State of Tennessee v. Michael Green ( 2019 )


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  •                                                                                           06/28/2019
    IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT KNOXVILLE
    January 23, 2019 Session
    STATE OF TENNESSEE v. MICHAEL GREEN
    Appeal from the Criminal Court for Knox County
    No. 105761A Steven W. Sword, Judge
    No. E2018-00350-CCA-R3-CD
    The Defendant, Michael Green was convicted by a Knox County Criminal Court jury of
    two counts of aggravated kidnapping, a Class B felony, and two counts of attempted
    aggravated kidnapping, a Class C felony. T.C.A. §§ 39-12-101(a)(1)-(3) (2018) (criminal
    attempt); 39-13-304(a) (2018) (aggravated kidnapping). The trial court merged the
    convictions into a single aggravated kidnapping judgment and sentenced the Defendant, a
    Range II offender, to fifteen years to be served at 100%. On appeal, the Defendant
    contends that (1) the evidence is insufficient to support a conviction of aggravated
    kidnapping or attempted aggravated kidnapping, (2) the trial court erred in denying his
    motion to dismiss the case due to the lack of a preliminary hearing or for a delayed
    preliminary hearing, (3) the court erred in denying his motion to suppress his pretrial
    statement, and (4) the court erred in denying his request for a jury instruction pursuant to
    State v. White, 
    362 S.W.3d 559
    , 578 (Tenn. 2012). Upon review, we affirm the judgment
    of the trial court.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Criminal Court Affirmed
    ROBERT H. MONTGOMERY, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JAMES
    CURWOOD WITT, JR., and D. KELLY THOMAS, JR., JJ., joined.
    Gerald L. Gulley, Jr. (at motion for new trial and on appeal), and Robert L. Jolley, Jr. (at
    trial), and Megan Swain (at trial), Knoxville, Tennessee, for the Appellant, Michael
    Green.
    Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Jeffrey D. Zentner, Assistant
    Attorney General; Charme Allen, District Attorney General; Ta Kisha M. Fitzgerald,
    Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.
    OPINION
    The Defendant’s convictions relate to a June 5, 2015 incident involving a female
    college student in a Knoxville shopping center parking lot.
    At the trial, Knox County Emergency Communications District employee Michael
    Mays testified that he compiled the records related to the present case. A recording of a
    9-1-1 call was played for the jury. In it, a female caller stated that she had just seen two
    men try to push a woman into the back of a “van” in a parking lot. She said the men were
    “jumping on the interstate” traveling east. She said the victim had screamed, “Let me go.
    Let me go.” She described the vehicle as an old, rusted, brown “Jeep” or “Bronco.” She
    said that the men “shoved [the victim] in the car,” that someone at a Mexican restaurant
    told the men to release the victim, and that the caller followed them but was unable to
    obtain a license plate number.
    The twenty-two-year-old victim testified that she had been a college student on the
    date of the incident and had been working two summer jobs. She said that on the date of
    the incident, she had gone shopping for dog treats and clothing around 10:00 p.m. She
    said she went into the store with her wallet, cell phone, identification, and keys. She said
    her wallet was in her hand. She said she parked a distance from the store because she
    liked to walk.
    The victim testified that she left the store and unlocked her car with a remote
    control. She said she noticed a light-colored SUV parked next to her. She said the
    vehicles faced the same direction, with her driver’s side against the SUV’s passenger
    side. She said the SUV’s engine was running and someone was sitting inside with the
    light on. She said the rear passenger side door of the SUV was open and blocked her
    driver’s side door. She said that she saw legs in sweatpants behind the open door and that
    a man said something like, “Oh, am I in your way.” She said she told the person to take
    his time. She said, “I’m somehow on the ground being choked from behind and all my
    things are scattered.” She said she was on the ground between her car and the SUV. She
    said a man said, “Shut up, b----. I’ll f--- you up.” She said that she started screaming and
    that the man held his hand over her mouth. She said she was unable to reach her keys in
    order to activate her car alarm or to reach her cell phone. She said that the more she
    struggled, the more the man choked her. She said, “[H]e said he’ll snap my neck if I
    don’t shut up and get in the car.” She said that the SUVs back seats were folded down
    and that the door was still open. She said she was scared and thought she might die or be
    taken away. She thought she lost consciousness from being choked and said her next
    memory was being bent over into the SUV with her legs out of the SUV. She said the
    man in sweatpants pushed against her, held her head down into the carpet, and said
    something like “grab her” to the other man. She said that she continued to scream and
    that the man had his hand on her neck and held her by her hair. She said she tried to push
    -2-
    herself out of the SUV. She said that someone approached and said something, that the
    man who had attacked her got into the SUV, and that the SUV drove away. The victim
    was left at the scene. She said she found her cell phone and sent a text message
    containing the SUV’s license plate number to a friend. She said the license plate number
    was BGG2398. The victim agreed that the incident occurred “within a couple of
    minutes.” She said that she returned to the store and that two store employees retrieved
    her wallet from the parking lot. She said she also recovered her keys and the shopping
    bag containing her purchases. She said nothing was missing from her personal items.
    She said store employees called 9-1-1.
    The victim testified that her teeth cut the inside of her mouth from the pressure of
    the man’s hand on her mouth. She said she had knots on her head, scratches, and bruises
    on her arms, legs, and ribs. She agreed that she was examined by paramedics but did not
    go to a hospital. She said the paramedics told her nothing could be done for her at a
    hospital. She said her neck was swollen for weeks. She said she participated in
    counseling. She said she withdrew from school during the fall semester of 2015 and
    cancelled her classes for the spring semester of 2016 because she was uneasy in crowds,
    in unfamiliar places, and around unfamiliar people.
    The victim identified a photograph of an SUV with a Virginia license plate. The
    plate number was VGG2398. She identified a photograph of a bruise on her leg and said
    the photograph was taken a day or two after the incident. She said she remembered the
    perpetrator’s eyes but could not make a positive identification. She initially said she had
    identified the driver but then said she was unsure whether she identified him. She
    thought the incident lasted at least two minutes. She was sure the person inside the SUV
    was in the driver’s seat, not the passenger seat. She said the perpetrator got into the
    passenger side of the SUV before it drove away.
    The victim acknowledged that she had been arrested for felony shoplifting on
    January 21, 2016. She said she had been on medication and had made a “stupid
    mistake.” She agreed that she pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor and said she received
    diversion, which meant the offense would be removed from her record in a few months.
    When asked if she was cooperating with the State in order to be eligible for a U-Visa, she
    said that she had not spoken to anyone about her immigration status and that she had a
    permanent green card.
    The victim testified that she tried to scratch the perpetrator with her fingernails.
    She agreed the police did not ask for her clothing until the day after the incident. She
    denied taking anything from the SUV but said something fell from it when she kicked it.
    She said she told the officers that night about something falling from the SUV but that
    they did not collect it. The victim drew a diagram of the scene, which was received as an
    exhibit.
    -3-
    Knoxville Police Department (KPD) Investigator Michael Washam testified that
    he assisted his partner, Investigator Clay Madison, in the investigation of this case.
    Investigator Washam said he and Evidence Technician Tim Schade went to Fort Worth,
    Texas, to obtain evidence from a 1997 Chevrolet Tahoe SUV that had been recovered.
    Investigator Washam said the police received information that the Defendant had been in
    the SUV and that “Mr. Keeney”1 had been arrested in Texas. Investigator Washam said
    he provided information to Fort Worth Detective Patrick Henz for a search warrant
    affidavit relative to the SUV. Investigator Washam said he and Mr. Schade collected
    evidence from the SUV at the Fort Worth Police impound garage. He identified
    photographs of the SUV, which were received as exhibits.
    Investigator Washam testified that he flew to Las Vegas, Nevada, on June 18,
    2015. He said the police were notified on June 15 that the Defendant was in custody.
    Investigator Washam stated he provided Las Vegas Police with information for a search
    warrant affidavit relative to a car that was recovered in Las Vegas and for buccal swabs
    of the Defendant.
    Investigator Washam testified that he and Las Vegas Police Detective Travis Ivey
    interviewed the Defendant at the Clark County, Nevada Jail. Investigator Washam
    identified the Defendant in the courtroom. Investigator Washam said he advised the
    Defendant of his Miranda rights before the interview. A written waiver of rights form
    and an audio recording of the interview were received as exhibits.
    The recording of Investigator Washam and Detective Ivey’s interview of the
    Defendant reflects the following: Investigator Washam read the Defendant’s Miranda
    rights and asked the Defendant to sign a document. Investigator Washam told the
    Defendant that the authorities had video evidence of the Defendant and Mr. Keeney
    pulling out of a Knoxville shopping center and that a woman had said the Defendant tried
    to pull her into a vehicle but released her after a struggle. Investigator Washam told the
    Defendant that the authorities had evidence the Defendant had seen the victim and had
    waited for her to come out of a store before attacking her. The Defendant said he was
    confused as to what he was accused of doing. Investigator Washam advised the
    Defendant, “In Tennessee you are being charged with aggravated kidnapping.” The
    Defendant denied that the incident occurred, and Investigator Washam responded that
    Mr. Keeney had said otherwise and that Mr. Keeney had said the Defendant intended to
    rob the victim but not to rape her.
    1
    Other evidence showed that Bobby Keeney had been with the Defendant during part of the cross-country flight
    from Virginia and that Mr. Keeney had been present at the time of the offense involving the victim.
    -4-
    In the recording, the Defendant stated his understanding that newspaper articles
    suggested the incident was for “sexual purposes.” Investigator Washam told the
    Defendant that Investigator Washam was talking to him to allow the Defendant the
    opportunity to confirm Mr. Keeney’s statement that the Defendant’s intent had been to
    rob the victim. Investigator Washam noted the Defendant’s criminal history in Virginia.
    The Defendant expressed concern that he had been labeled years ago as “something that
    I’m not,” that he was tired of living with the label, and that he wanted to live in peace.
    The Defendant said he was perceived to be a sexual predator based upon a sexual
    encounter he had with a sixteen-year-old girl when he was eighteen. He said he had
    served twenty-two years before he was paroled. He said that after he was paroled, he
    started a business and was doing well until he was charged with reckless driving. He said
    that he was told he would be incarcerated for a parole violation and that he fled Virginia
    before the incident in the present case. The Defendant acknowledged his other
    convictions for non-sexual offenses. The Defendant said that, under Virginia law, he was
    considered a violent sexual offender, had absconded, and would be confined for the rest
    of his life pursuant to Virginia’s civil commitment law.
    In the recording, Detective Ivey reiterated that the Defendant had an opportunity
    to give his version of the offenses. The Defendant continued to express his dismay that
    he had been labeled as a sexual offender. Investigator Washam told the Defendant that
    the Defendant was doing himself a disservice by not making a statement. Investigator
    Washam said that a Virginia attorney could argue that the incident in Knoxville had not
    been a sexual offense and that the Defendant was not “Ted Bundy”2 and had not gone
    across the country raping and killing women.
    In the recording, the Defendant said the incident did not happen. He said he found
    out two days before he left Virginia that his reckless driving charge was a Class 1
    misdemeanor and would result in a parole violation. He thought he and Mr. Keeney left
    Virginia on June 3 in Mr. Keeney’s gold SUV.
    In the recording, Investigator Washam said that it made a “big difference” for a
    judge and a jury to know that a defendant had admitted the things for which the defendant
    was culpable. Investigator Washam asked the Defendant how it would hurt the
    Defendant to say the incident was not going to be a rape and abduction. The officers
    informed the Defendant that Mr. Keeney had said robbing the victim had been the
    Defendant’s idea and asked the Defendant why Mr. Keeney would fabricate this. In
    reference to Mr. Keeney’s account of the relevant events, Investigator Washam told the
    Defendant, “When you leave no other voices to be heard, that’s the voice that’s going to
    be heard.” The Defendant continued to deny that the incident occurred. Investigator
    2
    See Bundy v. State, 
    471 So. 2d 9
    (Fla. 1985); Bundy v. State, 
    455 So. 2d 330
    (Fla. 1984).
    -5-
    Washam said the victim and another person had provided the license plate number from
    the gold SUV to the authorities and that the authorities had evidence the Defendant and
    Mr. Keeney had been in Fort Worth, Texas, together. Investigator Washam encouraged
    the Defendant, “Tell it the way it was, not how it’s being perceived,” and stated the
    Defendant should say the incident was never going to involve rape if that was the case.
    Investigator Washam said Virginia had the Defendant “painted as the absolute devil” and
    asked the Defendant why the Defendant should allow this perception to stand. The
    Defendant protested that there was nothing he could do about it. Investigator Washam
    said the Defendant could not change the perception of the Defendant in Virginia but that
    the Defendant could have an effect on how he was perceived by the State of Tennessee.
    In the recording, Investigator Washam advised the Defendant that the Defendant
    was charged with aggravated kidnapping and said that the charge did not have “a per se
    sexual connotation” but noted that it appeared from the Defendant’s actions that he had
    grabbed the victim and tried to put her into the SUV.
    In the recording, the Defendant agreed that he left Virginia with about $6000 and
    said he bought a car in Dallas, Texas, for $2000. He said he had spent a large amount of
    money on gas during his cross-country trip. He said he and Mr. Keeney had gone to
    Texas because Mr. Keeney wanted to visit the mother of Mr. Keeney’s child. The
    Defendant said that he had been concerned about his legal status in Virginia and that Mr.
    Keeney thought they might be able to find a place in Texas to live their lives in peace.
    The Defendant agreed that he “bailed out” of Mr. Keeney’s car when they encountered
    the authorities in Texas, said he was scratched from going through bushes and thickets
    afterward, and agreed that Mr. Keeney refused to allow the Defendant into their motel
    room when the Defendant returned to the motel. The Defendant said he did not sleep
    much because he was trying to avoid the authorities.
    In the recording, Investigator Washam invited the Defendant to “set the record
    straight” and told him that in ten years he might regret not making a statement.
    Investigator Washam again asked the Defendant what he had to lose by making a
    statement, noted that the authorities knew the Defendant had been present, and said the
    only thing left to determine was the Defendant’s intent. The Defendant continued to
    maintain that he was “screwed” no matter what he did. Investigator Washam told the
    Defendant that, despite the legal issues in Virginia, the Defendant had the opportunity to
    influence the outcome of his Tennessee legal issues. Investigator Washam asked the
    Defendant why the Defendant would give Virginia “any fuel to the fire” to paint him as
    “a Bundy” when the Defendant was not. Investigator Washam noted that the victim had
    said the Defendant tried to push her into a vehicle and said anyone who may have seen
    the incident from a distance would likely think the Defendant tried to push the victim into
    the vehicle, even it only appeared this way because the Defendant and the victim were
    struggling near an open SUV door. Investigator Washam said he had reason to believe
    -6-
    that the truth was something other than that the Defendant had tried to push the victim
    into the SUV but that the Defendant was the only person who could clarify his intent.
    Investigator Washam said the Defendant was adding to his Ted Bundy image by not
    clarifying his intent.
    In the recording, Investigator Washam said that their conversation was being
    recorded and that what the Defendant said “was gonna [sic] get played” and would be
    “part of the public record of what occurred.” The Defendant said, “I’m not that guy,” and
    Investigator Washam invited the Defendant to explain what actually happened.
    Fifty-nine minutes into the recording, the Defendant stated that he had never raped
    or attempted to rape anyone, nor had he ever wanted to rape anyone. Investigator
    Washam continued to tell the Defendant that the Defendant had the opportunity to help
    himself with his Tennessee legal issues by making a statement.
    In the recording, Detective Ivey said the officers were going to collect a sample of
    the Defendant’s DNA. Detective Ivey stated that if the Defendant had not touched the
    victim, his DNA should not be on her. Investigator Washam said that evidence had been
    collected from Mr. Keeney’s SUV, including from the “carpet by that door” and
    seatback, and that it would be processed by the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation (TBI)
    laboratory. Investigator Washam said he thought the testing would detect the presence of
    the victim’s DNA. Investigator Washam said DNA was “absolute” in court. He said
    that if the victim’s DNA were detected, the Defendant was the only person who could
    provide evidence “that it was not what it looked like.”
    In the recording, Investigator Washam stated that the victim had been “scared to
    death” and had fought. He said the victim thought she was being forced into the SUV.
    The Defendant asked about the possible length of a sentence for aggravated kidnapping,
    and Investigator Washam responded that it was based upon a “points system” and that the
    Defendant had points based upon his Virginia convictions. Investigator Washam said
    that the range started at eight years and that he thought the maximum was twenty years.
    Investigator Washam said he had no control over a judge but that he had some influence
    with a prosecutor because he could tell the prosecutor whether the Defendant admitted or
    denied relevant facts. The Defendant expressed concern that evidence would be
    presented during a trial to show he was a registered sex offender, and the officers told
    him such evidence could not be admitted. Detective Ivey told the Defendant that in
    Nevada, prior convictions were inadmissible unless the prosecution sought a conviction
    as a repeat offender.
    In the recording, Investigator Washam said he was asking the Defendant for the
    truth, rather than a specific story. The Defendant asked what Mr. Keeney was charged
    with, and Investigator Washam responded that Mr. Keeney was charged with aggravated
    -7-
    kidnapping. Investigator Washam said that based upon Mr. Keeney’s statement and the
    Defendant’s lack of a statement, it appeared that Mr. Keeney thought the plan was to rob
    the victim but that the Defendant had a different intent. Investigator Washam noted the
    evidence that the Defendant had been outside of the SUV but that Mr. Keeney had not.
    In the recording, the Defendant asked what good would result from his making a
    statement, and Detective Ivey told the Defendant that the victim, not the Defendant, was
    the victim. Detective Ivey said the twenty-year-old victim had emotional trauma and
    thought she would be kidnapped, raped, and killed. The Defendant stated that he was not
    a rapist, and Detective Ivey challenged him to say what had happened. The Defendant
    expressed concern that whatever he said would be twisted. Investigator Washam said the
    victim was scared and was undergoing counseling. He said the Defendant was not being
    fair to the victim.
    In the recording, the Defendant stated that he had always been a person to whom
    others could come for protection and that he was not being the man he had “prided”
    himself in being. Investigator Washam said, “Change that.” The Defendant asked the
    officers to tell the victim he was sorry and did not want her to be afraid. He said that he
    and Mr. Keeney were spending money too quickly and that they decided on a whim to
    rob the victim because they thought they had an opportunity to get more money to fund
    their travels. The Defendant acknowledged that he saw the victim arrive and that they
    waited for her to come back to her car. He said he wanted to get jewelry and cash. He
    said they did not have any weapons or anything else to help “control the situation.” He
    said that he got out of the driver’s seat, that the victim came out of a store, that he had the
    door open to look as if he were doing something in the back of the SUV, that he said
    something like “excuse me” and tried to grab the victim’s purse as she approached, and
    that she started screaming. He said he “freaked out” and “tried to shut her up.” He said
    that whenever he released her, she screamed, and that when he held her, he debated
    whether to hold her or release her. He said he released her after Mr. Keeney stated that
    people were coming.
    In the recording, the Defendant stated that he and the victim had been on the
    ground and that he had felt for her necklace but that she had screamed. He said that they
    somehow ended up leaning into the SUV and that from this point, he could not focus on
    whether she had jewelry because he was focused on trying to quiet the victim by putting
    his hand over her mouth and his arm around her throat. He agreed with Investigator
    Washam’s assessment that his motive had been robbery and that the victim fought back
    “tooth and nail.” When the Defendant said the police would not believe him, Detective
    Ivey stated that he believed the Defendant. The Defendant asked again for Investigator
    Washam to tell the victim that he was sorry and that she was not targeted for a sexual
    assault.
    -8-
    In the recording, Detective Ivey asked the Defendant what happened in Las Vegas
    and referred to a “chick who called in.” The Defendant explained that he had met a
    homeless woman, who had agreed to rent a motel room and register a car in her name.
    The Defendant said this was “so we could help each other.” He said the woman rented a
    hotel room in her name for three nights, that he bought food for her, and that he allowed
    her to drive the car. He said that he stayed in the room for two days. He said that after
    they had a disagreement about his giving her advice about the things that were being
    required of her in order to obtain custody of her children, she said she could not stay and
    left the room. He said the police arrived thereafter. He said he heard someone say that a
    newspaper clipping stated he had held a homeless woman against her will. Detective
    Ivey stated that the police had received a call reporting this information but said
    regarding the caller, “[N]otice she didn’t stick around.” Detective Ivey speculated that
    she had fabricated information in order to get a quick police response. The entire
    interview lasted about one hour and fifty minutes.
    Investigator Washam testified that his intent in interviewing the Defendant was to
    obtain an admission that the Defendant had been present. Investigator Washam noted
    that Mr. Keeney had given a statement and that other witnesses identified the SUV as
    having been at the scene. Investigator Washam said that it did not matter for the
    purposes of an aggravated kidnapping charge whether the Defendant said the intent had
    been to commit robbery or rape. Investigator Washam said that the Defendant had
    already been charged with aggravated kidnapping at the time of the interview and that
    any admission of intent to commit robbery or rape would have been relevant to a
    consideration of whether an additional charge should be added.
    Investigator Washam testified that he learned during the investigation that the
    SUV had been stopped by Texas authorities when the Defendant had been driving.
    Investigator Washam said the Defendant stated during the interview that the scratches on
    the Defendant’s face were from the Defendant’s running through bushes relative to this
    incident. Investigator Washam said a Las Vegas Police evidence technician searched a
    red Pontiac that had been attributed to the Defendant in Las Vegas.
    Investigator Washam acknowledged that he told the Defendant during the
    interview that the Knoxville Police had a video recording of him and Mr. Keeney leaving
    the parking lot where the incident occurred. He said that Investigator Madison had
    viewed the recording and had obtained a copy of it. Investigator Washam said the copy
    Investigator Madison received was faulty. Investigator Washam said that he contacted
    the owner of the business from which the recording was made three times about obtaining
    another copy and that by the time he spoke with the owner, the original recording had
    been overwritten and no longer existed.
    -9-
    Investigator Washam acknowledged that no investigation was done of the victim’s
    text message to a friend containing the SUV’s license plate number. He agreed that no
    photographs of the victim’s neck were taken on the date of the incident. He said the
    victim and another woman had provided the SUV’s license plate number to the police.
    Investigator Washam testified that he was aware that Investigator Madison had
    obtained a warrant for the Defendant’s arrest on June 10, 2015. Investigator Washam
    said the police had received information from Virginia that identified the Defendant and
    Mr. Keeney. Investigator Washam said the Defendant was held in Las Vegas on a
    pending Tennessee warrant and on two Virginia warrants. Investigator Washam said the
    police received conflicting information about who had been in the SUV’s passenger seat
    during the incident. He agreed that both the Defendant and Mr. Keeney had said the
    Defendant had been the driver.
    Investigator Washam testified that an evidence technician collected samples for
    DNA analysis from the portion of the SUV’s back seat that the victim identified as where
    she had been pushed into the SUV. He agreed that the victim’s DNA was not identified
    from the samples collected from the SUV and that no DNA evidence linked the
    Defendant and the victim or Mr. Keeney and the victim. Investigator Washam
    acknowledged that he had inaccurately stated when he interviewed the Defendant that
    incriminating DNA evidence existed and said he had done so in order to obtain truthful
    information from the Defendant.
    The Defendant testified that he had intended to rob the victim. He said he needed
    money. He acknowledged his prior criminal history for abduction by deceit, arson,
    solicitation, and perjury. He acknowledged that he had served twenty-two years in
    Virginia for a sexual offense committed when he was eighteen years old and that the
    victim was sixteen. He said he was registered as a sex offender. He agreed that he had
    been out of prison for about seven months when the relevant events occurred.
    The Defendant testified that he had been harassed by the police after he was
    released from prison and that he was nervous they would find a reason to return him to
    prison. He said police officers searched his house two or three times and claimed they
    had “received calls about this or that.” He said the authorities tried to close his business
    by telling him that he could not advertise with a sign in front of his house. He said the
    fire marshal eventually “kicked me out” of the house based upon a zoning issue. He said
    that he had a car wreck and that he was charged with reckless driving. He said he was
    concerned because a new criminal charge would violate the terms of his parole. He said
    he left a voicemail message reporting the new charge to his parole officer and “went on
    the run” because he had spent over half his life in prison and did not want to return.
    -10-
    The Defendant testified that he reached an agreement with Bobby Keeney
    whereby the Defendant would purchase a Tahoe SUV that would be titled in Mr.
    Keeney’s name. The Defendant said the plan was that he would use the SUV if he
    needed to flee and that he would live in the SUV for five or six months or whatever
    length of time necessary, after which the Defendant would return the SUV to Mr.
    Keeney. The Defendant said Mr. Keeney would own the SUV “free and clear” after the
    Defendant finished using it.
    The Defendant testified that when he decided to flee Virginia, the SUV was “full
    of stuff,” with about one and one-half feet left below the roof. He said he removed the
    electronic ankle monitor he was required to wear as a sex offender. The Defendant said
    he stopped to pick up Mr. Keeney, who put additional items into the SUV. He said they
    stayed in the Martinsville, Virginia, area until Mr. Keeney learned that the police had
    been asking questions about them. The Defendant said their original plan had been to go
    to Colorado to see a man Mr. Keeney called his father, although the man was not Mr.
    Keeney’s biological father. The Defendant said that they went to Colorado and spoke
    with the man but that Mr. Keeney did not stay with the man. The Defendant said they
    went to Texas on the way to Colorado in order for Mr. Keeney to visit the mother of his
    child and his daughter.
    The Defendant testified that he and Mr. Keeney stopped in Knoxville to purchase
    gas. The Defendant said he had not heard from his fiancée since that morning. He said
    their plan was to reunite and for him to “live under her name” after his five or six months
    of living as a fugitive. He said he called his ex-wife while he was in Knoxville and that
    he was scared as a result of the conversation. He said he was, at that point, on his own
    and had lost his chance for a future. He said he was concerned about his finances
    because he “had nowhere to go” and did not know what he was going to do. He said that
    he knew the police were searching for the SUV, that he needed somewhere to go and a
    new identity, and that he did not have enough money to meet his needs. He said he paid
    $50 to $60 every time he filled the SUV’s gas tank.
    The Defendant said he and Mr. Keeney discussed the Defendant’s situation and
    that the Defendant decided to “snatch a purse” to get more money. He said that while
    they sat in the parking lot where the incident occurred, he saw a woman who parked
    across the lot away from other cars. He said he drove toward the woman’s car and
    parked with the SUV’s passenger side next to the driver’s side of her car. He said he
    turned off the headlights, went to the back passenger door, and pretended to shuffle the
    SUV’s contents in order not to appear suspicious. He said the back of the SUV was still
    packed full of items.
    The Defendant testified that the victim stopped at the front of her car and that he
    said something like “excuse me.” He said he took a step or two back and noticed the
    -11-
    victim’s purse between her elbow and her side. He said he waited for her to approach her
    door and tried to reach for her purse but that it fell to the ground, scattering its contents.
    He said he looked for a wallet or money but could not see either. He said that the victim
    started screaming and that “she had slid down against her car into . . . a squat position.”
    He said that he bent over her and tried to put his hand over her mouth to quiet and calm
    her but that she kept flailing. He said she never stopped screaming except to breathe. He
    said that the victim kept rocking her head back and forth and that he was in an awkward
    position. He said he tried to feel her throat for a necklace. He said he thought he was
    running out of time to take something because she was screaming and other people were
    in the parking lot. He said that he started to panic, grabbed her arm, pulled her up, and
    tried to feel for a necklace. He said that the victim “kicked off her car” and that they both
    fell sideways. He said that he grabbed her arm to try to stop himself from falling but that
    he fell against the back doorframe of the SUV and that she fell against him. He said that
    he fell at an angle and that he rolled over her and braced his hands against the SUV to try
    to get to his feet. He said that he saw the victim reaching for items inside the SUV and
    that he grabbed her waist and pulled her away from the SUV. He said he “let her go” and
    had “given up.” He said he did not look on the ground for something to steal because he
    knew he was out of time. He said Mr. Keeney told him that people were coming. The
    Defendant said the victim stood with a “mean defiant look on her face” after he pulled
    her away from the SUV and that he walked to the SUV driver’s seat and got inside. He
    denied that the victim ever lost consciousness during the incident and said he never had
    his hand or arm around her throat. He said he drove away in the wrong direction to leave
    the parking lot and had to turn around in order to leave.
    The Defendant denied that he tried to put the victim in the back of the SUV. He
    said the back was full and he was driving and would have been unable to control her. He
    denied hitting or punching the victim and said he had no intention of hurting her. He said
    Mr. Keeney remained in the passenger seat during the entire incident. The Defendant
    said that from the time he attempted to grab the victim’s purse until he returned to the
    driver’s seat, no more than twenty seconds elapsed.
    The Defendant testified that he and Mr. Keeney went through Arkansas on the
    way to Texas and that they returned to Arkansas to look for his fiancée after they left
    Texas. The Defendant said that they went through Oklahoma to Colorado to see the man
    Mr. Keeney called his father but that the man would not allow them to stay with him.
    The Defendant said they returned to Texas from Colorado. He agreed he was eventually
    arrested in Las Vegas and gave a statement to Investigator Washam.
    The Defendant denied that he intended to kidnap the victim and said he had
    intended to take her purse and later to take her necklace when he could not get her purse.
    He said he could have lifted the victim and placed her into the SUV if he had wanted but
    -12-
    that he would not have been able to put her in the SUV due to the items in the back. He
    said, “I feel bad about what I did.”
    Regarding his prior criminal history in Virginia, the Defendant testified that he
    committed arson at age eighteen and received a ten-year sentence. He denied that he had
    been convicted of “abduction with the intent to sexually molest” and said he was
    convicted of “abduction by deceit.” He also said he later found out “it said something
    about defile or something.” He acknowledged a document reflecting a conviction of
    abduction with the intent to sexually molest. He denied that he was required to register
    as a sexual offender as a result of this conviction. The Defendant denied telling an
    investigator that he had solicited a cellmate to kill the prosecutor in the abduction case
    but agreed he had said the charge would go away if the prosecutor went away. He
    acknowledged he had been convicted of solicitation to maliciously wound the prosecutor
    and a corrections officer. He said he had been charged originally with attempted capital
    murder, that a judge reduced the charge to conspiracy, and that he was found guilty of
    solicitation. When shown a document, the Defendant acknowledged he had been found
    guilty by a Virginia jury of solicitation to aid a prisoner to escape from jail and sentenced
    to one year, solicitation to commit malicious wounding and sentenced to four years, and
    solicitation to commit capital murder for hire and sentenced to five years. He agreed that
    he had been convicted upon his guilty pleas of two counts of perjury related to rape and
    malicious wounding charges. The Defendant acknowledged an additional solicitation to
    commit a felony conviction but did not recall the details. Relative to his pending issues
    in Virginia, he said he faced thirteen years for a parole violation and five years for
    removing his ankle monitor.
    When asked if he had sold stocks and received about $6000 before he removed his
    ankle bracelet on June 3, 2015, the Defendant did not recall the exact amount he had
    when he left Virginia on June 5 but said $6000 “sounds about right.” He said he had
    already stopped “several times” for gas by the time he and Mr. Keeney reached
    Knoxville. The Defendant said he did not want Mr. Keeney to know how much money
    he had because the Defendant was paying for everything and Mr. Keeney had asked
    about stopping at restaurants, even though they had food in the SUV, and had selected
    items for the Defendant to purchase when they were at gas stations. The Defendant
    agreed he had spent less than $1000 when they arrived in Knoxville. The Defendant said
    he learned in Knoxville that his fiancée had left him and realized that the money he had
    would have to last the rest of his life, rather than five or six months. He said he and Mr.
    Keeney discussed robbing someone but did not discuss a specific plan. He said he made
    a spur-of-the-moment decision when he saw the victim across the parking lot. He denied
    that the victim was unable to enter her car because he was in her way. He agreed that he
    said “excuse me” and stepped back to make her feel comfortable about approaching her
    car door. When asked about the victim’s testimony that he had said, “Shut up, b----. I’ll
    f--- you up,” the Defendant was uncertain but thought he had said nothing. He said the
    -13-
    victim seemed more angry and defiant than scared when she began screaming. He said
    she could have run away but instead screamed to bring attention to the situation. He
    acknowledged he could have gotten into the SUV and driven away when he did not see
    money or a wallet after the victim’s purse contents spilled, but he said he panicked. He
    acknowledged that he did not see a necklace when he grabbed the victim’s neck but said
    he assumed she wore one. The Defendant said that when he fell against the SUV’s door
    frame, the door was open but he and the victim were not inside the SUV. He said that
    when he regained his balance, he noticed the victim trying to grab things inside the SUV
    and that he pulled her away from the SUV.
    The Defendant testified that he got lost after he drove from the scene and had to
    stop to ask directions. He said he and Mr. Keeney stopped in Nashville. He said he was
    not thinking at this point about his financial concerns or about robbing someone. He said
    that they saw a street event in Nashville and that they went to check it out. He agreed
    there were a “[l]ot of ladies” but said he was not focused on their purses. He said that he
    was scared from the incident in Knoxville and that he had never tried to rob anyone
    before it. He agreed that they met two women in Nashville and that they went to a fast
    food restaurant but said he did not purchase anything. He said their next stop was at a
    truck stop after crossing the Mississippi River, that he got into the passenger seat and
    slept, and that he awoke in Texas the next morning.
    The Defendant testified that he was “supposed to be with” a woman named Jade in
    Texas and that she was a friend of the mother of Mr. Keeney’s child. The Defendant
    said, however, that he learned that Mr. Keeney and Jade were together after the
    Defendant fled when Mr. Keeney and he were stopped by police. The Defendant said
    they stayed with the mother of Mr. Keeney’s child in Texas. He agreed that when they
    were stopped by the police in Texas, he gave them his driver’s license but drove away
    and jumped out of the moving SUV when several officers arrived. He said that he ran
    through brush and woods and that his money was in the motel room. He said he returned
    to the motel, waited outside, and talked with Mr. Keeney, who was supposed to buy a car
    for the Defendant for $700. The Defendant said Mr. Keeney was supposed to register the
    car in Mr. Keeney’s child’s mother’s name but that Mr. Keeney never returned to the
    motel. The Defendant said he left the motel area when he realized helicopters and police
    were searching for him. The Defendant said he was able to get a ride to Walmart, that he
    met a cashier who knew someone who had a car for sale, and that he paid $2000 for it.
    He acknowledged he had spent $2700 on cars in Texas and said he was concerned about
    money but did not consider committing more robberies because he had been scared by
    the incident in Knoxville.
    The Defendant testified that he wanted to get “another ID.” He said he went to
    Las Vegas, where he met a homeless woman with whom he rented a motel room. He
    -14-
    said that she agreed to “put things in her name” and that he did not have to worry about
    spending thousands of dollars on a false identification.
    Kathryn Bigley testified that she lived in Martinsville, Virginia, in 2014 and 2015
    and that she met the Defendant through her former employment as a prison librarian. She
    said the Defendant had been a prison library aide. She said that she had been in business
    with the Defendant after his release from prison and that they purchased storage lockers
    and resold the contents online. She said she started the business before the Defendant
    was released from prison and that after his release, they lived together in an apartment in
    the business’s warehouse. She said that after the Defendant was released and moved into
    the warehouse, they were “harassed” about the property’s zoning not permitting their
    living on it. She said that after the Defendant was in custody following his flight from
    Virginia, she spoke with him about “Christina” no longer being in the area. In Ms.
    Bigley’s opinion, the Defendant was “a very truthful man.”
    Ms. Bigley acknowledged that she and the Defendant had been in a romantic
    relationship, which was against the prison’s rules, that they married, and that she
    resigned. She acknowledged that she had worked for a school, that she stored a gun in
    her glove box because she was being harassed by prison employees, that the authorities
    overheard monitored telephone conversations she had with the incarcerated Defendant
    about the handgun, that she was arrested and convicted, and that she was later granted
    clemency. She denied that the authorities overheard the Defendant and her discussing
    kidnapping a child from a school for the Defendant to rape and kill. She said, “They
    construed some stories.” She said the Defendant was concerned because she was being
    harassed and that “he tried to push me away by trying to make himself into a monster on
    the phone.” She agreed she was aware of the Defendant’s convictions for facilitation of a
    felony, two counts of perjury, and abduction with the intent to sexually assault. She said
    that she met the woman who had been the victim of the Defendant’s abduction conviction
    and that the woman stated the woman had been age sixteen and the Defendant had been
    age eighteen at the time of the offense. Ms. Bigley said the woman was surprised the
    Defendant was still in prison at the time and had signed an affidavit supporting the
    Defendant’s parole.
    The presentment charged the Defendant as follows:
    Count 1: Aggravated Kidnapping by unlawfully and knowingly removing
    the victim so as to interfere substantially with her liberty, where the victim
    suffered bodily injury
    Count 2: Aggravated Kidnapping by unlawfully and knowingly confining
    the victim so as to interfere substantially with her liberty, where the victim
    suffered bodily injury
    -15-
    Count 3: Aggravated Kidnapping by unlawfully and knowingly removing
    the victim so as to interfere substantially with her liberty, with the intent to
    terrorize the victim
    Count 4: Aggravated Kidnapping by unlawfully and knowingly confining
    the victim so as to interfere substantially with her liberty, with the intent to
    terrorize the victim
    After receiving the proof, the jury acquitted the Defendant of aggravated
    kidnapping as charged in Count 1 but found him guilty of the lesser included offense of
    attempted aggravated kidnapping. The jury found the Defendant guilty of the charged
    offense in Count 2. The jury acquitted the Defendant of aggravated kidnapping as
    charged in Count 3 but found him guilty of the lesser included offense of attempted
    aggravated kidnapping. The jury found the Defendant guilty of the charged offense in
    Count 4. The trial court merged the convictions into a single count of aggravated
    kidnapping and sentenced the Defendant, a Range II offender, to fifteen years to be
    served at 100%. This appeal followed.
    I
    Sufficiency of the Evidence
    The Defendant contends that the evidence is insufficient to support a conviction of
    aggravated kidnapping or attempted aggravated kidnapping. The State counters that the
    evidence is sufficient. We agree with the State.
    In determining the sufficiency of the evidence, the standard of review is “whether,
    after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier
    of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.”
    Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319 (1979); see State v. Vasques, 
    221 S.W.3d 514
    ,
    521 (Tenn. 2007). The State is “afforded the strongest legitimate view of the evidence
    and all reasonable inferences” from that evidence. 
    Vasques, 221 S.W.3d at 521
    . The
    appellate courts do not “reweigh or reevaluate the evidence,” and questions regarding
    “the credibility of witnesses [and] the weight and value to be given the evidence . . . are
    resolved by the trier of fact.” State v. Bland, 
    958 S.W.2d 651
    , 659 (Tenn. 1997); see
    State v. Sheffield, 
    676 S.W.2d 542
    , 547 (Tenn. 1984).
    “A crime may be established by direct evidence, circumstantial evidence, or a
    combination of the two.” State v. Hall, 
    976 S.W.2d 121
    , 140 (Tenn. 1998); see State v.
    Sutton, 
    166 S.W.3d 686
    , 691 (Tenn. 2005). “The standard of review ‘is the same whether
    -16-
    the conviction is based upon direct or circumstantial evidence.’” State v. Dorantes, 
    331 S.W.3d 370
    , 379 (Tenn. 2011) (quoting State v. Hanson, 
    279 S.W.3d 265
    , 275 (Tenn.
    2009)).
    As relevant to this appeal,
    Aggravated kidnapping is false imprisonment, as defined in § 39-13-302,
    committed:
    . . .
    (3) With the intent to inflict serious bodily injury on or to terrorize
    the victim or another;
    [or]
    (4) Where the victim suffers bodily injury[.]
    T.C.A. § 39-13-304(a)(3), (4) (2018). “A person commits false imprisonment who
    knowingly removes or confines another unlawfully so as to interfere substantially with
    the other’s liberty. 
    Id. § 39-13-302
    (2018). “‘Bodily injury’ includes a cut, abrasion,
    bruise, burn or disfigurement, and physical pain or temporary illness or impairment of the
    function of a bodily member, order, or mental faculty[.]” 
    Id. § 39-11-106(2)
    (2018).
    “As an element of [the] offense of aggravated kidnapping, [“terrorize”] is an act which is
    done to fill [a victim] with intense fear or to coerce by threat or force.” Terror, Black’s
    Law Dictionary (6th ed. 1991). As relevant to this case, “A person acts knowingly with
    respect to a result of the person’s conduct when the person is aware that the conduct is
    reasonably certain to cause the result.” T.C.A. § 39-11-106(20). Criminal attempt is
    defined as follows:
    (a) A person commits criminal attempt who, acting with the kind of
    culpability otherwise required for the offense:
    (1) Intentionally engages in action or causes a result that would
    constitute an offense, if the circumstances surrounding the conduct were as
    the person believes them to be;
    (2) Acts with intent to cause a result that is an element of the
    offense, and believes the conduct will cause the result without further
    conduct on the person’s part; or
    -17-
    (3) Acts with intent to complete a course of action or cause a result
    that would constitute the offense, under the circumstances surrounding the
    conduct as the person believes them to be, and the conduct constitutes a
    substantial step toward the commission of the offense.
    
    Id. § 39-12-101(a)(1)-(3)
    (2018).
    Viewed in the light most favorable to the State, the evidence shows that the
    Defendant selected the victim after seeing her walk into a store with her wallet in her
    hand. He drove next to her car and stood outside, rummaging in the backseat of his SUV
    as she approached her car. When she was near, he choked her from behind, and her
    belongings scattered on the ground. The Defendant did not attempt to retrieve any of the
    scattered belongings. The more the victim struggled, the more the Defendant choked her.
    He repeatedly attempted to silence her by placing his hand on her mouth. He told her,
    “Shut up, b----. I’ll f--- you up,” and threatened to snap her neck unless she stopped
    screaming and got into the SUV. The victim briefly lost consciousness, and when she
    regained consciousness, she was partially inside the SUV. The Defendant held the
    victim’s head down against the SUV’s carpet. The Defendant said something like “grab
    her” to Mr. Keeney. An eyewitness saw two men trying to push a woman into a vehicle.
    The incident occurred “within a couple of minutes.” Despite struggling and screaming,
    the victim did not escape until the Defendant fled the scene. She sustained knots on her
    head, scratches, and bruises on her arms, legs, and ribs. She was traumatized
    emotionally.
    This evidence established that the Defendant confined the victim, that he
    attempted to remove her, that he interfered substantially with her liberty over the course
    of a couple of minutes, that she suffered bodily injury, and that he intended to terrorize
    her. The jury discredited the Defendant’s claim that he intended to rob the victim, not
    kidnap her, as was its province as the trier of fact. The evidence is sufficient to support
    the elements of the conviction offenses. The Defendant is not entitled to relief on this
    basis.
    II
    Denial of Motion to Dismiss or for a Preliminary Hearing
    The Defendant contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion to dismiss
    the case based upon the lack of a preliminary hearing and that the court erred, as well, in
    denying his request in the alternative for a belated preliminary hearing. The State
    contends that the court properly denied the motions. We agree with the State.
    -18-
    The record reflects that defense counsel learned for the first time at the
    suppression hearing that, at the time of the Las Vegas interview, the Defendant had been
    the subject of an outstanding Knox County warrant related to the incident in the present
    case. The prosecutor stated, however, that the Defendant was never served with this
    warrant and that his extradition was based upon a June 24, 2015 indictment. After the
    suppression hearing, the Defendant filed a motion to dismiss the prosecution due to the
    lack of a preliminary hearing. Alternatively, he sought a belated preliminary hearing in
    the event the trial court denied the motion to dismiss.
    The Defendant relied upon Tennessee Rule of Criminal Procedure 5(e)(1) to
    support his motion. At the time of the pertinent events, Tennessee Rule of Criminal
    Procedure 5(e)(1)3 provided, “Any defendant arrested or served with a criminal summons
    prior to indictment or presentment for a misdemeanor or a felony, except small offenses,
    is entitled to a preliminary hearing. A preliminary hearing may be waived as set forth by
    subsection (2) or as otherwise provided in this rule.” At the time, Rule 5(d)(3) provided
    that, unless waived by the defendant, a preliminary hearing must be conducted within ten
    days of arrest or service for a defendant in custody or within thirty days for a defendant
    on release status. At the time, Rule 5(e)(4)4 provided:
    If an indictment or presentment is returned against a defendant who
    has not waived his or her right to a preliminary hearing, the circuit or
    criminal court shall dismiss the indictment or presentment on motion of the
    defendant filed not more than thirty days from the arraignment on the
    indictment or presentment. The dismissal shall be without prejudice to a
    subsequent indictment or presentment and the case shall be remanded to the
    general sessions court for a preliminary hearing.
    The court held a hearing on the motion, at which the parties did not offer proof. Defense
    counsel stated that the court had received proof relative to the issue at the motion to
    suppress and that the dismissed warrant had been attached to the motion.
    Because the evidence received at the suppression hearing is relevant to both this
    issue and to section IV pertaining to the trial court’s denial of the motion to suppress, we
    will recount it here.
    At the hearing on the motion to suppress, Investigator Washam testified that, as
    part of the investigation in this case, he interviewed the Defendant in Las Vegas, Nevada.
    3
    The provisions of former Rule 5(e)(1) are now found in subsection (f)(1).
    4
    The provisions of former Rule 5(e)(4) are now found in subsection (f)(4).
    -19-
    Investigator Washam said that before he arrived in Nevada, he sent Las Vegas Police
    Detective Travis Ivey information to obtain a search warrant for a car and for buccal
    swabs of the Defendant.
    Investigator Washam testified that he and Detective Travis Ivey met with the
    Defendant at the Clark County, Nevada jail on June 18, 2015. Investigator Washam said
    that before they met with the Defendant, he told Detective Ivey that he planned to tell the
    Defendant that the co-defendant, Mr. Keeney, “had already handed [the Defendant] up.”
    Investigator Washam testified that he advised the Defendant of his Miranda rights
    and that the Defendant signed a waiver of his rights. Investigator Washam identified an
    audio recording of his interview of the Defendant and a diagram Investigator Washam
    drew and the Defendant initialed during the interview. The recording and the diagram
    were received as exhibits.
    Investigator Washam testified that Detective Ivey wore a polo-type shirt with the
    words “Las Vegas Metro Homicide.” Investigator Washam thought that both he and
    Detective Ivey had removed any weapons before entering the jail. Investigator Washam
    said the Defendant was in custody but did not remember whether the Defendant’s legs
    were shackled. He agreed that the interview took place inside a room in a locked facility.
    Investigator Washam testified that the Defendant had an outstanding Knox
    County, Tennessee warrant at the time of the interview. Investigator Washam said he had
    testified before the grand jury before he went to Las Vegas. He said the Defendant was
    being held in Las Vegas based upon Virginia and Knox County, Tennessee warrants
    listed in the NCIC database. Investigator Washam said he had spoken with a United
    States Marshal who had advised that the Marshals Service was attempting to locate the
    Defendant based upon the warrants listed in the database.
    Investigator Washam acknowledged that the Defendant said early in the interview
    that he wanted to be “left in peace,” which Investigator Washam explained the Defendant
    had stated in reference to his issues in Virginia but not in reference to speaking with
    Investigator Washam. Investigator Washam said it was clear from the context that the
    Defendant’s comment was in reference to the Virginia warrant.
    Investigator Washam acknowledged that he told the Defendant the police had a
    video recording of the Defendant coming out of the plaza where the incident occurred,
    even though the police did not have a recording. Investigator Washam explained that the
    police had an electronic file of a recording from a laundromat but that the file did not
    work. He said that he had not viewed the recording but that his partner, Officer Clay
    Madison, had. Investigator Washam denied that he falsely told the Defendant that a
    woman had identified the Defendant as the person who pulled her into a vehicle.
    -20-
    Investigator Washam agreed that he told the Defendant that making a statement “really
    does make a difference in the impact” with Investigator Washam, a judge, and jurors.
    Investigator Washam said he told the Defendant that he had no control over what
    happened in Virginia but that Investigator Washam would advise a Tennessee prosecutor
    if the Defendant “owned up to what he did.” Investigator Washam agreed that he said he
    thought the Defendant was making a mistake by being reluctant to talk and that he told
    the Defendant it made a difference if a person acknowledged that an event had occurred.
    Investigator Washam agreed that he made a comment about witnesses changing their
    accounts of alleged offenses and said he made the comment in reference to a rape case.
    Investigator Washam said the Defendant was concerned about his perception that he had
    been mistreated by Virginia authorities. Investigator Washam agreed that he told the
    Defendant that unless the Defendant was “Ted Bundy,” the Defendant should explain
    what had happened in the Tennessee case. Investigator Washam agreed that his intent
    was to convey that the Tennessee authorities would view a robbery differently than “this
    guy who’s waiting in the bushes to grab a girl and rape her and potentially kill her.”
    Investigator Washam agreed that he told the Defendant his DNA might be on the victim
    but did not think he said the Defendant’s DNA had been found. Investigator Washam
    thought his partner had collected DNA swabs from the victim. He agreed that he told the
    Defendant that carpet from inside the car would go to the TBI Laboratory but that
    nothing had been sent to the laboratory at the time. Investigator Washam agreed that he
    said DNA evidence was “absolute” in court, even though the authorities had no DNA
    evidence at the time. He agreed that, in response to the Defendant’s question about the
    possible length of a Tennessee sentence, Investigator Washam explained that it was
    determined by a formula but that Investigator Washam did not understand it. He agreed
    that Detective Ivey made comments about the operation of Nevada sentencing laws.
    Investigator Washam testified that Detective Ivey told the Defendant, “You’re not
    the victim. The victim is the victim here,” and that the Defendant started to cry.
    Investigator Washam thought Detective Ivey’s comment convinced the Defendant to give
    a statement.
    When asked whether he had shown the Defendant a copy of the Knox County
    warrant, Investigator Washam did not recall doing so. Investigator Washam did not think
    they had discussed a Knox County warrant during the interview.
    Investigator Washam testified that it took him twenty-four to thirty hours after
    learning the Defendant was in custody to make arrangements to interview the Defendant
    in Las Vegas. Investigator Washam thought the Defendant had been in custody for less
    than twenty-four hours when Investigator Washam was notified about the Defendant’s
    arrest.
    -21-
    Investigator Washam testified that the violent crimes unit was not notified of the
    incident until the following day. He said that some “fairly new patrol officers” had
    responded to the scene and that he and Investigator Madison had been displeased with
    how the patrol officers had handled the case on the night of the incident. He noted that
    the patrol officers had not collected evidence or taken photographs. He said departmental
    protocol required that photographs be taken of any injuries.
    Investigator Washam agreed that the Defendant was unhappy about how he had
    been treated in Virginia and expressed concern repeatedly about how he would be treated
    in Tennessee. Investigator Washam noted that the Defendant was concerned about the
    Tennessee offense “being a sex offender’s situation versus robbery” and that the
    Defendant was concerned Tennessee would view his actions as being sexually motivated.
    Investigator Washam noted that no additional charges were filed against the Defendant
    after the Defendant cooperated with the authorities.
    Investigator Washam testified that no fingerprints matching those of the Defendant
    and the victim were found in the SUV. Investigator Washam said that the Defendant
    claimed the victim ended up partially in the SUV during the struggle.
    In its order denying the motion, the trial court made the following pertinent
    findings: A warrant was issued on June 10, 2015, which charged the Defendant with an
    incident occurring on June 4, 2015. The Defendant was arrested in Las Vegas on
    unrelated Nevada charges on June 15, 2015. “It appears that a hold was placed on the
    defendant from the Knox County charge while he was in custody of the Nevada
    authorities. However, no proof has been submitted by either side on that issue.” The
    Defendant was interviewed by a KPD investigator while he was in custody in Las Vegas
    and was transported to the custody of the Knox County Sheriff. On June 24, 2015, the
    Knox County Grand Jury returned a presentment charging the Defendant with aggravated
    kidnapping. The original warrant was never served on the Defendant and was cancelled
    on June 26, 2015. The Defendant was booked on the presentment on July 1, 2015. He
    was arraigned on July 8, 2015. The Defendant filed the motion to dismiss on March 4,
    2016.
    The trial court denied the motion for two reasons. First, the court found that the
    Defendant had not filed his motion within the thirty days required by Rule 5(e)(4).
    Second, the court found that the Defendant failed to show that Rule 5(e) applied to the
    facts of the case to create a right to a preliminary hearing. The court found that the
    Defendant had not shown that he had been served with the warrant when he was arrested
    for Nevada charges. The court stated that the Defendant had not established that he had a
    right to a preliminary hearing based upon an interstate hold on a warrant.
    -22-
    The Defendant argues on appeal that, despite his failure to move for dismissal
    within the thirty-day limit of Rule 5(e)(4), the trial court should have applied the
    principle of equitable tolling and granted his motion. He argues that he was unaware of
    the existence of the warrant until he learned of it at the hearing on the motion to suppress,
    which was held on February 5, 2016.
    We begin our analysis by noting that the Defendant has not cited any authority to
    support the application of the principle of equitable tolling to Rule 5 motions to dismiss
    filed more than thirty days after the arraignment. It is unnecessary for us to examine that
    issue, however, because even if we were to conclude that the doctrine of equitable tolling
    applies to motions to dismiss under Rule 5, the Defendant would not be entitled to its
    benefits because equitable tolling is not available “to pursue a patently non-meritorious
    ground for relief.” See Nunley v. State, 
    552 S.W.3d 800
    , 829 (Tenn. 2018) (quoting
    Harris v. State, 
    301 S.W.3d 141
    , 153 (Tenn. 2010) (Koch, J., concurring)).
    In that regard, the Defendant claims that he is entitled to dismissal of the
    presentment in case number 105761, which was filed on June 24, 2015, and is the
    charging instrument in the present case, because he never received a preliminary hearing
    on warrant 1117689, which was never served on him and was cancelled on the State’s
    motion on June 26, 2015. Rule 5(e)(1) applies to “[a]ny defendant arrested or served
    with a criminal summons prior to indictment or presentment.” Because it is undisputed
    that the Defendant was never served with the warrant, Rule 5(e)(1) applies only if he was
    arrested pursuant to the warrant. The recording of the June 18, 2015 Las Vegas interview
    reflects that Investigator Washam advised the Defendant, “In Tennessee you are being
    charged with aggravated kidnapping.” Investigator Washam testified that the Defendant
    was held by Nevada authorities based upon outstanding warrants from Tennessee and
    Virginia that had been entered into a national database. However, when discussing the
    Defendant’s initial encounter with police in Nevada, Detective Ivey stated in the
    interview that the police had received a report from a woman who alleged that she had
    been held against her will, which led to the Las Vegas police response to the motel room
    where the Defendant was staying. The prosecutor stated at the hearing on the motion to
    dismiss that the Defendant had not been held in Nevada based upon the Tennessee
    warrant. She explained that a hold was placed on the Defendant based upon the grand
    jury’s return of the presentment and that the first warrant was cancelled. She further
    explained that the warrant had not been the basis for Tennessee’s priority over Virginia in
    prosecuting the Defendant and that Virginia authorities had agreed to allow Tennessee to
    prosecute the Defendant first because a conviction in Tennessee would constitute a
    violation of his release in Virginia.
    -23-
    The Defendant has offered no evidence to show he was arrested pursuant to or
    served with the Tennessee warrant. To the contrary, the evidence shows that he was
    arrested in Nevada for alleged Nevada conduct,5 that he was not served with the
    Tennessee warrant, that he was charged by presentment in Tennessee for the incident
    involving the victim, that the Tennessee warrant was cancelled, and that he was arraigned
    in Tennessee based upon the presentment that forms the basis for the present case.
    Because the Defendant was not entitled to a preliminary hearing upon a warrant on which
    he was never arrested and which was never served upon him, the trial court did not err in
    denying the motion to dismiss or for a preliminary hearing. The Defendant is not entitled
    to relief on this basis.
    III
    Denial of Motion to Suppress
    The Defendant contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress
    the pretrial statement he gave during his Las Vegas detention. He argues that the
    statement was not voluntarily given because it was induced by false statements by the
    police officers who interviewed him. The State counters that trial court did not err in
    denying the motion because the Defendant’s statement was knowingly and voluntarily
    given. We agree with the State.
    A trial court’s findings of fact on a motion to suppress are conclusive on appeal
    unless the evidence preponderates against them. State v. Odom, 
    928 S.W.2d 18
    , 23
    (Tenn. 1996); State v. Jones, 
    802 S.W.2d 221
    , 223 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1990). Questions
    about the “credibility of the witnesses, the weight and value of the evidence, and
    resolution of conflicts in the evidence are matters entrusted to the trial judge as the trier
    of fact.” 
    Odom, 928 S.W.2d at 23
    . The prevailing party is entitled to the “strongest
    legitimate view of the evidence and all reasonable and legitimate inferences drawn from
    that evidence.” State v. Keith, 
    978 S.W.2d 861
    , 864 (Tenn. 1998); see State v. Hicks, 
    55 S.W.3d 515
    , 521 (Tenn. 2001). A trial court’s application of the law to its factual
    findings is a question of law and is reviewed de novo on appeal. State v. Yeargan, 
    958 S.W.2d 626
    , 629 (Tenn. 1997). In reviewing a trial court’s ruling on a motion to
    suppress, this court may consider the trial evidence as well as the evidence presented at
    5
    In its brief, the State asserts that the Defendant was arrested in Nevada on Nevada charges and cites to the trial
    court’s order as support for this fact. The appropriate citation to the record for a statement of fact upon which a
    party relies is to the location in the record of the supporting factual evidence itself, not to the factual findings of a
    lower court. Although we are bound by a lower court’s factual findings unless they are unsupported by the record, a
    lower court’s finding of fact does not constitute evidence of that fact. In this instance, the appropriate citation would
    have been to the recording that was received as an exhibit at the suppression hearing, with an identification of the
    location on the recording where the pertinent evidence is found.
    -24-
    the suppression hearing. See State v. Henning, 
    975 S.W.2d 290
    , 297-99 (Tenn. 1998);
    see also State v. Williamson, 
    368 S.W.3d 468
    , 473 (Tenn. 2012).
    The Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution, which applies to the
    states via the Fourteenth Amendment, provides that “no person . . . shall be compelled in
    any criminal case to be a witness against himself.” U.S. Const. amend. V. Similarly,
    Article I, section 9 of the Tennessee Constitution states that “in all criminal prosecutions,
    the accused . . . shall not be compelled to give evidence against himself.” Tenn. Const.
    Art. I, § 9. “The test of voluntariness for confessions under Article I, § 9 of the Tennessee
    Constitution is broader and more protective of individual rights than the test of
    voluntariness under the Fifth Amendment.” State v. Smith, 
    933 S.W.2d 450
    , 455 (Tenn.
    1996); see State v. Northern, 
    262 S.W.3d 741
    , 763 (Tenn. 2008). To be considered
    voluntary, a statement must not be the product of “any sort of threats or violence, nor
    obtained by any direct or implied promises, however slight, nor by the exertion of any
    improper influence.” State v. Smith, 
    42 S.W.3d 101
    , 109 (Tenn. Crim. App. 2000)
    (quoting Bram v. United States, 
    168 U.S. 532
    , 542-43 (1897)). A defendant’s subjective
    perception is insufficient to establish the existence of an involuntary confession. 
    Id. The essential
    inquiry is “whether the behavior of the State’s law enforcement officials was
    such as to overbear [the defendant’s] will to resist and bring about confessions not freely
    self-determined [.]” State v. Kelly, 
    603 S.W.2d 726
    , 728 (Tenn. 1980) (quoting Rogers v.
    Richmond, 
    365 U.S. 534
    , 544 (1961)). A confession is involuntary if it is the product of
    coercive state action. See, e.g., Colorado v. Connelly, 
    479 U.S. 157
    , 163-64 (1986).
    In determining whether a confession is voluntary, a trial court examines the
    totality of the circumstances, which encompasses “both the characteristics of the accused
    and the details of the interrogation.” State v. Climer, 
    400 S.W.3d 537
    , 568 (Tenn. 2013)
    (quoting Dickerson v. United States, 
    530 U.S. 428
    , 434 (2000)). Relevant circumstances
    include the following:
    [T]he age of the accused; his lack of education or his intelligence level; the
    extent of his previous experience with the police; the repeated and
    prolonged nature of the questioning; the length of the detention of the
    accused before he gave the statement in question; the lack of any advice to
    the accused of his constitutional rights; whether there was an unnecessary
    delay in bringing him before a magistrate before he gave the confession;
    whether the accused was injured, intoxicated[,] or drugged, or in ill health
    when he gave the statement; whether the accused was deprived of food,
    sleep, or medical attention; whether the accused was physically abused; and
    whether the suspect was threatened with abuse.
    State v. Huddleston, 
    924 S.W.2d 666
    , 671 (Tenn. 1996) (quoting People v. Cipriano, 
    429 N.W.2d 781
    , 790 (Mich. 1988)).
    -25-
    The Defendant argues that his statement was coerced by deceptive police
    practices. He has identified several representations made by Investigator Washam and
    Detective Ivey which he claims were false or misleading:
    1.     The police had a video recording which showed the Defendant and
    Mr. Keeney at the scene, despite the police not having possession of such a
    recording;
    2.      The victim identified the Defendant as the person who perpetrated
    the attack;
    3.     The Defendant would appear like rapist and serial killer Ted Bundy
    unless he confessed;
    4.     The Defendant’s DNA would be on the victim if he had physical
    contact with her, despite the police not having any DNA evidence;
    5.    DNA evidence was “absolute” in court, despite the lack of DNA
    evidence; and
    6.     Investigator Washam gave the Defendant incorrect information
    about the possible sentence he faced.
    The Defendant also argues that the confession was not voluntary because Detective Ivey
    became angry and yelled at him during the interview and that Detective Ivey made
    legally incorrect statements about the effect of prior convictions on the sentence the
    Defendant might receive.
    In denying the motion to suppress, the trial court made the following factual
    findings:
    [O]n June 18, 2015, Detective Michael Washam of the Knoxville Police
    Department (KPD) traveled to Las Vegas, Nevada where he interviewed the
    defendant regarding allegations that the defendant was involved in an
    alleged kidnapping in Knoxville in the recent past. The defendant was in
    the custody of Las Vegas law enforcement on unrelated charges in Las
    Vegas. The defendant was taken into custody on those charges three days
    earlier. Detective Washam was accompanied by an Investigator with the
    Las Vegas Police Department, Travis Ivy. The first part of the interview
    focused exclusively on the Knoxville allegations.
    -26-
    Detective Washam began the interview by explaining to the
    defendant his Miranda rights. He explained to the defendant that if he
    wanted to talk to the detective, he must sign the waiver. The defendant
    agreed and signed the written waiver form. He appeared from the
    conversation to understand his rights and to speak with the investigators
    freely and voluntarily. At no point during the interview did the defendant
    make a request for an attorney or declare he wished to stop speaking with
    the investigators. To the contrary, the defendant revealed several times that
    he wanted to speak to the investigators so he could find out what they knew
    and what the witnesses were saying. At one point, the defendant used the
    phrase, “I just want to be left in peace.” However, the context makes it
    clear that the defendant was not referring to the ongoing interview. He was
    speaking about his life in general in light of his past criminal justice issues
    from the State of Virginia. This was not an unequivocal request for counsel
    or invocation of his right to remain silent. Furthermore, the record reflects
    that the defendant has a serious criminal history. This was not his first
    occasion to speak with the police or to have his rights explained to him.
    Detective Washam was quite polite and cordial throughout the
    interview. He told the defendant that he had more evidence of the crime
    than he actually had in his possession or knowledge. The detective was
    attempting to get the defendant to make admissions in the guise of getting
    the defendant’s explanation of why he committed the offense instead of
    asking if he actually was the one who committed it. The defendant never
    denied being involved in the incident in Knoxville. He expressed early on
    his concern that it didn’t matter what he said about the Knoxville offense
    because he was going to prison for life in Virginia. He was also very
    defensive about being considered a sexual predator. The investigators
    attempted to use this to get the defendant to admit he committed the offense
    for the purpose of robbery and not sexual assault.
    Detective Washam told the defendant that if he cooperated and told
    them why they tried to force the victim into the van that he would speak to
    the DA and tell her that the defendant cooperated and was not trying to rape
    the woman. He indicated to the defendant that it might make a difference
    to a judge and jury. However, he also made it clear that he could not make
    him any promises. The defendant continued to maintain that it wouldn’t
    make a difference, whatever he said, that he was “screwed.”
    At this point, Investigator Ivy took a different approach. He began
    to be more forceful and confrontational. He told the victim he was acting
    like the victim. He told the defendant to put himself in the victim’s place.
    -27-
    Investigator Ivy raised his voice when speaking with the defendant at this
    point in the interview. However, this period of confrontation was very
    brief. The defendant at first maintained that whatever he said would be
    twisted. He then said that he felt bad. He began to sound sad, remorseful,
    and teary. He said to tell the victim he was sorry and that he wasn’t going
    to rape her. The defendant then explained that they were blowing through
    their money quickly and were looking to make a quick score. They were
    attempting to rob the victim of cash and not rape her. He explained that he
    was not even trying to kidnap her. She just started yelling and he was
    trying to shut her up.
    After the defendant answered questions and gave an explanation of
    the incident in Knoxville, Investigator Ivy asked the defendant about what
    happened in Las Vegas. The defendant answered freely. Before the
    interview ended, the defendant again expressed his remorse and asked
    Detective Washam to tell the victim that he was sorry and that she was not
    going to be raped. This reveals that it was the investigators’ appeal to his
    empathy for the victim that caused the defendant to admit to his
    involvement in the crime.
    Based upon its findings of fact, the trial court concluded that (1) the evidence did
    not show an unlawful arrest and initial detention which was exploited to obtain the
    statement, (2) that the Defendant was advised of his Miranda rights, and (3) the
    Defendant was not coerced and made a statement freely and voluntarily. With regard to
    the issue of coercion, the court made the following pertinent findings:
    In this case, the defendant argues that his statement was not
    voluntary because the detective lied to him about the evidence the police
    had gathered and misled him about the law in Tennessee.                  A
    misrepresentation by law enforcement alone does not invalidate an
    otherwise voluntary confession. See State v. Stearns, 
    620 S.W.2d 92
    , 96
    (Tenn. Crim. App. 1981); and Frazier v. Cupp, 
    394 U.S. 731
    , 739, 
    89 S. Ct. 1420
    , 1424-25, 
    33 L. Ed. 2d 684
    (1969). It is unclear as to what exactly the
    detective said that was a lie. The detective did make reference to a video
    which no longer exists. However, the video apparently existed at one point
    and was viewed by the police. In addition, the co-defendant had given a
    previous statement. Detective Washam stated that he wanted to give the
    impression that they already had a lot of evidence that the defendant
    committed the offense.
    The detective also told the defendant that if he cooperated and told
    them why they accosted the victim that he would speak to the DA. He also
    -28-
    said that a judge and jury may take into account a cooperative statement
    explaining that they were not going to rape the victim, but just rob her.
    However, Detective Washam made it clear that he could not make any
    promises to the defendant. Looking at the statement as a whole, the court
    finds that the defendant’s statement was not obtained as a product of any
    promises of leniency. These statements by the detective appeared to have
    little to no effect on the defendant.
    To the contrary, the court finds that the defendant gave the
    incriminating statement when the investigators appealed to his empathy for
    the victim and desire not to be labeled as a sex offender, not based upon
    promises of leniency. In doing this, the investigators did not overbear the
    defendant’s will. They used the defendant’s own concerns about the
    public’s perception of him as a sex offender and his concern that the victim
    know she wasn’t going to be a rape victim. Although Investigator Ivy
    raised his voice in challenging the defendant to empathize with the victim,
    this was a brief incident in the context of a lengthy interview that was
    otherwise very calm and polite. The defendant was certainly challenged,
    however, he was not “brow-beaten” into a confession. Investigator Ivy did
    not overbear the defendant’s will. The statement was a product of the
    defendant’s own free will and desire to let the victim know she wasn’t
    going to be a rape victim.
    ...
    Looking to the totality of the circumstances, the defendant’s
    statement was knowingly, voluntarily, and freely given. He was explained
    his rights. He waived those rights. He is a middle aged man with an
    extensive criminal history. He displayed cunning and awareness in trying
    to get information out of the investigators while being interviewed by them.
    He was not coerced into giving the statement by either threats or promises.
    Upon review of the record, we conclude that the evidence does not preponderate
    against the trial court’s finding of fact. See 
    Odom, 928 S.W.2d at 23
    ; 
    Jones, 802 S.W.2d at 223
    . In our review of the court’s ruling on the motion, we have considered the trial
    court’s factual findings from the suppression hearing and the trial evidence. See
    
    Henning, 975 S.W.2d at 297-99
    ; see also 
    Williamson, 368 S.W.3d at 473
    . In our review
    of the totality of the circumstances, we have considered the alleged false or misleading
    statements the Defendant attributes to the officers who interviewed the Defendant.
    We conclude that the trial court did not err in denying the motion to suppress.
    Although the officers were less than entirely truthful with the Defendant and encouraged
    -29-
    the Defendant to confess in order not to appear to be a sexual predator, with one of the
    investigators briefly raising his voice at the Defendant, the evidence supports the trial
    court’s conclusion that the Defendant was not coerced and gave his statement freely and
    voluntarily. See 
    Stearns, 620 S.W.2d at 96
    ; see also 
    Frazier, 394 U.S. at 739
    ; State v.
    Ronallen Hardy, No. M2008-00381-CCA-R3-CD, 
    2009 WL 2733821
    , at *9 (Tenn. Crim.
    App. Aug. 31, 2009) (holding that, in view of the totality of the circumstances, the police
    did not coerce the defendant’s confession by falsely telling him that they could determine
    the date his fingerprints were left in a vehicle); State v. Stanley Earl Cates, No. E2003-
    02648-CCA-R3-CD, 
    2004 WL 2951976
    , at *5 (Tenn. Crim. App. Dec. 20, 2004)
    (holding that police deception during an investigation did not amount to a constitutional
    violation); State v. Monoleto Delshone Green, No. 01C01-9510-CC-00351, 
    1996 WL 741551
    , at *4 (Tenn. Crim. App. Dec. 30, 1996) (holding that a detective’s
    misrepresentation of evidence was relevant when reviewing the totality of the
    circumstances but that it did not invalidate the confession as a matter of course). As the
    court noted, the Defendant was experienced in the criminal justice system and was
    concerned about not being perceived as a sexual predator, which compelled him to
    explain that his attack on the victim had been an attempt to rob her, not an attempt to
    sexually assault her. When viewed in conjunction with the totality of the evidence, the
    officers’ conduct during the interview was not of a nature to overbear the free will of a
    suspect in the Defendant’s situation.
    The trial court did not err in denying the motion to suppress. The Defendant is not
    entitled to relief on this basis.
    IV
    Jury Instructions
    The Defendant contends that the trial court erred in denying his request for a jury
    instruction pursuant to State v. White, 
    362 S.W.3d 559
    , 578 (Tenn. 2012), which holds
    that a defendant charged with a kidnapping and an accompanying felony is entitled to a
    jury instruction that the jury is to determine whether the defendant’s removal or
    confinement of the victim was essentially incidental to committing an accompanying
    felony offense. The State responds that the White instruction is not required when the
    State elects to charge a defendant with a kidnapping offense but not with another felony
    offense. We agree with the State.
    In White, our supreme court delineated a new method for determining whether
    dual convictions for a kidnapping-related offense and another felony offense are
    permissible pursuant to due process principles. The court determined that a separate due
    process inquiry was unnecessary and concluded that a proper jury instruction in
    conjunction with appellate review of sufficiency of the evidence satisfied due process
    -30-
    principles. 
    Id. at 577-78;
    see State v. Cecil, 
    409 S.W.3d 599
    , 609 (Tenn. 2013) (“Only
    when the jury is properly instructed can appellate review of the sufficiency of the
    convicting evidence satisfy the due process safeguard.”). The White instruction requires
    a trial court to provide a jury instruction “defin[ing] the key element [of the kidnapping-
    related offense] – the substantial interference with the victim’s liberty – as requiring a
    finding by the jury that the victim’s removal or confinement was not essentially
    incidental to the accompanying felony offense.” 
    White, 362 S.W.3d at 580
    .
    Subsequent cases applying the White instruction have involved a kidnapping-
    related offense in conjunction with another felony offense, most notably robbery, assault,
    and rape. See State v. Rico R. Williams, No. W2011-02365-CCA-RM-CD, 
    2014 WL 60967
    (Tenn. Crim. App. Jan. 7, 2014) (analyzing the White instruction relative to
    charges for especially aggravated kidnapping and aggravated robbery); State v. Glenn
    Lydell McCray, No. M2011-02411-CCA-R3-CD, 
    2013 WL 6408753
    (Tenn. Crim. App.
    Dec. 6, 2013) (analyzing the White instruction relative to charges for especially
    aggravated kidnapping and aggravated assault); State v. Jonathan Kyle Husle, No.
    E2011-01292-CCA-R3-CD, 
    2013 WL 1136528
    (Tenn. Crim. App. Mar. 19, 2013)
    (analyzing the White instruction relative to charges for especially aggravated kidnapping
    and aggravated rape). Therefore, the purpose of the White instruction is to ensure the
    confinement or removal associated with a kidnapping-related charge is not merely
    incidental to accomplishing another felony, such as robbery, assault, and rape. See State
    v. Alston, 
    465 S.W.3d 555
    , 562 (Tenn. 2015) (“We have also identified certain crimes –
    such as robbery, rape, and assault – that, when charged along with kidnapping, would
    warrant [the White] instruction.”).
    The requirement of a White instruction is not absolute, however. In Alston, the
    supreme court said that the instruction was unnecessary in the case of a defendant
    charged with a kidnapping offense and aggravated burglary. 
    Id. The supreme
    court has
    also said that the White instruction is unnecessary when a defendant is charged with
    kidnapping of one victim and robbery of another. See State v. Teats, 
    468 S.W.3d 495
    ,
    503 (Tenn. 2015); State v. Williams, 
    468 S.W.3d 510
    , 516-17 (Tenn. 2015).
    In the present case, the Defendant is charged with four counts of aggravated
    kidnapping but not with an accompanying felony. The Defendant nevertheless contends
    that he was entitled to the White instruction based upon the evidence he attempted to rob
    the victim. Our research reflects that Tennessee appellate courts have not yet addressed
    this precise factual scenario.
    The Defendant relies upon State v. Salamon, 
    949 A.2d 1092
    , 1122, n.35 (Conn.
    2008). In Salamon, the defendant was convicted of second-degree kidnapping, first-
    degree unlawful restraint, and risk of injury to a child related to his having accosted a
    minor in a train station. 
    Salamon, 949 A.2d at 1100-01
    . The defendant was charged
    -31-
    initially with assault, but the State later filed an amended information that did not include
    an assault charge. 
    Id. at 1102.
    He requested but was denied a jury instruction that he
    must be found not guilty of the kidnapping charge if the jury determined “that the
    defendant’s restraint of the victim in connection with the kidnapping was incidental to the
    defendant’s restraint of the victim in connection with his assault of the victim.” 
    Id. At the
    time of the Salamon defendant’s trial, the requested instruction was contrary to
    controlling precedent, and the trial court’s instructions were in accord with existing law.
    
    Id. at 1101-02.
    The Connecticut Supreme Court overruled existing precedent and
    adopted a rule that prohibited convictions of kidnapping and another crime if the
    confinement or movement was merely incidental to the commission of the other crime.
    
    Id. at 1101.
    The court granted the defendant a new trial on the kidnapping charge and
    stated that “the jury must be instructed that, if it finds that the defendant’s restraint of the
    victim was merely incidental to the defendant’s commission of another crime against the
    victim, that is, assault, then it must find the defendant not guilty of the crime of
    kidnapping.” 
    Id. at 1122.
    The court said that the instruction was necessary, whether or
    not the state charged the defendant with assault, because the facts would reasonably
    support an assault conviction. 
    Id. at 1122,
    n.35.
    The Tennessee Supreme Court relied on Salamon in adopting the rule in
    Tennessee requiring that a jury be instructed to determine whether the removal or
    confinement associated with a kidnapping charge was essentially incidental to the
    commission of another felony. See 
    White, 362 S.W.3d at 577
    . In White, the defendant
    was charged with especially aggravated kidnapping, burglary, and aggravated robbery.
    
    Id. at 562.
    Thus, the question of whether the White instruction is required in Tennessee
    when a defendant is charged only with a kidnapping offense was not before the White
    court.
    As we have stated, Tennessee appellate courts have yet to address this question.
    Cf. State v. Jamie Lynn Moore, No. M2017-01877-CCA-R3-CD, 
    2018 WL 6172096
    (Tenn. Crim. App. Nov. 26, 2018) (rejecting the defendant’s argument, in the context of
    reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence of an aggravated kidnapping conviction, that
    White was determinative of the outcome even though a companion domestic assault
    charge had been dropped before the case was submitted to the jury).
    White addressed “the application of due process principles to dual convictions for
    kidnapping and an accompanying felony, such as rape or robbery.” 
    White, 362 S.W.3d at 561
    (emphasis added). In Teats, dual convictions as to the same victim were not present,
    and the supreme court said that the White instruction was not required. See 
    Teats, 468 S.W.3d at 503
    . The Teats court reasoned:
    Where a defendant is charged with kidnapping and an accompanying
    offense involving some confinement of the same victim, there are
    -32-
    appropriate due process concerns that the defendant could be convicted of
    two crimes—e.g. robbery and kidnapping—when he has only committed
    one crime—robbery. But where, as in this case, the State charged the
    Defendant with robbing the restaurant manager and kidnapping the four
    other employees, the Defendant does not stand the risk of being convicted
    of kidnapping a victim he confined only long enough to rob. Simply put,
    the due process concerns articulated in White are not present, as the
    kidnapping of one or more victims can never be “essentially incidental” to
    an offense perpetrated against a different victim or victims. See 
    White, 362 S.W.3d at 580
    .
    
    Id. In the
    present case, the Defendant was never at risk for being convicted of two
    crimes, one of which was essentially incidental to the other, because the jury was asked
    to determine his guilt of only of alternative theories of a single offense, aggravated
    kidnapping. The jury was charged with the law regarding the elements of aggravated
    kidnapping and with the law regarding State’s burden of proof. After the jury found the
    Defendant guilty, the trial court had the obligation as thirteenth juror to approve the
    verdict, and in Section I above, we have reviewed the sufficiency of the evidence to
    support the conviction. This procedure ensures that the Defendant has been afforded his
    right to due process.
    We acknowledge that the supreme court in White relied on Salamon in adopting
    the requirement that the jury determine, upon proper instruction, whether the evidence
    relied upon to establish a kidnapping shows that the conduct was essentially incidental to
    the defendant’s commission of a charged accompanying felony. However, the court’s
    reliance on Salamon pertained to its legal principles, not to its facts, which differed from
    those before the White court. The injustice that may result to a defendant charged with
    dual offenses is conviction of both of the kidnapping and the accompanying felony, and
    that concern is absent in this case because the jury was asked to consider, and the
    Defendant was convicted of, only aggravated kidnapping. We conclude, therefore, that
    the trial court did not err in denying the Defendant’s request for the White instruction.
    The Defendant is not entitled to relief on this basis.
    In consideration of the foregoing and the record as a whole, the judgment of the
    trial court is affirmed.
    _____________________________________
    ROBERT H. MONTGOMERY, JR., JUDGE
    -33-