The defendant was found guilty of three counts of illegally selling heroin, with the evidence in support of the jury verdict
1
establishing
As to the first sale of heroin by the defendant, the purchaser testified that he and an informant went to the residence of the defendant and that:
“We were admitted to 359 Highland by Mr. Fletcher and we went upstairs. It’s an upstairs apartment, and when we got up there, the confidential informant asked Mr. Fletcher if he had any stuff and Mr. Fletcher said, ‘A little,’ and then he asked me how much I wanted and I said, ‘Three-quarters,’ meaning three quarter bags of heroin. He got up — we were in the living room — he got up and walked into a room to the right as you come up the stairs and got three tinfoil packets out of a refrigerator and turned and handed them to me and I in turn handed him $75 — three 20’s, one 10 and one 5 — and then we departed.”
As to the second sale of heroin, eleven days later, the purchaser testified that he returned to the same address, this time alone, and was again admitted by the defendant. The purchaser testified that he was asked what he wanted and that he replied, “Two quarters of jive,” that the defendant then left the room and the following then transpired:
“I believe the unidentified Negro male said, ‘Billy wants you’ or something to that effect. I walked into the bedroom. Mr. Fletcher was sitting at a table in a corner and he had a small pile of white powder in front of him, and he was using a small spoon to put a quantity of this white powder in tinfoil packets; and then Mr. Fletcher asked me what was the last thing I had bought from him, and at this time I said, ‘The brown junk,’ and he agreed and then finished spooning out two quarter bags and then handed it to me and I handed him $50, which was in two 20’s and one 10.”
“Mrs. Caroline Fletcher answered the door and admitted us and we went upstairs to the upstairs apartment, and Mr. Fletcher asked what we wanted and the confidential informant said, ‘A quarter,’ and then Mr. Fletcher asked the confidential informant a few questions, personal questions concerning him, and then Mr. Fletcher went into the room to the right and returned with a tinfoil packet; and I handed Mr. Fletcher a $20 bill and a $5 bill, and Mr. Fletcher handed the packet to the confidential informant and he placed it in his right jacket pocket and then we exited the apartment. And, when we returned to my car, the confidential informant handed me the tin packet, tinfoil packet, and I placed it in my left shirt pocket.”
As to sufficiency of the evidence to sustain conviction, we hold that the evidence supporting the verdict, believed and rationally considered by the jury, was amply sufficient to sustain the guilty verdict as to each of the three counts. The issue raised by the defendant as to the testimony of backup agents who observed the purchaser approach the house of the defendant, goes to the credibility of such witnesses and the weight to be given their testimony — both of which are matters for a jury to determine. 2
As
to the quantities of heroin being sufficient to sustain conviction,
we hold, as a matter of law, that they were. The chemist who analyzed the contents of the several tinfoil packets testified that the total weight of the matter contained in one packet was two tenths of a gram, five percent of which was heroin, ninety-five percent of which was diluting material. Thus each packet contained ten milligrams or so of heroin, which defend
As1
to jury instructions on entrapment being hero required,
we hold that such instructions would in this case have been entirely inappropriate. A trial court is not required to give a requested instruction unless, the evidence reasonably requires it,
7
and here the evidence did not require it. The issue of entrapment does not arise under the circumstances of the three sales as testified to by the purchaser, such testimony, if believed by the jury, establishing that the defendant “was predisposed to unlawfully sell a dangerous drug.”
8
Under
By the Court. — Judgment and order affirmed.
Notes
This court has repeatedly held:
“ ‘. . .
In reviewing the evidence to challenge a finding of fact, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the finding. Reasonable inferences drawn from the evidence can support a finding of fact and, if more than one reasonable inference can be drawn from the evidence, the inference which supports the finding is the one that must be adopted. . . .’”
Ziegler v. State
(1974),
See: Blackwell v. State
(1969),
State v. Dodd
(1965),
Secs. 161.02 (1) and 161.28 (1), Stats. 1969, and sec. 161.41 (1) (a), Stats. 1971.
State v. Dodd, swpra, footnote 3, at page 651.
Id. at page 651, this court adding: “. . . A more liberal interpretation favorable to drug addicts and those illegally dealing in narcotics cannot reasonably be given. . . .”
Belohlavek v. State
(1967),
State v. Boutch
(1973),
“Kasabuske [undercover agent for the state department of justice] testified that he approached defendant and asked him if he knew where he could get some weed. Defendant said he would try, and then walked over to another party and returned in about a minute and said he couldn’t. He testified that the defendant approached another individual, came back and said he couldn’t get any weed, but had some organic mese to sell.
Id. at page 448, this court holding: “Likewise, the record shows no previous importunities on the part of agent Kasabuske nor refusals on the part of the defendant to purchase or sell dangerous drugs. It is, in fact, impossible to find any basis upon which to base a claim of entrapment. The defendant was not induced by state agents to commit a crime not contemplated by him. The record shows the defendant to be able and willing to supply such drugs without hesitancy on his part whatsoever. The state has proven beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused had a prior disposition to commit the crime.” Also holding at page 447: “If, however, the individual is so predisposed to commit the crime such that the intent to violate the law can be said to have originated in the mind of the individual and not the government agent, then the defense of entrapment is inapplicable. . . .”
Id.
at page 448, this court holding: “‘It is only when the government’s deception actually implants the criminal design in the mind of the defendant that the defense of entrapment comes into play.’” Quoting
United States v. Russell
(1978),
See: United States v. Hampton
(8th Cir. 1974), 507 Fed. 2d 832, 834, 835, the court stating: “. . . Appellant recognizes that the Supreme Court has recently rejected a ‘Government conduct’ theory of entrapment in
United States v. Russell,
United States v. Bussell, supra,
footnote 10, at page 433, the majority opinion holding: “. . . This Court’s opinions in
Sorrells v. United States, supra
[(1932),
“We decline to overrule these cases. . . .”
Ramer v. State
(1968),
Valiga v. National Food Co.
(1973),
Ramer v. State, supra,
footnote 13, at page 83, citing
Loose v. State
(1903),
See: Waite v. State
(1973),
