Unlawful Imprisonment – 18 U.S.C. § 1201 Sentencing Guidelines
Thanks for visiting Federal Lawyers, a second-generation firm managed by our lead attorney with over 40 years of combined experience. When federal prosecutors charge unlawful imprisonment under 18 U.S.C. § 1201, they’re alleging you unlawfully restrained someone’s freedom of movement—confining, detaining, or restricting their liberty—without the aggravating factors that would elevate the offense to kidnapping. While § 1201 is primarily known as the federal kidnapping statute, courts recognize lesser-included unlawful imprisonment offenses for restraints that don’t involve transportation, ransom demands, or extended detention. Sentences vary dramatically: brief unlawful imprisonment might yield months, while imprisonment accompanied by violence or extended duration approaches kidnapping’s life-imprisonment range.
Unlawful Imprisonment vs. Kidnapping
The distinction matters enormously for sentencing:
**Kidnapping** under § 1201 involves seizing, confining, abducting, or carrying away a person across state lines, for ransom, or in violation of federal law, with substantial restraint of liberty. Kidnapping typically involves transportation, extended confinement, or specific intents (ransom, facilitating other crimes). Sentences range up to life imprisonment.
**Unlawful imprisonment** is restraint of liberty without those aggravating factors. Locking someone in a room for hours, restraining them during arguments without moving them significant distances, confining them without ransom demands or intent to commit additional crimes—these constitute unlawful imprisonment. While serious, they lack kidnapping’s heightened culpability elements.
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(212) 300-5196Courts evaluate several factors distinguishing the two:
- **Duration of confinement** – Brief restraints (minutes to hours) suggest imprisonment rather than kidnapping. Extended confinement (days to weeks) indicates kidnapping.
- **Distance moved** – Substantial transportation (across state lines, to remote locations) supports kidnapping. Minimal movement (within the same building, short distances) suggests imprisonment.
- **Purpose of restraint** – Ransom demands, facilitating other crimes, or terrorizing victims indicate kidnapping. Restraints arising from domestic disputes, preventing victims from leaving during arguments, or impulsive confinement suggest imprisonment.
- **Increased danger** – If restraint placed victims in substantially greater danger than they faced before confinement, kidnapping applies. If danger level remained constant, imprisonment is more appropriate.
- **Planning and premeditation** – Kidnapping often involves planning, preparation, and deliberation. Unlawful imprisonment frequently arises spontaneously from volatile confrontations.
The “Asportation” Requirement
Many courts require kidnapping involve some “asportation”—carrying away or transporting victims. When defendants confine victims without moving them, courts often characterize the offense as unlawful imprisonment rather than kidnapping. This doctrine prevents overcharging: locking someone in a closet during a robbery shouldn’t convert robbery into kidnapping unless the confinement substantially exceeded what was necessary for the robbery.
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Defense challenges kidnapping charges by demonstrating minimal asportation. If victims were moved only within the same location, if movement was incidental to other crimes, or if defendants confined victims without transporting them, unlawful imprisonment might be the appropriate charge—dramatically reducing sentencing exposure.

After a heated custody dispute, your ex-spouse claims you refused to let them leave your home with your child for over three hours, and now federal investigators are involved because the incident occurred on a military installation. You've just learned that a federal grand jury is considering charges under 18 U.S.C. § 1201 for unlawful imprisonment.
What kind of sentence am I realistically facing if I'm convicted of federal unlawful imprisonment, and is there any way to get the charges reduced?
Under 18 U.S.C. § 1201, if the imprisonment element is proven without additional aggravating factors like ransom or serious bodily harm, sentencing guidelines typically place the offense at a lower level than full kidnapping charges, but you could still face significant prison time depending on the circumstances. The federal sentencing guidelines consider factors such as the duration of restraint, whether any force or threats were used, and your prior criminal history—each of which can adjust your offense level substantially. A strong defense strategy would focus on challenging the element of 'willfulness' and arguing that the situation was a domestic misunderstanding rather than criminal confinement, which could support a motion to dismiss or reduce charges to a state-level offense. We would also explore whether the conduct truly falls under federal jurisdiction or whether prosecutors are overreaching, since § 1201 was primarily designed for interstate kidnapping cases, not brief domestic detention incidents.
This is general information only. Contact us for advice specific to your situation.
Common Unlawful Imprisonment Scenarios
These fact patterns typically result in unlawful imprisonment charges rather than full kidnapping:
- **Domestic violence confinement** – One partner prevents the other from leaving during arguments by blocking doors, taking car keys, physically restraining them. The confinement is temporary and arises from volatile domestic situations rather than planned kidnapping.
- **Workplace restraint** – Employers or coworkers prevent employees from leaving during disputes, lock them in offices during confrontations, or physically block exits. These workplace conflicts involve restraint without kidnapping’s transportation or ransom elements.
- **Robbery-related brief confinement** – Robbers lock victims in back rooms, closets, or bathrooms during robberies. The confinement facilitates theft and prevents immediate pursuit but doesn’t constitute independent kidnapping absent substantial movement or extended duration.
- **False imprisonment during assaults** – Defendants restrain victims during assaults by holding them down, preventing escape, or confining them in rooms. If the restraint is brief and merely facilitates assault rather than constituting separate kidnapping, unlawful imprisonment applies.
