Yes - especially if you think the charge is a misunderstanding. "Misunderstanding" cases are the ones where defendants talk to the police without a lawyer, assume the case will clear itself up, and end up indicted on words they said during what they thought was a friendly conversation. Rhode Island kidnapping exposure is too high to treat this way. A Rhode Island kidnapping lawyer's first job in a "misunderstanding" case is to stop the conversation, preserve the evidence that supports the defendant's version of events, and present it to the prosecutor before an indictment issues - not after. Bank & Munns has cleared cases pre-indictment that would have become Superior Court felonies if the defendant had kept talking.