶ 77 (quoting Daniels, 189 N.C. App. at 710). Finally, a majority of the Court
    of Appeals issued a writ of certiorari authorizing review of defendant’s challenge to the trial
    court’s decision to enter a civil judgment against him in the amount of the attorney’s fees
    that had been awarded to his court-appointed trial counsel and held that the trial court had
    erred by entering that judgment without affording defendant with adequate notice and an
    opportunity to be heard and remanded the issue to Superior Court, Watauga County, for
    further proceedings. Id. ¶¶ 83–84.
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    Opinion of the Court
    According to Judge Tyson, defendant’s actions in moving the victim to the second
    bedroom “prevented [the victim] from seeking medical attention, contacting help, or
    fleeing from [d]efendant”; “continued [the victim’s] pain, damage, and trauma from
    the rape”; and “allowed [d]efendant a chance to shower, instead of needing to
    immediately flee.”     Id., ¶ 92. In addition, Judge Tyson contended that “[t]hese
    additional restraints and asportation ‘ma[de] easier’ the commission of the rape by
    allowing [d]efendant a chance to destroy evidence.” Id. (first alteration in original)
    (quoting State v. Kyle, 
    333 N.C. 687
    , 694 (1993)). As a result, Judge Tyson would
    have held that, when viewed in the light most favorable to the State, “the evidence
    supports the conclusion that a purpose of the separate kidnapping was to facilitate
    the rape and the jury could conclude that the kidnapping was part of an ongoing
    criminal transaction.” 
    Id.
     ¶ 93 (citing State v. Chevallier, 
    264 N.C. App. 204
    , 211
    (2019)). The State noted an appeal to this Court based upon Judge Tyson’s dissent.5
    5  Judge Tyson also disagreed with the majority’s determinations that defendant had
    been improperly sentenced for both first-degree kidnapping and first-degree rape and that
    the trial court had erred by entering a civil judgment against defendant in the amount of the
    fees awarded to defendant’s court-appointed counsel. Elder, ¶¶ 100, 105 (Tyson, J.,
    concurring, in part, and dissenting, in part). However, given that the State has not brought
    either of these issues forward for consideration by this Court in its notice of appeal, they are
    not before us and will not be discussed further in this opinion. See N.C. R. App. P. 14(b)(1)
    (requiring that, “[i]n an appeal which is based upon the existence of a dissenting opinion in
    the Court of Appeals, the notice of appeal . . . shall state the issue or issues which are the
    basis of the dissenting opinion and which are to be presented to the Supreme Court for
    review”).
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    II.   Analysis
    A. Standard of Review
    ¶ 17         In evaluating the correctness of the trial court’s decision concerning a motion
    to dismiss for insufficiency of the evidence, a reviewing court “need determine only
    whether there is substantial evidence of each essential element of the crime and that
    the defendant is the perpetrator,” with “substantial evidence” consisting of “that
    amount of relevant evidence necessary to persuade a rational juror to accept a
    conclusion.” State v. Winkler, 
    368 N.C. 572
    , 574 (2015) (quoting State v. Mann, 
    355 N.C. 294
    , 301 (2002)). In the course of making this inquiry, the reviewing court must
    view the evidence “in the light most favorable to the State,” with the State being
    “entitled to every reasonable intendment and every reasonable inference to be drawn
    therefrom[.]” 
    Id.
     (quoting State v. Powell, 
    299 N.C. 95
    , 99 (1980)). As long as the
    record contains “substantial evidence, whether direct or circumstantial, or a
    combination, to support a finding that the offense charged has been committed and
    that the defendant committed it, the case is for the jury and the motion to dismiss
    should be denied.” State v. Golder, 
    374 N.C. 238
    , 250 (2020) (cleaned up). “Whether
    the State presented substantial evidence of each essential element of the offense is a
    question of law,” so, accordingly, “we review the denial of a motion to dismiss de novo.”
    State v. Chekanow, 
    370 N.C. 488
    , 492 (2018) (quoting State v. Crockett, 
    368 N.C. 717
    ,
    720 (2016)).
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    B. Summary of Relevant Caselaw
    ¶ 18          The divergent results reached by the members of the panel at the Court of
    Appeals ultimately rest upon a disagreement about which of our precedents controls
    the outcome in this case. As a result, we will begin our analysis by reviewing the
    relevant precedent.
    1. State v. Faircloth
    ¶ 19          In State v. Faircloth, the grand jury charged the defendant with felonious
    larceny of an automobile, kidnapping, armed robbery, and first-degree rape, having
    alleged, among other things, that the defendant “did feloniously kidnap [the victim]
    . . . by unlawfully removing her from one place to another [f]or the purpose of
    facilitating flight following the commission of the felony of rape.” 
    297 N.C. 100
    , 104,
    107 (1979).    The evidence presented at trial, however, tended to show that the
    defendant had forced his way into the victim’s vehicle, drove that vehicle to a secluded
    location, and then raped the victim. 
    Id.
     at 102–03. After the jury convicted him of
    kidnapping, robbery, and rape,6 the defendant asserted on appeal that “there was no
    evidence presented in the case at hand tending to show that he confined, restrained,
    or removed [the victim] from one place to another for the purpose of ‘facilitating flight
    following the commission of the felony of rape,’ ” resulting in a “a fatal variance
    6At the close of evidence, the trial court dismissed the felonious automobile larceny
    charge. Faircloth, 297 N.C. at 104.
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    between the indictment and proof.” Id. at 107 (emphasis added). In agreeing that
    the defendant’s contention had merit, this Court observed that, while the defendant’s
    conviction could have been upheld had he “been tried on an indictment alleging that
    he restrained or removed [the victim] from one place to another for the purpose of
    facilitating the commission of the felony of rape,” “the evidence does not support the
    charge as laid in the indictment.” Id. at 108 (emphasis added).
    2. State v. Hall
    ¶ 20          In Hall, which this Court decided less than three years after it decided
    Faircloth, the defendant and an accomplice robbed a service station attendant at
    gunpoint, forced the victim into their car, and drove away in order to prevent the
    victim from calling for assistance.       Hall, 305 N.C. at 79–80.       After driving
    approximately five miles, the defendant stopped the car and, as the victim was
    leaving the vehicle, one of the men shot him in the back. Id. at 80. The defendant
    was subsequently charged with robbery with a dangerous weapon, first-degree
    kidnapping, and felonious assault, with the kidnapping charge resting upon the
    “asportation of the victim to facilitate the commission of the felony of armed robbery.”
    Id. at 79, 82.
    ¶ 21          In the course of challenging his kidnapping conviction on appeal, the defendant
    argued that, “since the evidence show[ed] the crime of armed robbery was complete
    at the time the victim was taken from the service station to” the point at which he
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    Opinion of the Court
    was let out of the car, “the kidnapping was for the purpose of facilitating flight, not
    for the purpose of facilitating armed robbery,” meaning that there was a fatal
    variance between the indictment and the evidence presented at trial. Id. at 82. In
    rejecting the defendant’s argument, this Court held that “[t]he purposes specified in
    [N.C.G.S. §] 14-39(a) are not mutually exclusive,” so that “[a] single kidnapping may
    be for the dual purposes of using the victim as a hostage or shield and for facilitating
    flight, or for the purposes of facilitating the commission of a felony and doing serious
    bodily harm to the victim.” Id. Based upon that logic, the Court held that, “[s]o long
    as the evidence proves the purpose charged in the indictment, the fact that it also
    shows the kidnapping was effectuated for another purpose enumerated in [N.C.G.S.
    §] 14-39(a) is immaterial and may be disregarded.” Id. The Court concluded that the
    record contained sufficient evidence to show that the defendant had kidnapped the
    victim “for the purpose of facilitating the armed robbery and also for the purpose of
    facilitating flight” and, therefore, “the evidence proved the crime charged in the
    indictment.” Id. (emphasis in original). As a result, we held that, “[a]lthough [the]
    defendant contends that the crime was ‘complete’ when [his accomplice] pointed his
    pistol at [the victim] and attempted to take property by this display of force, the fact
    that all essential elements of a crime [have] arisen does not mean the crime is no
    longer being committed,” with this Court opining that the fact that the “the crime
    was ‘complete’ does not mean it was completed.’ ” Id. (citing State v. Squire, 292 N.C.
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    494 (1977)).   Justice Britt, who had authored the Court’s opinion in Faircloth,
    dissented from his colleagues’ decision in Hall on the grounds that he was “unable to
    reconcile the holding of the majority in this case with our decision in [Faircloth].” 305
    N.C. at 91 (Britt, J., joined by Branch, C.J., and Exum, J., dissenting, in part).
    3. State v. Diaz
    ¶ 22         Four years later, we decided Diaz, in which the defendant had been charged
    with trafficking in marijuana on an acting in concert theory. 317 N.C. at 546. At
    that time, the relevant statute provided that “anyone who s[old], manufacture[d],
    deliver[ed], transport[ed], or possesse[d] more than 50 pounds of marijuana” was
    guilty of a felony. Id. at 547 (emphasis added) (citing N.C.G.S. § 90-95(h)(1) (1985)).
    At the defendant’s trial, the trial court instructed the jury that it could convict
    defendant if it found that he, acting together with the other defendants, “knowingly
    possessed or knowingly transported marijuana[.]” Id. at 553 (emphasis added). On
    appeal, the defendant argued that the trial court had erred by denying his motion to
    set aside the jury’s guilty verdict because “the verdict was ambiguous and lacked the
    unanimity required” by N.C.G.S. § 15A-1237 and Article I, Section 24 of the North
    Carolina Constitution. Id.
    ¶ 23         This Court agreed, holding that “a verdict of guilty following submission in the
    disjunctive of two or more possible crimes to the jury in a single issue is ambiguous
    and therefore fatally defective.” Id. (citing State v. McLamb, 
    313 N.C. 572
    , 577 (1985);
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    Opinion of the Court
    State v. Albarty, 
    238 N.C. 130
    , 133 (1953)). According to the Court, the “[s]ale,
    manufacture, delivery, transportation, and possession of 50 pounds or more of
    marijuana are separate trafficking offenses for which a defendant may be separately
    convicted and punished,” so that, “[b]y instructing the jury that it could find [the]
    defendant guilty of trafficking in marijuana if it found that [the] defendant knowingly
    possessed or knowingly transported 10,000 pounds or more of marijuana[,] the trial
    judge submitted two possible crimes to the jury,” with it being impossible to know
    whether the jury had unanimously found that the defendant knowingly possessed the
    marijuana, unanimously found that the defendant had knowingly transported the
    marijuana, or that some jurors had found that the defendant had knowingly
    possessed the marijuana while other jurors had found that the defendant had
    knowingly transported it. Id. at 554 (emphasis added). As a result, the Court
    concluded that the trial court’s instruction deprived the defendant of his
    constitutional right not to be convicted of a crime except on the basis of a unanimous
    jury verdict. Id.
    ¶ 24         The Court cautioned, however, that its decision in Diaz “[did] not mean that a
    simple verdict of guilty based on an indictment and instruction charging crimes in
    the disjunctive will always be fatally ambiguous.” Id. Instead, the Court stated that
    a reviewing court must examine “the verdict, the charge, the initial instructions by
    the trial judge to the jury[,] . . . and the evidence in a case [that] may remove any
    STATE V. ELDER
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    Opinion of the Court
    ambiguity created by the charge.” Id. After acknowledging that Hall had “reached
    results at variance with this opinion,” the Court stated that, “[i]nsofar as [Hall] and
    other opinions of this Court contain language inconsistent with the holding of this
    case they are overruled.” Id. at 555.7
    4. State v. Kyle
    ¶ 25          In Kyle, the defendant, who was armed with a pistol, broke into a mobile home
    in which his estranged wife and stepson were living.               
    333 N.C. at 692
    .       After
    exchanging words with his wife and stepson, the defendant shot his wife in the chest,
    dragged her outside to her automobile, placed her in the front seat, and ordered his
    stepson to enter the back seat. 
    Id.
     According to the stepson, the defendant’s wife was
    7 The parties disagree concerning the extent to which the Court’s decision in Diaz to
    overrule Hall encompassed the portions of the Hall opinion that are relevant to the present
    case. The State, on the one hand, contends that Diaz only overruled Hall with respect to the
    jury unanimity issue that was explicitly addressed in Hall, a question that did not include
    the kidnapping charge, while defendant argues that, in light of Diaz, “it would be reversible
    error to allow [defendant’s] conviction on the second count of first-degree kidnapping to stand
    when the jury may have convicted [defendant] of the second first-degree kidnapping charge
    for some other purpose than that alleged in the indictment.” Our subsequent decisions make
    clear that the State has the better of this disagreement. See Kyle, 
    333 N.C. at 695
     (relying
    on Hall in rejecting the defendant’s argument that the kidnapping of the defendant’s wife
    and stepson could not have facilitated the crime of burglary because the burglary was
    complete upon his entry into the house and noting that Diaz had overruled Hall “on other
    grounds”); State v. Bell, 
    351 N.C. 1
    , 30 (2004) (concluding that, to secure a kidnapping
    conviction under N.C.G.S. § 14-39(a), “[i]t is not necessary for the State to prove, nor for the
    jury to find, that a defendant committed a particular act other than that of confining,
    restraining, or removing the victim” and that, even if the trial court had instructed the jury
    disjunctively with respect to the various purposes which allegedly motivated the defendant’s
    actions, the requirement that the jury’s verdict be unanimous was not violated despite the
    possibility that individual jurors might have relied upon different purposes in determining
    that the defendant should be convicted) (citing State v. Hartness, 
    326 N.C. 561
     (1990)).
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    Opinion of the Court
    still alive at that time and calling the defendant’s name. 
    Id.
     After driving some
    distance, the defendant pulled the automobile to the side of the road, shot his wife in
    the side of the head to “shut [her] up,” and, after driving several more miles, pulled
    over again and dumped her body in a ditch. 
    Id.
     at 692–93. A grand jury returned
    bills of indictment charging the defendant with the first-degree murder and first-
    degree kidnapping of his wife, first-degree kidnapping of his stepson, and first-degree
    burglary, alleging in the kidnapping indictment that the defendant had “confined,
    restrained and removed [his wife] ‘for the purpose of facilitating the commission of
    the felonies of murder and burglary, and facilitating the flight of [the defendant]
    following his participation in the commission of the felonies.’ ” 
    Id. at 691, 693
    .
    ¶ 26         On appeal from a judgment based upon defendant’s conviction as charged, the
    defendant argued before this Court that the State had presented insufficient evidence
    “to establish that he restrained or removed [his wife] for either the purpose of
    burglarizing her home or for the purpose of murdering her.” 
    Id. at 694
    . In upholding
    defendant’s kidnapping conviction, this Court began by noting that “[t]he word
    facilitate has been defined as ‘to make easier.’ ” 
    Id.
     (quoting Webster’s Ninth New
    Collegiate Dictionary 444 (1988)). The Court then reasoned that “[r]estraining [his
    wife] and [stepson] in [his wife’s] apartment . . . made the crime of burglary easier by
    enabling [the] defendant to carry out his felonious intent” of killing her and that, had
    the defendant “not restrained the victim and had instead allowed her to flee from his
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    Opinion of the Court
    presence, he may not have completed his intent to kill her.” 
    Id. at 695
    . For that
    reason, the Court, in reliance upon Hall, rejected the defendant’s argument that “the
    burglary was complete upon entry into the house and that the kidnapping could not
    facilitate this crime.” 
    Id.
     Similarly, we noted with respect to the first-degree murder
    charge that, “after shooting [his wife] in her [home], [the] defendant dragged her and
    [his stepson] to her car while she was still living” and that, after driving several miles,
    defendant shot her in the head, evidence that “support[ed] a reasonable inference
    that [the] defendant removed the victim from her apartment for the purpose of
    facilitating the commission of murder.” 
    Id. at 696
    . As a result, the Court affirmed
    the defendant’s first-degree kidnapping conviction. Id.
    5. State v. Morris
    ¶ 27         In Morris, the defendant, who was a high school student, invited one of his
    female classmates to visit him at his apartment, called her upstairs, and “began to
    rub her shoulders and breasts.” 147 N.C. App. at 248. When the victim attempted
    to leave, the defendant “pushed her away from the door” and “punched her in the
    face,” causing her to black out.      Id.   Upon regaining consciousness, the victim
    discovered that the defendant was on top of her and that she was not wearing shorts
    or underwear. Id. at 248–49. After she began screaming, hitting, and scratching at
    the defendant in order to get him to stop what he was doing, the defendant hit the
    victim in the face, causing her to lose consciousness for a second time. Id. at 249. The
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    Opinion of the Court
    victim woke up the next morning in a storage closet outside the apartment, wearing
    only a tank top and feeling sore all over her body. Id. After a grand jury charged the
    defendant with second-degree rape and second-degree kidnapping, the jury convicted
    him of both offenses. Id. at 248.
    ¶ 28         On appeal, a majority of the Court of Appeals held that there was a fatal
    variance between the allegations of the indictment and the evidence, stating that
    [t]he indictment for second degree kidnapping stated [that
    the] defendant kidnapped the victim “for the purpose of
    facilitating the commission of a felony.” The indictment
    made no mention of facilitating defendant’s flight following
    the commission of a felony. At trial, the State again
    asserted only that the kidnapping facilitated the felony of
    second degree rape.
    ....
    In the case before us, the evidence presented shows the
    victim was confined in the apartment living room, she was
    knocked unconscious, she awoke once to find [the]
    defendant on top of her and her clothes removed, she was
    knocked unconscious again, and when she awoke a second
    time, she was locked in the storage closet outside. The
    evidence presented could possibly show [the] defendant
    kidnapped the victim for the purpose of facilitating the
    flight from the commission of a felony; however, this crime
    was not charged. There is no evidence [that the] defendant
    removed the victim to the storage closet for the purpose of
    raping her there. All of the physical evidence of a rape was
    found inside the apartment. While there was testimony
    that the victim kicked her way out of the storage closet,
    there was no evidence of a struggle or a rape inside the
    storage closet.
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    Opinion of the Court
    Id. at 250–51. In addition, the majority at the Court of Appeals rejected the State’s
    invocation of the continuous transaction doctrine on the grounds that “our Courts
    have not applied the continuous transaction doctrine to instances involving rape and
    kidnapping like the situation we have before us” and that, “[w]hile these two acts
    occurred close in time, they were not inseparable or concurrent actions,” with “[a]ll of
    the elements of the rape [having been] completed before defendant removed the
    victim to the storage closet.” Id. at 252.
    ¶ 29         Finally, the Court of Appeals disagreed with the State’s argument that Kyle
    was controlling, reasoning that, “[w]hile there is little question that [the] defendant’s
    actions made his flight from the scene easier and was an attempt to cover up his act,
    the removal of the victim to the storage closet in no way made defendant’s rape of her
    easier, as all the elements of rape were completed before the removal.” Id. at 252–
    53.   As a result, the Court of Appeals reversed the defendant’s second-degree
    kidnapping conviction over a dissent.        Although Judge Walker dissented on the
    grounds that he was “unable to reconcile the facts of this case” with those in Hall, id.
    at 253 (Walker, J., dissenting), this Court affirmed the Court of Appeals decision by
    means of a per curiam opinion, State v. Morris, 
    355 N.C. 488
     (2002).
    C. Second-Degree Kidnapping
    ¶ 30         In the present appeal, the State asserts that, by relying upon Morris and
    Jordan, the Court of Appeals’ decision in this case conflicts with this Court’s decision
    STATE V. ELDER
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    Opinion of the Court
    in Hall. According to the State, “it is not clear that the sexual assaults on [the victim]
    had ended” at the time that defendant had moved her to the second bedroom and
    that, “even if they were, Hall argues that the crime still is not necessarily over.”
    Arguing consistently with the reasoning that Judge Tyson adopted in his dissent, the
    State contends that “[d]efendant’s actions after the second kidnapping ‘continued [the
    victim’s] pain, damage, and trauma from the rape’ ” and that defendant’s actions in
    restraining the victim “allowed [d]efendant a chance to potentially destroy evidence
    by showering [and] escaping, and prolonged the victim’s pain, injuries, and trauma,”
    quoting Elder, ¶ 92 (Tyson, J. concurring, in part, and dissenting, in part). In
    addition, the State contends that, “[i]f the second kidnapping . . . in any way ‘made
    easier’ the commission of the rape, as the jury found, then [d]efendant facilitated the
    commission of the rape,” citing Kyle, 
    333 N.C. at 693
    . As a result, the State asserts
    that, when the evidence is viewed in the light most favorable to the State, it
    “support[s] a reasonable inference that [defendant] moved [the victim] into the closet
    to facilitate the commission of her rape.”
    ¶ 31         In the State’s view, both Jordan and Morris are distinguishable from this case
    in ways that the Court of Appeals failed to appreciate. As an initial matter, the State
    argues that the defendant in Jordan had been charged with burglary, which is
    “complete once the defendant enters a house,” whereas “the end of the commission of
    [a rape] is far more amorphous and difficult to define.” The State also contends that,
    STATE V. ELDER
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    Opinion of the Court
    even if this Court finds that distinction to be unpersuasive, Jordan was incorrectly
    decided in light of Hall and Kyle. In support of this assertion, the State points to the
    fact that “the trial court instructed the jury that the confinement, restraint, or
    removal of the victim had to be for ‘the purpose of facilitating [defendant’s]
    commission of committing first-degree rape,’ ” with the fact that the jury found that
    this element of the relevant crime existed beyond a reasonable doubt providing
    further indication that, “in [the] light most favorable to the State, the trial court’s
    decision to deny [d]efendant’s motion to dismiss this [count of first-degree
    kidnapping] was correct.” According to the State, “the second kidnapping helped
    facilitate the commission of rape because it prevented the victim from fleeing or
    getting help” and that the existence of “other grounds or theories the State could have
    used in indicting and convicting [defendant] is irrelevant” because “the second
    kidnapping could satisfy a theory in which the crime was done to facilitate a felony,
    and in which the crime was done to facilitate flight.”
    ¶ 32         Furthermore, the State argues that the majority at the Court of Appeals erred
    by relying upon Morris even though the Court of Appeals’ decision in that case had
    been affirmed per curiam by this Court, insisting that “the Court of Appeals
    myopically found [that] ‘there is no evidence defendant removed the victim for the
    purpose of raping her there,’ ” quoting Morris, 147 N.C. App. at 251. In the State’s
    view, this conclusion was “short-sighted” because the “jurors could, as they did in
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    Opinion of the Court
    Morris and in this matter, find that the facts supported that a second kidnapping
    facilitated the commission of a rape” by allowing the defendant to “destroy evidence
    by showering, prolong the victim’s pain and suffering, and evade capture by
    committing the second kidnapping.”
    ¶ 33         In seeking to persuade us that the Court of Appeals’ decision to overturn the
    second of defendant’s first-degree kidnapping convictions on fatal variance grounds
    should be upheld, defendant begins by noting that “[a] valid kidnapping indictment
    must allege [that] the defendant unlawfully confined, restrained, or removed a
    person, for one of the [ten] specific purposes set out in N.C.G.S. § 14-39” and that “the
    State is restricted at trial to proving the purpose(s) alleged in the indictment.”
    According to defendant, “the State had the burden of proving not only that [he]
    kidnapped [the victim] by moving her from her back bedroom to the front bedroom
    closet, but [also] that [he] did so with the specific intent to facilitate his commission
    of a felony, to wit: first degree rape; as alleged in the State’s indictment.” In light of
    the State’s failure to make the required evidentiary showing, defendant contends that
    the majority at the Court of Appeals properly concluded that Morris dictated a
    decision in his favor in this case.
    ¶ 34         We hold that the evidence adduced at trial does not support the second of the
    two counts of first-degree kidnapping alleged in the indictment and that the majority
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    Opinion of the Court
    did not err in reaching this conclusion. According to the relevant statutory provision,
    a defendant is guilty of kidnapping if he or she
    unlawfully confine[s], restrain[s], or remove[s] from one
    place to another, any other person 16 years of age or over
    without the consent of such person, or any other person
    under the age of 16 years without the consent of a parent
    or legal custodian of such person . . . if such confinement,
    restraint or removal is for the purpose of:
    (1) Holding such other person for a ransom or as a
    hostage or using such other person as a shield; or
    (2) Facilitating the commission of any felony or
    facilitating flight of any person following the
    commission of a felony; or
    (3) Doing serious bodily harm to or terrorizing the
    person so confined, restrained or removed or any
    other person; or
    (4) Holding such other person in involuntary servitude
    in violation of [N.C.G.S. §] 14-43.12.
    (5) Trafficking another person with the intent that the
    other person be held in involuntary servitude or
    sexual servitude in violation of [N.C.G.S. §] 14-
    43.11.
    (6) Subjecting or maintaining such other person for
    sexual servitude in violation of [N.C.G.S. §] 14-
    43.13.
    N.C.G.S. § 14-39(a) (2021) (emphasis added). A kidnapping is elevated from second-
    degree kidnapping to first-degree kidnapping in the event that “the person kidnapped
    either was not released by the defendant in a safe place or had been seriously injured
    or sexually assaulted.” N.C.G.S. § 14-39(b).
    STATE V. ELDER
    2022-NCSC-142
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶ 35          According to well-established North Carolina law, since “kidnapping is a
    specific intent crime, the State must prove that the defendant unlawfully confined,
    restrained, or removed the person for one of the [ten] purposes set out in the statute.”
    State v. Moore, 
    315 N.C. 738
    , 743 (1986);8 accord State v. China, 
    370 N.C. 627
    , 633
    (2018); State v. Prevatte, 
    356 N.C. 178
    , 252 (2002).          As a result, an indictment
    charging a defendant with kidnapping “must allege the purpose or purposes [for the
    kidnapping] upon which the State intends to rely, and the State is restricted at trial
    to proving the purposes alleged in the indictment.” Moore, 
    315 N.C. at 743
    ; see also
    Faircloth, 297 N.C. at 107 (observing that it “has long been the law of this state that
    a defendant must be convicted, if convicted at all, of the particular offense charged in
    the warrant or bill of indictment”). Although the indictment “may allege more than
    one purpose for the kidnapping, the State has to prove only one of the alleged
    purposes in order to sustain a kidnapping conviction. Moore, 
    315 N.C. at 743
    .
    ¶ 36          The indictment returned against defendant in this case for the purpose of
    charging him with kidnapping alleged that he
    kidnap[ped] [the victim], a person who had attained and
    [sic] the age of 16 years, by unlawfully confining,
    restraining[,] and removing her from one place to another
    without her consent and for the purpose of facilitating the
    8 The General Assembly amended N.C.G.S. § 14-39 in 2006 to add human trafficking
    and sexual servitude to the list of purposes for which a person could “unlawfully confine,
    restrain, or remove” another person so as to be guilty of kidnapping. See Act to Protect North
    Carolina’s Children/Sex Offender Law Changes, S.L. 2006-247, § 20(c), 
    2006 N.C. Sess. Laws 1065
    , 1084.
    STATE V. ELDER
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    Opinion of the Court
    commission of a felony, first degree rape, by moving [the
    victim] from the back bedroom to another bedroom and
    put[ting] her into a closet. [The victim] was not released
    by the defendant and she was forcibly confined to a closet
    until she freed herself sometime after the defendant left.
    (emphasis added.) As a result of the manner in which the kidnapping indictment was
    written, the State was obligated to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant
    had moved the victim to the closet in the second bedroom for the purpose of facilitating
    the commission of rape. See Moore, 
    315 N.C. at 743
    ; see also Morris, 147 N.C. App. at
    253.   A careful review of the record reveals, however, that all of the evidence
    presented at trial, even when taken in the light most favorable to the State, tended
    to show that defendant did not move the victim “from the back bedroom to another
    bedroom and put her into a closet” until after he had raped her, with nothing that
    defendant did during that process having made it any easier to have committed the
    actual rape.9 As a result, the record does not support the allegation that defendant
    moved the victim to the closet in the second bedroom for the purpose of facilitating
    the commission of rape. See Jordan, 186 N.C. App. at 584 (holding that, where an
    indictment alleges that the defendant kidnapped a victim for the purpose of
    facilitating the commission of a felony, “the felony that is the alleged purpose of the
    9N.C.G.S. § 14-27.21(a) provides, in pertinent part, that a defendant “is guilty of first-
    degree forcible rape if the person engages in vaginal intercourse with another person by force
    and against the will of the other person” and “[i]nflicts serious personal injury upon the victim
    or another person.”
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    Opinion of the Court
    kidnapping must occur after the kidnapping”); see also State v. Brooks, 
    138 N.C. App. 185
    , 192 (2000) (holding that, in order for the State to prove that the defendant
    kidnapped the victim for the purpose of facilitating the commission of assault with a
    deadly weapon inflicting serious injury, “the evidence at trial must have shown that
    [the] defendant kidnapped [the victim] before he shot her”).
    ¶ 37         The evidence elicited at trial would, of course, support a jury finding that
    defendant moved the victim to the closet in the second bedroom for the purpose of
    facilitating his flight following the commission of the rape. For example, the evidence
    tending to show that defendant locked the victim in the bedroom closet and took a
    shower could support a jury finding that the defendant facilitated his escape from
    raping the victim by destroying any biological evidence of the crime that might have
    been present on his body and leaving the scene before the victim had had an
    opportunity to call for help. See Morris, 147 N.C. App. at 252–53 (noting that “there
    is little question” that the defendant’s actions in moving the victim from the bedroom
    in which he had raped her to a storage closet outside the apartment “made his flight
    from the scene easier and was an attempt to cover up his act”). However, the grand
    jury simply did not allege that defendant moved the victim from one bedroom to
    another for the purpose of facilitating his flight following the commission of a felony.
    Cf. Faircloth, 297 N.C. at 108 (holding that, had the indictment alleged that the
    defendant had “restrained or removed the victim from one place to another for the
    STATE V. ELDER
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    Opinion of the Court
    purpose of facilitating the commission of the felony of rape, the conviction could be
    upheld,” and that, because the evidence contained in the record tended to show that
    the kidnapping took place before the rape, the record did not support the allegation
    contained in the indictment that the defendant had kidnapped the victim for the
    purpose of facilitating his flight from the commission of a felony).
    ¶ 38         The facts at issue in this case are virtually indistinguishable from those at
    issue in Morris. In this case, defendant moved the victim to the closet in the second
    bedroom after having raped her, just as the defendant in Morris moved his victim
    into a storage closet outside the apartment after he had raped her, with “[t]here
    [being] no evidence defendant removed [the victim] to the [closet in the second
    bedroom] for the purpose of raping her there.”            Morris, 147 N.C. App. at 251.
    Similarly, as in Morris, the indictment “[makes] no mention of facilitating defendant’s
    flight following the commission of a felony.” Id. at 250. In addition, the Court of
    Appeals in Morris rejected an argument that had been advanced by the State in that
    case, in reliance upon Kyle, that is very similar to an argument that the State has
    advanced in this case.
    The State also relies on State v. Kyle in arguing that “to
    facilitate” means “to make easier.” Therefore, any act
    which makes the commission of the felony easier will
    support a conviction of facilitating the felony. In Kyle, the
    kidnapping made the eventual murder easier because it
    prevented the victim from escaping. While we agree with
    this theory of the State’s argument and its definition of “to
    facilitate,” the facts in the case before us do not support this
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    Opinion of the Court
    theory. While there is little question defendant’s actions
    made his flight from the scene easier and was an attempt
    to cover up his act, the removal of the victim to the storage
    closet in no way made defendant’s rape of her easier, as all
    the elements of rape were completed before the removal.
    Again, defendant’s actions possibly would support a
    conviction of second degree kidnapping for the purpose of
    facilitating his flight from the commission of a rape;
    however, the State has failed to carry its burden in proving
    defendant’s actions facilitated defendant’s commission of
    the actual rape.
    Id. at 252–53 (citation omitted). In the same vein, by placing the victim in the closet
    in the second bedroom and apparently taking a shower, defendant may have
    facilitated his escape from or covered up evidence of the commission of the rape.
    However, we are unable to see how any of these actions made it any easier for
    defendant to rape the victim.
    ¶ 39         Apart from contending that the Court of Appeals took a “short-sighted” view
    in Morris, the State has made no attempt to persuade us that it is not controlling in
    this case, despite the fact that this Court has long held that “[p]er curiam decisions
    stand upon the same footing as those in which fuller citations of authorities are made
    and more extended opinions are written.” Bigham v. Foor, 
    201 N.C. 548
    , 549 (1931);
    accord Tinajero v. Balfour Beatty Infrastructure, Inc., 
    233 N.C. App. 748
    , 761 (2014);
    Total Renal Care of N.C. v. N.C. Dep’t of Health & Hum. Servs., 
    195 N.C. App. 378
    ,
    386 (2009); see also Mote v. White Lake Lumber Co., 
    192 N.C. 460
    , 465 (1926)
    STATE V. ELDER
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    Opinion of the Court
    (observing that a per curiam opinion “carries all the force of a formal utterance”).10
    In addition, Judge Tyson totally failed to make any mention of Morris in his
    dissenting opinion.      See Elder, ¶¶ 88–94 (Tyson, J., concurring, in part, and
    dissenting, in part). Instead, both the State and Judge Tyson simply contend that
    the outcome in this case is controlled by Hall. We do not find this argument to be
    persuasive.
    ¶ 40          As an initial matter, N.C.G.S. § 14-39(a) delineates ten specific purposes for
    which a defendant might “unlawfully confine, restrain, or remove” a victim in order
    to be guilty of kidnapping, with the indictment being required to allege that the
    defendant acted to effectuate one of these purposes and with the State being required
    to elicit substantial evidence to that effect in order to obtain the defendant’s
    conviction for kidnapping. See Moore, 
    315 N.C. at 743
     (noting that “[t]he indictment
    in a kidnapping case must allege the purpose or purposes upon which the State
    intends to rely, and the State is restricted at trial to proving the purposes alleged in
    the indictment”).     As we have already noted, the indictment returned against
    10The dissenting judge in Morris argued, as Judge Tyson has done in this case, that
    the majority’s decision was inconsistent with Hall. Morris, 147 N.C. App. at 253–54 (2001)
    (Walker, J., dissenting). For that reason, the issue before this Court in Morris was identical
    to the one that is before us now. See State v. Alexander, 
    380 N.C. 572
    , 2022-NCSC-26, ¶ 26
    (noting that, “when an appeal is taken pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7A-30(2), the only issues
    properly before the Court are those on which the dissenting judge in the Court of Appeals
    based his dissent” (cleaned up)); N.C. R. App. P. 14(b)(1). Our decision to affirm the Court of
    Appeals’ decision in Morris per curiam means that we effectively rejected the State’s
    contention that a fact pattern like the one at issue here was controlled by Hall. In other
    words, one can have either Hall or Morris, but not both.
    STATE V. ELDER
    2022-NCSC-142
    Opinion of the Court
    defendant in this case alleged that defendant kidnapped the victim by “unlawfully
    confining, restraining[,] and removing her from one place to another without her
    consent and for the purpose of facilitating the commission of a felony, first degree
    rape,” which means that the State was required to prove that defendant moved the
    victim to the bedroom closet for the purpose of facilitating the commission of a rape.
    (emphasis added.) For the reasons that we have already provided, the record simply
    does not support a determination that the movement of the victim from one bedroom
    to the other did anything to make any easier the commission of the rape, which had
    already occurred prior to the point in time at which the victim was moved to the closet
    in the second bedroom. Aside from the fact that an identical argument was rejected
    in Morris, the State has not cited any authority in support of its contention that,
    unlike a burglary, which is “complete once the defendant enters a house,” “the end of
    the commission of [rape] is far more amorphous and difficult to define.”11 On the
    contrary, we have clearly held that, “generally rape is not a continuous offense, but
    each act of intercourse constitutes a distinct and separate offense.” State v. Dudley,
    
    319 N.C. 656
    , 659 (1987) (cleaned up); accord State v. Carter, 
    198 N.C. App. 297
    , 305
    (2009); State v. Sapp, 
    190 N.C. App. 698
    , 704 (2008).
    11The State apparently overlooks the fact that this Court in Kyle specifically rejected
    the defendant’s argument that “the burglary was complete upon entry into the house and
    that the kidnapping could not facilitate this crime.” 
    333 N.C. at 695
    .
    STATE V. ELDER
    2022-NCSC-142
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶ 41         In addition, the State’s argument in reliance upon Hall simply cannot be
    squared with the sequence of events that transpired in this case.            Although
    defendant’s decision to move the victim to the closet in the second bedroom might
    have facilitated his ability to escape following the commission of the rape, we are
    completely unable to see how those actions facilitated the commission of the rape
    itself, which had already happened by that point. For the same reason, we have
    difficulty seeing how the defendant’s decision to kidnap the victim in Hall after
    having already robbed him served to facilitate the commission of the robbery rather
    than facilitating the defendant’s flight following the robbery, particularly given our
    observation that the defendant kidnapped the victim “so [the victim] couldn’t get to a
    telephone for a while,” Hall, 305 N.C. at 80. Indeed, the Court in Hall did not provide
    any explanation for how the asportation of the victim helped make the commission of
    the robbery any easier other than making the conclusory assertion that “[the
    defendant] kidnapped [the victim] for the purpose of facilitating the armed robbery
    and also for the purpose of facilitating flight” and the otherwise unsupported
    contention that “the fact that all essential elements of a crime have arisen does not
    mean that the crime is no longer being committed” and that the fact that “the crime
    was ‘complete’ does not mean it was completed.” 305 N.C. at 82–83.
    ¶ 42         The only authority that this Court cited in support of the last of these
    propositions was State v. Squire, a case in which three defendants were charged with
    STATE V. ELDER
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    Opinion of the Court
    having murdered a state trooper while fleeing from the commission of an armed
    robbery. 292 N.C. at 500–01. This Court upheld the defendants’ convictions for first-
    degree murder on the basis of the felony murder rule despite the defendants’
    argument that the robbery had been completed before one of them fatally shot the
    trooper on the grounds that, “[f]or the purposes of this rule, the underlying felony is
    not deemed terminated prior to the killing merely because the participants have then
    proceeded far enough with their activities to permit their conviction of the underlying
    felony.” Id. at 511. This holding from Squire would come to be known as the
    “continuous transaction doctrine,” pursuant to which “[a] killing is committed in the
    perpetration or attempted perpetration of another felony when there is no break in
    the chain of events between the felony and the act causing death, so that the felony
    and homicide are part of the same series of events, forming one continuous
    transaction.” State v. Wooten, 
    295 N.C. 378
    , 385–86 (1978). We have applied the
    continuous transaction doctrine in cases in which the defendant has committed
    murder and, within the same time frame, also committed another crime such as
    arson, see State v. Campbell, 
    332 N.C. 116
    , 120 (1992); armed robbery, see State v.
    Olson, 
    330 N.C. 557
    , 566 (1992); sexual offense, see State v. Thomas, 
    329 N.C. 423
    ,
    434 (1991); rape, see State v. Trull, 
    349 N.C. 428
    , 449 (1998); and kidnapping, see
    State v. Mann, 
    355 N.C. 294
    , 305 (2002). In addition, this Court has held that
    evidence is sufficient to convert what would otherwise be a second-degree sexual
    STATE V. ELDER
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    Opinion of the Court
    offense into a first-degree sexual offense in the event that it shows “a series of
    incidents forming a continuous transaction between [the] defendant’s wielding [of a
    dangerous or deadly weapon] and the sexual assault” even if the defendant was not
    holding the weapon at the exact moment that the sexual act was committed, State v.
    Whittington, 
    318 N.C. 114
    , 119–20 (1986), and that a conviction for robbery with a
    dangerous weapon can be upheld when “the defendant’s use or threatened use of a
    dangerous weapon . . . precede[s] or [is] concomitant with the taking, or [is] so joined
    with it in a continuous transaction by time and circumstance as to be inseparable,”
    State v. Hope, 
    317 N.C. 302
    , 306 (1986).
    ¶ 43         On the other hand, as the Court of Appeals recognized in Morris, we have not
    applied the continuous transaction doctrine to circumstances like those presented in
    that case and the one that is presently before us, see Morris, 147 N.C. App. at 252,
    and are not persuaded that we should do so in circumstances involving similar facts.
    Although defendant’s actions in raping the victim and moving her to the closet in the
    second bedroom “occurred close in time, they were not inseparable or concurrent
    actions” given that “[a]ll of the elements of the rape were completed before defendant
    removed the victim to the [second bedroom] closet.” Id.; see also Dudley, 
    319 N.C. at 659
    . In addition, unlike the vast majority of the cases in which the continuous
    transaction doctrine has been applied, this case does not involve the commission of a
    homicide. See Wooten, 295 N.C. at 385–86. Thus, we hold that the continuous
    STATE V. ELDER
    2022-NCSC-142
    Opinion of the Court
    transaction doctrine does not justify a decision to uphold the second of defendant’s
    first-degree kidnapping convictions in this case.
    ¶ 44          In light of this logic, we conclude that the Court’s statement in Hall that the
    fact that “the crime was ‘complete’ does not mean it was completed” sweeps too
    broadly, particularly given that the only support provided for that proposition stems
    from the application of the felony murder rule. See Squire, 292 N.C. at 511 (holding
    that, “[f]or the purposes of this rule, the underlying felony is not deemed terminated
    prior to the killing merely because the participants have then proceeded far enough
    with their activities to permit their conviction of the underlying felony” (emphasis
    added)). In addition, we are concerned that the Court in Hall failed to articulate any
    kind of limiting principle that can be used to identify the point at which the
    commission of a crime has been “completed.”12 If the point at which a crime has been
    committed is not, as the Court in Hall seemed to suggest it was not, the point at which
    all of the essential elements of the crime could be found beyond a reasonable doubt,
    there does not appear to be any meaningful limitation upon the extent to which acts
    committed by the defendant following the technical completion of a crime would
    12 As a matter of basic grammar, we cannot discern any difference between a
    “complete” crime and a crime that has been “completed” in light of the fact that “complete”
    and “completed” are simply two different forms of the same word. See New Oxford American
    Dictionary 355 (3d ed. 2010) (defining “complete” as an adjective meaning “having run its full
    course; finished: the restoration of the chapel is complete,” and defining “completed” as a
    transitive verb meaning “finished making or doing: he completed his Ph.D. in 1983”);
    Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary 254 (11th ed. 2007) (defining both “complete” and
    “completed” as transitive verbs meaning “to bring to an end” or “to mark the end of”).
    STATE V. ELDER
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    Opinion of the Court
    suffice to support a finding of facilitation of the commission of a rape for purposes of
    the kidnapping statute.     See State v. Dew, 
    379 N.C. 64
    , 2021-NCSC-124, ¶ 29
    (observing that, although “the concept of an assault can be broader than each
    individual harmful contact, . . . allowing for a separate charge for each non-
    simultaneous contact would erase any limiting principle and allow the State to charge
    a defendant for every punch in a fight”). For that reason, we are not persuaded that
    the statement from Hall upon which the State relies in this case provides adequate
    support for the trial court’s decision to allow defendant to be convicted of kidnapping
    on the grounds that his conduct facilitated the commission of the rape of the victim.
    ¶ 45         Finally, we conclude that the State’s position, and the holding in Hall upon
    which it rests, cannot be squared with the manner in which the kidnapping statute
    is written. According to the relevant statutory language, a defendant is guilty of
    kidnapping if he or she unlawfully confines, restrains, or removes the victim from one
    place to another “for the purpose of . . . [f]acilitating the commission of any felony or
    facilitating flight of any person following the commission of a felony.” N.C.G.S. § 14-
    39(a)(2) (emphasis added). The use of the disjunctive “or” in N.C.G.S. § 14-39(a)(2)
    plainly indicates that the defendant is subject to the criminal sanction based upon
    the commission of a kidnapping if his or her acts occurred for the purpose of either
    facilitating the commission of a felony or facilitating his or her escape following the
    commission of a felony. See Davis v. N.C. Granite Corp., 
    259 N.C. 672
    , 765 (1963)
    STATE V. ELDER
    2022-NCSC-142
    Opinion of the Court
    (holding that, “where a statute contains two clauses which prescribe its applicability,
    and the clauses are connected by a disjunctive (e.g., ‘or’), the application of the statute
    is not limited to cases falling within both clauses, but will apply to cases falling within
    either of them” (cleaned up)). An argument that defendant’s actions in moving the
    victim to the closet in the second bedroom after having raped her “made the
    commission of the rape easier” because it “helped [d]efendant get away with the rape”
    and “made it easier for [him] to shower and destroy evidence” effectively conflates
    actions that made it more likely that defendant would avoid apprehension for the
    rape with the actions necessary to commit the rape itself.             In other words, the
    argument upon which the State relies would, if adopted, effectively eliminate the
    distinction between the commission of a kidnapping for the purpose of “facilitating
    the commission of any felony” and the commission of a kidnapping for the purpose of
    “facilitating flight of any person following the commission of a felony,” a result that
    cannot be squared with the unambiguous statutory language making facilitation of
    the commission of a crime and flight from a crime two different bases for finding that
    the defendant has committed a kidnapping. See State v. Morgan, 
    372 N.C. 609
    , 614
    (2019) (recognizing that “a statute may not be interpreted in a manner which would
    render any of its words superfluous” (cleaned up)).13
    13 Similarly, we are not persuaded by the State’s argument that moving the victim to
    the closet in the second bedroom facilitated the commission of the rape because it “prolong[ed]
    STATE V. ELDER
    2022-NCSC-142
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶ 46          As a result, we hold that the portions of our prior decision in Hall upon which
    the State and the dissenting opinion at the Court of Appeals relied are fundamentally
    inconsistent with Faircloth and Morris and, therefore, must be overruled. See Janus
    v. Am. Fed’n of State, Cnty., and Mun. Emps., Council 31, 
    138 S. Ct. 2448
    , 2478–79
    (2018) (listing factors that should be considered in the course of deciding whether a
    prior decision should be overruled, including “the quality of [the prior decision’s]
    reasoning, the workability of the rule it established, its consistency with other related
    decisions, developments since the decision was handed down, and reliance on the
    decision”). For that reason, we hold that, in instances in which the grand jury has
    alleged that a defendant unlawfully confined, restrained, or removed a victim from
    one place to another without his or her consent for the purpose of facilitating the
    commission of a felony, “the felony that is the alleged purpose of the kidnapping must
    occur after the kidnapping.” Jordan, 186 N.C. App. at 584; see also Faircloth, 297
    [her] pain and suffering” and “continued the trauma of the rape.” The infliction of physical
    or emotional pain, while inherent in the commission of the offense, is not an element of rape,
    nor is a victim’s immediate trauma after the rape even sufficient to elevate a particular rape
    from a second-degree to a first-degree offense. See State v. Boone, 
    307 N.C. 198
    , 205 (1982)
    (holding that, in order for mental injury to constitute the “serious personal injury” sufficient
    to support a conviction for first-degree rape, “ordinarily the mental injury inflicted must be
    more than the res gestae results present in every forcible rape and sexual offense,” so that
    the State must “offer proof that such injury was not only caused by the defendant but that
    the injury extended for some appreciable time beyond the incidents surrounding the crime
    itself”), overruled on other grounds by State v. Richmond, 
    347 N.C. 412
    , 430 (1998).
    STATE V. ELDER
    2022-NCSC-142
    Opinion of the Court
    N.C. at 108; Morris, 147 N.C. App. at 253; Brooks, 138 N.C. App. at 192.14 In addition,
    we hold that, in this case, all of the evidence presented at trial, when considered in
    the light most favorable to the State, tends to show that the felony that defendant
    allegedly attempted to facilitate by kidnapping the victim occurred before defendant
    moved the victim to the closet in the second bedroom. As a result, there is a fatal
    variance between the allegation in the indictment that defendant moved the victim
    to the closet “for the purpose of facilitating the commission of a felony, first degree
    rape,” and the evidence elicited at trial that tended to show that the rape of the victim
    had been completed prior to the point in time at which the relevant kidnapping
    allegedly occurred, so that the trial court erred by failing to grant defendant’s motion
    to dismiss the second count of first-degree kidnapping for insufficiency of the
    evidence. See State v. Gibson, 
    169 N.C. 318
    , 322 (1915) (holding that a dismissal
    based upon the existence of a fatal variance between the indictment and the evidence
    “is based on the assertion, not that there is no proof of a crime having been committed,
    but that there is none which tends to prove the particular offense charged in the bill
    14  Other than Kyle, in which, unlike in Hall, the Court attempted to explain how
    defendant’s restraint of the victims facilitated the commission of burglary, the only other case
    that appears to have followed Hall is State v. Holloway, an unpublished decision in which
    the Court of Appeals rejected the defendant’s assertion that the State had failed to prove that
    he had kidnapped the victim “to facilitate the attempted armed robbery” given that the
    evidence tended to show that the robbery was complete before the defendant placed the victim
    in his car. No. COA 16-940. 658, 
    2017 WL 2118712
    , at *5 (N.C. Ct. App. May 16, 2017)
    (unpublished). Aside from the fact that Holloway is unpublished and lacks any precedential
    value, it is inconsistent with Faircloth, Morris, Jordan, and Brooks and, for that reason, offers
    minimal support for a decision adhering to Hall.
    STATE V. ELDER
    2022-NCSC-142
    Opinion of the Court
    has been committed” or, “[i]n other words, the proof does not fit the allegation”)
    (emphasis in original).
    III.     Conclusion
    ¶ 47         Thus, for the reasons set forth above, we hold that the trial court erred by
    denying defendant’s motion to dismiss the second first-degree kidnapping charge that
    had been lodged against defendant given that the evidence elicited at trial, when
    taken in the light most favorable to the State, did not support a finding that
    defendant had committed the crime alleged in the indictment. As a result, we affirm
    the decision of the Court of Appeals and remand this case to the Court of Appeals for
    further remand to the trial court for additional proceedings not inconsistent with this
    opinion.
    AFFIRMED.
    Chief Justice NEWBY dissenting.
    ¶ 48         This case requires us to determine whether the trial court erred when it denied
    defendant’s motion to dismiss a kidnapping charge. This Court affirms a trial court’s
    denial of a motion to dismiss if, when viewed in the light most favorable to the State,
    there is substantial evidence that the defendant committed each essential element of
    the charged crime. The essential element at issue in the present case is whether
    defendant kidnapped the victim for the purpose of facilitating the commission of rape.
    Based on our current case law, the record evidence is sufficient to allow a rational
    juror to conclude that the second kidnapping facilitated the rape. Thus, the trial
    court’s denial of defendant’s motion to dismiss should be affirmed. Nevertheless, the
    majority overrules forty years of precedent to reach its decision to affirm the Court of
    Appeals’ reversal of defendant’s conviction. I respectfully dissent.
    ¶ 49         Defendant broke into the 80-year-old victim’s house through the front door and
    kidnapped the victim by forcibly moving her to a bedroom. Defendant raped the
    victim in the bedroom and kidnapped her again by moving her to a different bedroom
    and tying her to a chair. The victim told defendant that her daughter was on the way,
    and defendant responded that if the victim’s daughter arrived while he was still
    there, he would kill the victim. Defendant barricaded the bedroom door and told the
    victim that she better not come out until he was finished taking a shower. The victim
    STATE V. ELDER
    2022-NCSC-142
    Newby, C.J., dissenting
    eventually escaped from the bedroom to find the shower still running, but defendant
    had already left the house.
    ¶ 50         Defendant was charged, inter alia, with one count of first-degree rape and two
    counts of first-degree kidnapping. The indictment provides as follows regarding the
    kidnapping charges:
    II. And the jurors for the State upon their oath present that
    on or about the date(s) of offense shown and in the county
    named above [defendant] unlawfully, willfully and
    feloniously did
    kidnap [the victim], a person who had attained and the age
    of 16 years, by unlawfully confining, restraining and
    removing her from one place to another without her
    consent and for the purpose of facilitating the commission
    of a felony, first[-]degree rape, by moving [the victim] from
    the kitchen to the back bedroom. [The victim] was not
    released by . . . defendant in a safe place and was bruised.
    III. And the jurors for the State upon their oath present
    that on or about the date(s) of offense shown and in the
    county named above [defendant] unlawfully, willfully and
    feloniously did
    kidnap [the victim], a person who had attained and the age
    of 16 years, by unlawfully confining, restraining and
    removing her from one place to another without her
    consent and for the purpose of facilitating the commission
    of a felony, first[-]degree rape, by moving [the victim] from
    the back bedroom to another bedroom and put her into a
    closet. [The victim] was not released by . . . defendant and
    she was forcibly confined to a closet until she freed herself
    sometime after . . . defendant left.
    Defendant moved to dismiss the second kidnapping charge. The trial court denied
    defendant’s motion, and the jury found defendant guilty on all counts. Defendant
    STATE V. ELDER
    2022-NCSC-142
    Newby, C.J., dissenting
    appealed.
    ¶ 51         On appeal the Court of Appeals reasoned that this case’s outcome should be
    controlled by its prior decision in State v. Morris, 
    147 N.C. App. 247
    , 
    555 S.E.2d 353
    (2001), aff’d per curiam, 
    355 N.C. 488
    , 
    562 S.E.2d 421
     (2002). State v. Elder, 
    278 N.C. App. 493
    , 2021-NCCOA-350, ¶ 36 (citing Morris, 
    147 N.C. App. at
    248–49, 
    555 S.E.2d at
    353–54 (reversing the defendant’s kidnapping conviction when the State alleged
    that the defendant kidnapped the victim to facilitate a rape, but the evidence tended
    to show only that the defendant kidnapped the victim to facilitate flight)). The Court
    of Appeals also cited its prior decision in State v. Jordan, 
    186 N.C. App. 576
    , 
    651 S.E.2d 917
     (2007), for the proposition that “the felony that is the alleged purpose of
    the kidnapping must occur after the kidnapping.” Elder, ¶ 34 (quoting Jordan, 
    186 N.C. App. at 584
    , 
    651 S.E.2d at 922
    ). Therefore, according to the Court of Appeals
    majority, because defendant had already completed the rape when he moved the
    victim from the first bedroom to the second bedroom, defendant could not have moved
    the victim for the purpose of facilitating the rape. Id. ¶ 32. The Court of Appeals thus
    reversed defendant’s second kidnapping conviction. Id.
    ¶ 52         The dissenting opinion at the Court of Appeals, however, relying on an older,
    authored opinion from this Court, noted that “[t]he occurrence of all essential
    elements of a crime does not mean the commission of a crime ceases.” Id. ¶ 89 (Tyson,
    J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) (citing State v. Hall, 
    305 N.C. 77
    , 82–
    STATE V. ELDER
    2022-NCSC-142
    Newby, C.J., dissenting
    83, 
    286 S.E.2d 552
    , 556 (1982), overruled on other grounds by State v. Diaz, 
    317 N.C. 545
    , 
    346 S.E.2d 488
     (1986)). According to the dissenting opinion, the trial court did
    not err in denying defendant’s motion to dismiss the second kidnapping charge
    because the second kidnapping facilitated the commission of the rape by preventing
    the victim from contacting help or fleeing, prolonging the victim’s pain and trauma,
    and allowing defendant an opportunity to destroy evidence. Id. ¶ 92. As such, the
    dissenting opinion would have found no error in defendant’s second kidnapping
    conviction. Id. ¶ 94. The State appealed to this Court based upon the dissenting
    opinion at the Court of Appeals.
    ¶ 53         The task here is to determine whether the trial court erred in denying
    defendant’s motion to dismiss the second kidnapping charge. This Court reviews a
    trial court’s denial of a motion to dismiss de novo. State v. Blagg, 
    377 N.C. 482
    ,
    2021-NCSC-66, ¶ 10 (quoting State v. Golder, 
    374 N.C. 238
    , 250, 
    839 S.E.2d 782
    , 790
    (2020)). “In ruling on a motion to dismiss, the trial court need determine only whether
    there is substantial evidence of each essential element of the crime and that the
    defendant is the perpetrator.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Golder, 374 N.C. at 249, 839 S.E.2d at
    790). Substantial evidence only requires “more than a scintilla of evidence,” State v.
    Earnhardt, 
    307 N.C. 62
    , 66, 
    296 S.E.2d 649
    , 652 (1982), or “the amount necessary to
    persuade a rational juror to accept a conclusion,” Blagg, ¶ 10 (quoting Golder, 374
    N.C. at 249, 839 S.E.2d at 790). “In evaluating the sufficiency of the evidence to
    STATE V. ELDER
    2022-NCSC-142
    Newby, C.J., dissenting
    support a criminal conviction, the evidence must be considered in the light most
    favorable to the State; the State is entitled to every reasonable intendment and every
    reasonable inference to be drawn therefrom.” Id. (quoting Golder, 374 N.C. at 249–50,
    839 S.E.2d at 790).
    ¶ 54         At the time of defendant’s crimes, kidnapping was defined as follows:
    (a) Any person who shall unlawfully confine, restrain, or
    remove from one place to another, any other person
    16years of age or over without the consent of such person,
    or any other person under the age of 16 years without the
    consent of a parent or legal custodian of such person, shall
    be guilty of kidnapping if such confinement, restraint or
    removal is for the purpose of:
    ....
    (2) Facilitating the commission of any felony or
    facilitating flight of any person following the
    commission of a felony[.]
    N.C.G.S. § 14-39 (2021). “Facilitate” simply means to make the commission of the
    crime easier. State v. Kyle, 
    333 N.C. 687
    , 694, 
    430 S.E.2d 412
    , 415–16 (1993).
    ¶ 55         “It has long been the law of this state that a defendant must be convicted, if
    convicted at all, of the particular offense charged in the warrant or bill of indictment.”
    State v. Faircloth, 
    297 N.C. 100
    , 107, 
    253 S.E.2d 890
    , 894 (1979). The indictment in
    the present case stated that defendant committed the second kidnapping “for the
    purpose of facilitating the commission of a felony, first[-]degree rape, by moving [the
    victim] from the back bedroom to another bedroom.” Therefore, the relevant question
    is whether substantial evidence shows that the second kidnapping facilitated, or
    STATE V. ELDER
    2022-NCSC-142
    Newby, C.J., dissenting
    made easier, the commission of the rape.
    ¶ 56         The majority contends that a kidnapping cannot facilitate a rape that has
    already occurred. Our long-standing case law, however, holds that an act can
    facilitate the commission of a crime even if the act occurs after the elements of the
    crime have all been met. See Hall, 
    305 N.C. at
    82–83, 
    286 S.E.2d at 556
     (“[T]he fact
    that all essential elements of a crime have arisen does not mean the crime is no longer
    being committed. That the crime was ‘complete’ does not mean it was completed.”);
    Kyle, 
    333 N.C. at 694
    , 
    430 S.E.2d at
    415–16 (noting that an act “facilitate[s]” a crime
    if it makes the crime “easier”).
    ¶ 57         Forty years ago, this Court decided a similar case. In Hall the defendant sought
    to reverse his kidnapping conviction, arguing that the State failed to prove the theory
    charged in the indictment—i.e., that the defendant kidnapped the victim for the
    purpose of facilitating the commission of armed robbery. Hall, 
    305 N.C. at 82
    , 
    286 S.E.2d at 555
    . The defendant contended there was a fatal variance in the indictment
    because he kidnapped the victim to facilitate his flight rather than the commission of
    the armed robbery. 
    Id.
     We rejected the defendant’s argument and explained that
    [t]he purposes specified in [N.C.]G.S. [§] 14-39(a) are not
    mutually exclusive. A single kidnapping may be for the
    dual purposes of using the victim as a hostage or shield and
    for facilitating flight, or for the purposes of facilitating the
    commission of a felony and doing serious bodily harm to the
    victim. So long as the evidence proves the purpose charged
    in the indictment, the fact that it also shows the
    kidnapping was effectuated for another purpose
    STATE V. ELDER
    2022-NCSC-142
    Newby, C.J., dissenting
    enumerated in [N.C.]G.S. [§] 14-39(a) is immaterial and
    may be disregarded.
    Id. Thus, we determined that the defendant kidnapped the victim both for the
    purpose of facilitating the armed robbery and for the purpose of facilitating flight. Id.
    ¶ 58         The defendant in Hall also contended that the kidnapping could not have
    facilitated the armed robbery because the armed robbery was already complete when
    the kidnapping occurred. Id. We again rejected the defendant’s argument and further
    explained that “the fact that all essential elements of a crime have arisen does not
    mean the crime is no longer being committed. That the crime was ‘complete’ does not
    mean it was completed.” Id. at 82–83, 
    286 S.E.2d at 556
    . Therefore, we found no error
    in the defendant’s kidnapping conviction. Id. at 83, 
    286 S.E.2d at 556
    .
    ¶ 59         Similarly, nearly thirty years ago in Kyle the indictment charged that the
    defendant kidnapped the victim “for the purpose of facilitating the commission of the
    felonies of murder and burglary, and facilitating the flight of [the defendant]
    following his participation in the commission of the felonies of burglary and murder.”
    Kyle, 
    333 N.C. at 693
    , 
    430 S.E.2d at 415
    . The defendant argued that the burglary was
    complete upon his entrance into the house and that the subsequent kidnapping thus
    could not have facilitated the commission of the burglary. 
    Id. at 695
    , 
    430 S.E.2d at 416
    . We rejected the defendant’s contention and cited Hall for the proposition that
    “the fact that all the essential elements of a crime have arisen does not mean the
    crime is no longer being committed. That the crime was ‘complete’ does not mean it
    STATE V. ELDER
    2022-NCSC-142
    Newby, C.J., dissenting
    was completed.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Hall, 
    305 N.C. at
    82–83, 
    286 S.E.2d at 556
    ).1 We then
    provided the following analysis:
    [T]he evidence shows that, once [the] defendant entered
    the apartment, he waved the gun around and backed [the
    victim] and her son . . . up against a side wall in the living
    room. [The d]efendant was standing between the victim
    and the door to the apartment. Restraining the victim and
    her son in her apartment in this manner made the crime of
    burglary easier by enabling [the] defendant to carry out his
    felonious intent. If [the] defendant had not restrained the
    victim and had instead allowed her to flee from his
    presence, he may not have completed his intent to kill her.
    
    Id.
     Thus, we concluded that the evidence supported a reasonable inference that the
    defendant kidnapped the victim for the purpose of facilitating his commission of
    murder and burglary. 
    Id. at 696
    , 
    430 S.E.2d at 417
    .
    ¶ 60          Here there is substantial evidence that the second kidnapping facilitated
    defendant’s commission of the rape, as well as facilitating flight. Just as the
    kidnapping in Kyle “made the crime of burglary easier by enabling [the] defendant to
    carry out his felonious intent,” Kyle, 
    333 N.C. at 695
    , 
    430 S.E.2d at 416
    , the second
    kidnapping in the present case made the crime of rape easier by allowing defendant
    the opportunity to shower and destroy evidence before the victim could seek help. The
    1 We recognized in Kyle that Hall had been overruled on other grounds by Diaz, 
    317 N.C. 545
    , 
    346 S.E.2d 488
    . See Kyle, 
    333 N.C. at 695
    , 
    430 S.E.2d at 416
    . Our decision in Diaz
    did not overrule our determination in Hall that “the fact that all the essential elements of a
    crime have arisen does not mean the crime is no longer being committed.” See 
    id.
     (quoting
    Hall, 
    305 N.C. at
    82–83, 
    286 S.E.2d at 556
    ). In footnote 7, the majority in this case concedes
    that this is a correct understanding of the case law.
    STATE V. ELDER
    2022-NCSC-142
    Newby, C.J., dissenting
    second kidnapping also prolonged the victim’s torment because defendant’s use of
    threat and force continued. Though the elements of rape were already satisfied at the
    time of the second kidnapping, “the fact that all essential elements of a crime have
    arisen does not mean the crime is no longer being committed. That the crime was
    ‘complete’ does not mean it was completed.” Hall, 
    305 N.C. at
    82–83, 
    286 S.E.2d at 556
    . Therefore, under Hall and Kyle, the evidence in the present case, viewed in the
    light most favorable to the State, is sufficient to allow a rational juror to conclude
    that the second kidnapping facilitated the commission of the rape. The trial court
    thus did not err in denying defendant’s motion to dismiss the second kidnapping
    charge.
    ¶ 61          Now the majority overrules this binding precedent of forty years in Hall and
    its progeny. Instead, the majority concludes that our decision here is controlled by a
    per curiam affirmance of the Court of Appeals’ decision in Morris.2 See Morris, 
    355 N.C. 488
    , 
    562 S.E.2d 421
    . The majority relies on a per curiam opinion despite it being
    well understood that an authored opinion should be given more weight than a per
    curiam opinion.
    ¶ 62          Further, the facts in Morris are distinguishable from those in the present case.
    In Morris the defendant knocked the victim unconscious and raped her. Morris, 147
    2  Interestingly, in a different opinion released today, the same majority gives less
    weight to a per curiam opinion than to an authored opinion. See Cedarbrook Residential Ctr.,
    Inc. v. N.C. Dep’t of Health & Hum. Servs., 2022-NCSC-120.
    STATE V. ELDER
    2022-NCSC-142
    Newby, C.J., dissenting
    N.C. App. at 248–49, 
    555 S.E.2d at 354
    . The victim awoke during the rape, but the
    defendant knocked her unconscious again. 
    Id.
     When the victim awoke for the second
    time, she was locked in a storage closet. Id. at 249, 
    555 S.E.2d at 354
    . Defendant was
    charged with second-degree rape and second-degree kidnapping. Id. at 248, 
    555 S.E.2d at 353
    . The indictment stated that the defendant kidnapped the victim “for
    the purpose of facilitating the commission of a felony.” Id. at 250, 
    555 S.E.2d at 355
    .
    The trial court denied the defendant’s motion to dismiss the second-degree
    kidnapping charge, id. at 250, 
    555 S.E.2d at 354
    , and a jury found the defendant
    guilty of both charges, id. at 248, 
    555 S.E.2d at 353
    . The defendant argued to the
    Court of Appeals that the trial court erred by denying his motion to dismiss because
    the evidence was insufficient to show he kidnapped the victim for the purpose of
    facilitating the rape. Id. at 250, 
    555 S.E.2d at 354
    .
    ¶ 63         The Court of Appeals agreed with our explanation in Kyle that “ ‘to facilitate’
    means ‘to make easier’ ” but concluded that the facts before it did not support the
    theory that the kidnapping made the rape easier. Id. at 252, 
    555 S.E.2d at 356
    (quoting Kyle, 
    333 N.C. at 694
    , 
    430 S.E.2d at
    415–16). Specifically, the Court of
    Appeals reasoned as follows:
    While there is little question [the] defendant’s actions
    made his flight from the scene easier and was an attempt
    to cover up his act, the removal of the victim to the storage
    closet in no way made [the] defendant’s rape of her easier,
    as all the elements of rape were completed before the
    removal. Again, defendant’s actions possibly would support
    STATE V. ELDER
    2022-NCSC-142
    Newby, C.J., dissenting
    a conviction of second[-]degree kidnapping for the purpose
    of facilitating his flight from the commission of a rape;
    however, the State has failed to carry its burden in proving
    [the] defendant’s actions facilitated [the] defendant’s
    commission of the actual rape.
    
    Id.
     at 252–53, 
    555 S.E.2d at 356
    . Thus, the Court of Appeals reversed the defendant’s
    kidnapping conviction. Id. at 253, 
    555 S.E.2d at 356
    . We then issued a per curiam
    opinion affirming the Court of Appeals’ decision. See Morris, 
    355 N.C. 488
    , 
    562 S.E.2d 421
    .
    ¶ 64          The majority’s reliance on our per curiam affirmance in Morris to decide the
    present case is misguided. First, by its very nature, a per curiam affirmance does not
    articulate any reasoning to support the decision. Further, unlike in Morris, the record
    evidence here, viewed in the light most favorable to the State, shows that the second
    kidnapping made the rape easier. Specifically, the primary purpose of the second
    kidnapping was to allow defendant to remain in the victim’s house for a longer period
    in order to destroy evidence. Moreover, defendant tied the victim to a chair and moved
    her to the second bedroom immediately after raping her and while she was conscious.
    These facts demonstrate the victim’s continued torment and defendant’s continued
    use of threat or force. Because such evidence was lacking in Morris, that case is
    distinguishable and thus should not control the outcome of the present case.
    ¶ 65          In summary, an act “facilitates” a crime when it makes that crime easier. See
    Kyle, 
    333 N.C. at 694
    , 
    430 S.E.2d at
    415–16. Further, our long-standing case law
    STATE V. ELDER
    2022-NCSC-142
    Newby, C.J., dissenting
    establishes that a subsequent act can make a crime easier because “the fact that all
    essential elements of a crime have arisen does not mean the crime is no longer being
    committed. That the crime was ‘complete’ does not mean it was completed.” Hall, 
    305 N.C. at
    82–83, 
    286 S.E.2d at 556
    . Here defendant kidnapped the victim after raping
    her so that he could take a shower and destroy evidence. These facts are sufficient for
    a rational juror to conclude that the second kidnapping made the rape easier. The
    trial court thus properly denied defendant’s motion to dismiss the second kidnapping
    charge. To reach its decision to affirm the Court of Appeals’ reversal of defendant’s
    conviction, the majority today overrules forty years of precedent. I respectfully
    dissent.
    Justice BERGER joins in this dissenting opinion.