Federal Kidnapping Charges Under 18 USC 1201: The Lindbergh Law and Death Penalty
So your probably facing federal kidnapping charges under 18 USC 1201 and your ABSOLUTELY TERRIFIED because kidnapping carries potential death penalty. Maybe you transported someone across state lines during domestic dispute. Maybe there’s allegations you held person against their will for ransom. Or maybe prosecutors claim you took someone for more than 24 hours triggering federal jurisdiction. Look, we get it. Your COMPLETELY OVERWHELMED by these charges. And you should be! Because kidnapping under 18 USC 1201 carries ANY TERM OF YEARS OR LIFE in federal prison and if death results from kidnapping, prosecutors can seek DEATH PENALTY – and statute passed after Lindbergh baby kidnapping in 1932 gives FBI jurisdiction over kidnappings crossing state lines!
What Is Federal Kidnapping Under 18 USC 1201?
Let me explain the statute born from America’s most notorious kidnapping case. Federal Kidnapping Act passed in 1932 after kidnapping and murder of Charles Lindbergh’s infant son! Also called Lindbergh Law! Designed to let FBI pursue kidnappers who cross state lines!
The statute criminalizes unlawfully seizing, confining, inveigles, decoying, kidnapping, abducting, or carrying away and holding any person! TWO types of kidnapping: holding for ransom or reward OR transporting in interstate commerce! Don’t need ransom demand for federal kidnapping!
Here’s what’s really scary – if victim not released within 24 hours, creates REBUTTABLE PRESUMPTION of interstate transportation! Don’t need to prove you actually crossed state lines! Holding someone over 24 hours automatically triggers federal jurisdiction unless you prove otherwise!
Federal jurisdiction requires interstate or foreign commerce involvement! Victim transported across state lines, into foreign country, or held on federal property! State kidnapping becomes federal crime once interstate element present!
What Are Elements Prosecutors Must Prove?
Different elements depending on ransom vs non-ransom kidnapping!
For ransom kidnapping: (1) unlawfully seized, confined, abducted, or carried away person (2) held for ransom, reward, or other benefit! Only two elements! Don’t need interstate commerce for ransom cases!
For non-ransom kidnapping: (1) unlawfully seized, confined, abducted, or carried away person (2) transported in interstate or foreign commerce! Must prove victim moved across state lines or federal boundary!
“Unlawfully” means without legal authority and against victim’s will! Victim must not have consented to being taken or confined! If victim willingly went with you, not kidnapping!
“Seized, confined, abducted, or carried away” covers broad range of conduct! Taking by force, holding in one place, transporting from location to location – all qualify! Even small movements can be kidnapping!
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(212) 300-5196Interstate commerce element satisfied if victim crosses state line! Taking someone from California to Nevada? Interstate commerce! From Texas into Mexico? Foreign commerce! Geographic boundary crossing gives FBI jurisdiction!
But remember 24-hour presumption! If you held victim more than 24 hours without releasing, law PRESUMES interstate transportation occurred! Burden shifts to YOU to prove no interstate movement! Devastating prosecutorial advantage!
What Are Penalties for Federal Kidnapping?
Sentences are CRUSHING with potential death penalty!
Standard kidnapping: imprisonment for any term of years OR LIFE! Judge can impose life sentence even for first offense! No maximum limit! Typical sentences range from 20 years to life!
Death penalty if victim dies: if death of any person results from kidnapping, defendant can be sentenced to death or life imprisonment! One of few federal crimes still carrying death penalty!
Todd Spodek
Lead Attorney & Founder
Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," Todd Spodek brings decades of high-stakes criminal defense experience. His aggressive approach has secured dismissals and acquittals in cases others deemed unwinnable.
“Death results” doesn’t require intent to kill! If victim dies during kidnapping from any cause – accident, medical emergency, escape attempt – death penalty available! Strict liability for death!

Your ex-spouse is accusing you of federal kidnapping after you drove your 8-year-old daughter across state lines to your mother's house during a heated custody dispute, and now FBI agents are involved. Prosecutors are threatening charges under 18 USC 1201 with potential life imprisonment, claiming you transported a minor across state lines without lawful authority.
Can I really face federal kidnapping charges and the death penalty just for taking my own child during a custody disagreement?
Under 18 USC 1201, the federal kidnapping statute known as the Lindbergh Law, transporting any person across state lines against their will can trigger federal jurisdiction, but there is a critical exception in Section 1201(a) for parents acting within the scope of parental rights. The death penalty provision under this statute applies only when the kidnapping results in the death of the victim, so that extreme penalty would not be on the table in a custody-related case. However, prosecutors sometimes use the threat of severe charges as leverage, which is why mounting an aggressive defense early — challenging the 'without lawful authority' element and establishing your custodial rights — is essential. We would file motions to dismiss based on the parental exception and work to get this matter moved back to family court where it belongs.
This is general information only. Contact us for advice specific to your situation.
Attempted kidnapping: up to 20 years! Trying to kidnap someone but failing carries 20-year maximum! Substantial step toward kidnapping prosecutable even if incomplete!
Conspiracy to kidnap: imprisonment for any term of years or life! Same penalties as completed kidnapping! Just agreeing to kidnap someone is life-sentence crime!
No mandatory minimums but sentencing guidelines are harsh! Base offense level 32 for kidnapping! Enhancements for ransom demand, permanent injury, sexual abuse, victim under 18, restraining victim more than few hours! Guidelines often reach life imprisonment!
