On November 23, 1982 Wilson Acevedo was convicted by a jury of aggravated kidnapping in violation of La.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 14:44 (West 1982). He was sentenced on November 23, 1982 to serve mandatory life imprisonment at hard labor. On appeal, the defendant’s counsel requested only a review of the record for errors patent. The conviction and sentence were affirmed. State v. Acevedo, 439 So.2d 1130 (La.App. 4th Cir. 1983). Claiming ineffective assistance of counsel on appeal, Acevedo filed an application for post conviction relief. Finding the claim meritorious under Lofton v. Whitley, 905 F.2d 885 (5th Cir.1990), this Court ordered that Acevedo be granted a new appeal.
Claiming that his actions were those of a desperately lonely man seeking companionship, Acevedo challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his conviction. In accordance with Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 99 S.Ct. 2781, 61 L.Ed.2d 560 (1979), we review the record evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution to determine if the facts established by the direct evidence and inferred from the circumstances established by that evidence are sufficient for a rational juror to conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was guilty of every essential element of the crime. State v. Smith, 441 So.2d 739, 741 (La.1983) (citation omitted). The principle criteria of review under Jackson v. Virginia is rationality; irrational decisions to convict will be overturned. State v. Mussal, 523 So.2d 1305, 1310 (La.1988).
Before reviewing the evidence produced at Acevedo’s trial, we examine the statutory framework of aggravated kidnapping. At the time of Acevedo’s conviction, two statutory kidnapping offenses existed, aggravated kidnapping and simple kidnapping. The aggravated kidnapping statute, La.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 14:44 (West pre-1989 amendment), provides that:
Aggravated kidnapping is the doing of any of the following acts with the intent thereby to force the victim, or some other person, to give up anything of apparent present or prospective value, or to grant any advantage or immunity, in order to secure *830a release of the person under the offender’s actual or apparent control:
(1) The forcible seizing and carrying of any person from one place to another; or
(2) The enticing or persuading of any person to go from one place to another; or
(3) The imprisoning or forcible secreting of any person.
Whoever commits the crime of aggravated Mdnapping shall be punished by life imprisonment at hard labor without benefit of parole, probation or suspension of sentence.
By contrast, the simple kidnapping statute, La.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 14:45 (West pre-1989 amendment), states in pertinent part:
A. Simple kidnapping is:
(1) the intentional and forcible seizing and carrying of any person from one place to another without his consent ...
B. Whoever commits the crime of simple kidnapping shall be fined not more than five thousand dollars, imprisoned with or without hard labor for not more than five years, or both.
In the case before us, the victim, Ms. Kathleen Plemer, testified at trial that she left her employer’s apartment in the French Quarter between 1:15 and 1:30 A.M. on April 30, 1982. Ms. Plemer had trouble starting her vehicle, a Blazer with a camper top,1 and Acevedo approached her and offered assistance. After starting the truck, Acevedo pulled out a gun,2 stuck it into Ms. Plemer’s side and said, “now, lets go for a ride ... just get in the truck and don’t give me any trouble.” Acevedo told Plemer that he wanted to go the bus station on Tulane Avenue and retrieve his baggage.3 Ms. Plemer advised Acevedo that the truck needed gasoline and proceeded to an Exxon station at the corner of Claiborne Avenue and Canal Street. While Ms. Plemer put gasoline in the truck and paid the attendant in the glass booth, Acevedo remained in the truck. Making no attempt to alert the attendant, Ms. Plemer returned to the truck. Acevedo first wanted to go to Armstrong Park, but as they neared the park, Acevedo ordered Ms. Plemer to keep driving. Ms. Plemer circled the park, then drove toward her home in St. Bernard. While they were driving towards St. Bernard, Acevedo repeatedly stated that he wanted Ms. Plemer to go to a motel with him and to go out with him. Acevedo requested that Ms. Plemer pull off on “different little roads,” but she refused, telling him “no, you couldn’t do that; there’d be people around.” Knowing that it was policy in St. Bernard for police to check vehicles stopped on the side of the road, Ms. Plemer informed Acevedo that she was getting tired and “needed to pull over for awhile.” She then parked near the entrance of a subdivision where her brother-in-law, a policeman in St. Bernard, lived.
Ms. Plemer stated that “we stopped for awhile, and then he wanted me to get in the back of the truck. I got in the back of the truck. He made me take my shoes, my pantyhose, my clothes off, except for my blouse, which he undone my blouse; and my underclothes; and he was laying on top of me when, thank God, the police came.” Acevedo warned Plemer to stay down and not say anything, that he was going to tell the police that they were sleeping on the side of the road.4 When the police approached the vehicle, however, Ms. Plemer started screaming. Acevedo stuck his gun out the window and started yelling at the police. He then drove off at a high rate of speed. During the high speed chase through St. Bernard which followed, Ms. Plemer pulled on her pants, climbed into the passenger seat, and screamed at Acevedo to slow down. Acevedo failed to negotiate a curve and the truck crashed and flipped over, landing on its wheels.
Deputy Dominick McGuire of the St. Bernard Parish Sheriffs Office, testified that, while on patrol on April 30, 1982, at approximately 3:32 A.M., he observed the Plemer *831vehicle parked on the side of the road. The deputy stopped his patrol car and approached the vehicle. The driver, Acevedo, told him there was no problem and pointed a chrome automatic-looking pistol out of the vehicle window. As Acevedo attempted to drive away, the deputy became aware of a partially disrobed woman in the back of the truck screaming for help. Deputy McGuire fired a warning shot in the air and another deputy, Deputy Soulier, shot the left front fender of the Plemer vehicle. After a high speed chase, the Plemer vehicle crashed, Acevedo was thrown from the vehicle, and the pistol was recovered from the floorboard. On inspection, the pistol used by Acevedo was discovered to be a toy gun. Deputy McGuire’s testimony was corroborated by Deputy Soulier and Detective Raul Vallecillo.
Ms. Plemer was taken to Delaronde Hospital for treatment of injuries she sustained in the accident. As its only witness, the defense called Ms. Judy K. Speer, a registered nurse at Delaronde Hospital. Ms. Speer testified that Ms. Plemer told her that she had been kidnapped, but did not tell her of an attempted rape. Ms. Speer testified further that there was nothing in the medical report indicative of a rape.
The trial court instructed the jury, in part, that “a demand for sexual activity by the kidnapper from a person who has been forcibly seized and carried from one place to another satisfies the requirement that the kidnapper intended to force the person to give anything of value to the kidnapper in order to gain the release of the kidnapped victim.” In order to convict Acevedo of aggravated kidnapping “you must find to your satisfaction, and beyond a reasonable doubt, that (1) the defendant forcibly seized Kathleen Plemer, and carried her from one place to another and that the defendant did so with the specific intent to force Kathleen Plemer to give up anything of prospective, present value, in order to secure her release; and third that the victim, the alleged victim, Kathleen Plemer was under the actual or apparent control of the defendant.” Reasonable doubt was defined as “such a doubt as would give rise to a grave uncertainty.”5
After an hour and a half of deliberations, the jury returned a verdict of guilty as charged of aggravated kidnapping. Acevedo was sentenced to mandatory life imprisonment at hard labor without any possibility of parole, probation, or suspended sentence.
DISCUSSION
The State suggests that this case is analogous to State v. Arnold, 548 So.2d 920 (La.1989) and we have only to determine whether Ms. Plemer believed she would be released upon gratification of Acevedo’s demands. In Arnold, the defendant grabbed the victim as she attempted to unlock her truck, forced her into the truck and drove off. The victim cried out for help and attempted to escape, but the defendant pulled her back into the truck by her hair and warned her not to try it again. He continued to hold on to her hair as he was driving and ordered her to lean down on the seat so that no one would see her. During the entire drive, the defendant held a knife on the victim and told her that if she “didn’t do what he said he would use the knife.” The defendant stopped in the parking lot of an apartment complex and ordered the victim to remove her pants and underwear. He attempted to vaginally rape her three times but was unable to achieve penetration. Consequently, he forced her at knife point to perform oral sex. The issue before the Court in Arnold was whether under these circumstances the defendant could be found guilty of aggravated kidnapping when there was no explicit communication by the kidnapper to the victim that she would be released if she complied with his demands for sexual gratification. The Court analyzed the aggravated kidnapping statute, found that the critical distinction between the crime of aggravated kidnapping and the crime of simple kidnapping is the kidnapper’s intent to ex*832tort, and determined that the four elements constituting aggravated kidnapping are:
1. the forcible seizing and;
2. the carrying of any person from one place to another (the asportation element);
3. with the intent to force the victim, or some other person, to give up anything of apparent present or prospective value (the extortion element);
4. in order to secure the release of that person.
In Arnold, the Court determined that the first three elements of aggravated kidnapping were clearly met; the victim was clearly seized and carried from one place to another and, in accordance with Louisiana jurisprudence, the seizure of a victim with intent to commit rape constitutes an intent to force the victim to give up something of value.6 The issue remaining before the Court was whether, under these circumstances where the kidnapper clearly intended to rape the victim, the statute required an explicit communication by the kidnapper to the victim that compliance with his sexual demands would result in the victim’s safe release. The- Court analyzed the fourth element of aggravated kidnapping and determined that when a kidnapper’s words and actions manifested an intent to extort sexual gratification such that a reasonable person, given the totality of the circumstances, would believe that he or she would not be safely released without compliance, evidence of explicit communication by the defendant to the victim was unnecessary under § 14:44. Arnold, 548 So.2d at 924. Reasoning that “any person who was forcibly seized, brought to a remote location, held at knifepoint and threatened in no uncertain terms with the use of that weapon, would comply with the abductor’s demands in hope of securing safe release,” the Court found that the defendant’s threat to “use the knife” plainly manifested an intent to force her to give in to his sexual demands in the hope of obtaining release and, thus, the evidence was sufficient to support a conviction of aggravated kidnapping. Id.
The victim in Arnold was brutalized and the defendant clearly intended to rape the victim; however, the facts before us are far more ambiguous. Acevedo carried a toy gun and originally wanted only to go to bus station. He told Ms. Plemer that he wanted to date her and go to a motel with her. Acevedo allowed Ms. Plemer to get out of the truck, pump gas, pay the attendant, drive past desolate roads, park on a major highway, and keep her underwear and blouse on. Approximately two hours passed between the time Ms. Plemer left her employer’s apartment in the French Quarter and the time the St. Bernard sheriffs stopped to investigate Ms. Plemer’s parked truck. Ms. Plemer did not report a rape attempt to the examining nurse and nothing in the medical report indicated rape.
Arnold does not require an explicit communication by the defendant when there is a clear intent to rape, looking rather to the defendant’s intent and the victim’s reasonable belief that compliance will result in a safe release. However, on the evidence before us we can guess at Acevedo’s likely intentions but cannot find that Acevedo’s actions clearly manifested an intent to force the victim to comply with his sexual demands in hopes of obtaining her release. There is no evidence that Acevedo removed his clothes or, in fact, attempted anything of a sexual nature beyond lying down on the mattress with the victim in the back of her truck. We decline to extend Arnold to include such circumstances.7 As such, a rational juror could not have concluded that Acevedo was guilty of every element of the crime of aggravated kidnapping and his conviction for that offense cannot be sustained. We reverse Acevedo’s conviction for aggravated kidnap*833ping and find him guilty of the lesser included offense of simple kidnapping. A remand to the trial court for sentencing on the simple kidnapping conviction is normal procedure, but in this ease Acevedo has served more than ten years, twice the maximum term of imprisonment for simple kidnapping. Accordingly, we order Acevedo released.
REVERSED AND RENDERED; RELEASE ORDERED.