This court on a previous appeal considered and rejected a number of contentions advanced by these appellants. We remanded, however, for a new trial for what we considered to be an error in the charge with respect to the burden of proof on the issue of entrapment. Gorin v. United States,
We reaffirm our previous holdings. Only a few matters require consideration on this appeal.
In our opinion on the previous appeal we set out the charges laid against these defendants-appellants and the facts adduced at the first trial in some detail. Repetition here would serve no useful purpose. It will suffice to say that entrapment was a principal if not the major issue at both trials. On the previous appeal the appellants contended that the evidence established entrapment as a matter of law whereas the government contended that the evidence failed even to raise the issue. We rejected both contentions and agreed with the district court that the evidence as to entrapment raised an issue for the jury. The same contentions are presented on this appeal and again we reject them. The principal difference between the evidence at the two trials is that the defendant Glassman elected to testify at the first trial but did not take the stand at the second. This weakened the evidence of entrapment. Perhaps it weakened that evidence to the point of supporting the government’s contention. But we can give the appellants the benefit of the doubt, as the district court did by submitting the issue to the jury a second time.
Another contention now advanced is that the court below erred in not striking and withdrawing from the consideration of the jury certain alleged overt acts on the ground that the evi *213 dence established that the alleged conspirators who perpetrated the acts had been entrapped into committing them. We reject the contention. The most that can be said of. the evidence is that the government agents left the door unlocked for the perpetrators of the acts to lift the latch and walk in. That is mot entrapment.
Another contention is that the court below erred in admitting in evidence a verbatim copy of notations' on a piece of .yellow paper found in Glassman’s posses.sion when he was arrested.
Glassman was taken into custody on ■a. warrant of arrest', the validity of which is not challenged, by an inspector of the Internal Revenue Inspection Service of the United States Treasury Department and a Deputy United States Marshal. The arresting officers took Glass-man to the United States Marshal’s ■office in Boston and asked him to put bis personal effects on a' desk. Glass-man complied. The inspector then asked Glassman to empty the contents of his wallet. Glassman did so in part but the inspector, noticing that some papers were still in Glassman’s wallet, asked to :see them all. Glassman said that the papers remaining in his wallet were personal and unimportant, but the inspector said he would like to see them anyway. Thereupon Glassman produced a sheet of yellow paper with figures and notations on it showing the division of Bergman’s Tee between the alleged conspirators and the dates and amounts of the payments made by Glassman to McCaffrey as stated in our previous opinion. The inspector ■copied the yellow paper verbatim and the copy was admitted in evidence over the appellants’ objections.
The appellants do not contend that the search of Glassman’s person upon his arrest was illegal. Nor can They. “Where one had been placed in the custody of the law by valid action •of officers, it was not unreasonable to .search him.” United States v. Rabino-witz,
Their contention is that the yellow paper was a private document wanted only as an item of evidence to aid in obtaining a conviction and as such could not be lawfully seized under the rule of United States v. Lefkowitz,
The appellants’ objections to the admission and exclusion of evidence present no questions of substance whatever. The rulings made were either clearly correct as a matter of law or well within the discretion of the district judge. Discussion of the rulings in detail would serve no useful purpose.
Judgment will be entered affirming the judgments of the District Court.
