Tony KEMP, Ray S. Collins, Houston Collins and Jeffrey J. Curtis
v.
STATE of Mississippi.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
Carroll Rhodes, Hazlehurst, for appellants.
Edwin Lloyd Pittman, Atty. Gen. by Charles W. Maris, Jr., Sp. Asst. Atty. Gen., and Kay B. Cobb, Jackson, for appellee.
EN BANC.
SULLIVAN, Justice, for the Court:
The appellants were convicted by the Circuit Court of Copiah County, Mississippi, of conspiracy to possess more than one (1) kilogram of marijuana with intent to distribute. Each appellant was fined $20,000.00 and sentenced to a term of six (6) years in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections. Each appeals assigning as one of their errors that the trial court should have granted their motion for a directed verdict and for a peremptory instruction at the end of the State's case.
We reverse and discharge the appellants on the authority of Barnes v. State,
The facts in this case present the classic reverse sting operation carried on by the Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics in June of 1983 against Barnes. The same agents using the same vehicles carried out the exact same reverse sting in May of 1983 against the appellants here.
We repeat for the edification of narcotics officers throughout the State of Mississippi that the rule in Mississippi as laid out in Barnes, supra, is that a reverse sale or a reverse undercover operation as termed by the officers in that case and in this case embraces all the elements and requirements *657 for the definition of entrapment. Entrapment in this case was established as a matter of law by the State's own proof and the defense is valid against a charge of conspiracy to possess marijuana. See Barnes v. State,
REVERSED AND APPELLANTS DISCHARGED.
ROY NOBLE LEE, C.J., DAN M. LEE, P.J., and PRATHER, ROBERTSON, and ZUCCARO, JJ., concur.
HAWKINS, P.J., and GRIFFIN and ANDERSON, JJ., dissent.
GRIFFIN, Justice, dissenting:
With deference, I respectfully dissent.
On May 16, 1983, Houston Collins spoke to an undercover agent of the Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics (MBN) at the C & T Liquor Store in Hazlehurst. According to Collins, the agent asked him if he knew anyone who would be interested in the purchase of two forty-pound bales of marijuana. Collins answered, "No, not at this time. You reckon I can get a couple of pounds?" When the agent said that he had to sell the whole thing, Collins stated, "Maybe I can tell you something tomorrow." The agent then asked, "Well, do you think you can come up with any money?" Collins responded, "I don't know; I'll have to talk to my partner," adding, "I believe I can come up with about $8,000 for forty pounds." This account is consistent with the agent's testimony that Collins agreed to make a purchase during the first fifteen seconds of their conversation.
On May 18, 1983, Collins, accompanied by Tony Kemp, and followed in another car by Jeffrey Curtis and Ray Collins, Houston's brother, met MBN agents at the T.G. & Y. parking lot in Hazlehurst. According to the agents, Kemp cut open a bale of marijuana, stored in an unmarked MBN van, commenting on the substance's quality. Upon request, Kemp then showed the agents a green bank bag, which contained $10,000, the agreed on price for one bale.
MBN agents asked to make the exchange at the Copiah Creek Water Park on Highway 28, a pre-arranged location where other law enforcement officers had hidden in anticipation of the transaction. Upon their arrival, Kemp and Curtis weighed the bale, stating that the marijuana was not Red Bud, a variety of the plant, but definitely was Columbian. As Houston Collins gave the agents the green bank bag, Kemp lifted the bale and Curtis opened the trunk; the officers, identifying themselves, then arrested the four appellants.
At trial, Kemp, Curtis and Ray Collins denied any participation in the crime, each claiming that he was unaware of the bale's contents. Yet, on cross-examination, Houston Collins stated, "I'm not saying that I'm not guilty of it, Mr. Lampton. I'm guilty of it."
In McLemore v. State,
Law enforcement officers though do not entrap a defendant, when they merely provide an opportunity to violate the law. McCormick v. State,
In the case at issue, the majority relies upon Barnes v. State,
On these facts, the Court ruled that a "`reverse sale' or `reverse undercover operation' ... embraces the requirements and definition for `entrapment'," especially noting "overwhelming evidence of the efforts at entrapment, including ownership of the marijuana... ." Id. at 316. Significantly, the Court cited no authority for the proposition that a reverse sale constituted entrapment as a matter of law.
Instead, the Court cited a series of cases involving narcotics supplied to the defendant by an informant or drug agent and subsequently sold or given by the defendant to a drug agent. These cases are wholly distinguishable from the facts at issue. For example, in Jones,
Likewise, in Sylar v. State,
In Epps v. State,
In Daniels v. State,
Finally, in Tribbett,
*659 These cases bear no similarity to the factual scenario either in Barnes or in the case at issue. Most certainly, these cases do not outlaw a reverse sale of narcotics to individuals, who otherwise display a predisposition to commit the crime.
In Barnes,
The usual entrapment case which arises under Mississippi law involves a confidential informant or police officer who originates the sale of contraband by supplying it to the accused, who then, acting in complicity with the confidential informant or police officer, sells or disposes of it to another officer or person who initiates the prosecution.
Obviously, the Court quoted the passage for its reference to an informant or undercover agent, who supplies an accused with contraband. Yet, this alone is not determinative of entrapment. Entrapment occurred in the cases cited above only when the informant or undercover agent instigated the sale and subsequent purchase. These are not the facts here. In this case, the MBN agent, who asked Houston Collins if he knew anyone who would be interested in the purchase of marijuana, merely provided him with an opportunity to violate the law a valid law enforcement technique often found in "sting" operations. Significantly, the criminal intent originated solely with Collins: "You reckon I can get a couple of pounds?"
In short, I find no distinction between an undercover purchase of illegal drugs, upheld in Tribbett, and an undercover sale of illegal drugs, where there is a predisposition to commit the crime.
Other jurisdictions, which have considered the issue, approve the use of so-called "reverse stings," despite claims of entrapment.
In United States v. Henthorn,
In United States v. Castro,
In United States v. Sayers,
In State v. Buffington, No. 85-291-III, slip op. (Tenn. Crim. App. decided November 5, 1987) an undercover police officer sold four bales of marijuana to the defendants. The Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals upheld the convictions.
In State v. Gessler,
In State v. Bass,
In Curtis v. State,
In Harrison v. State,
In People v. Cross,
In People v. Duke,
Finally, in State v. Rowan,
Significantly, in these cases, the courts focus not on the agent's sale of narcotics, but on the defendant's predisposition to commit the crime. Further, West's Decennial Digest does not reveal that any jurisdiction other than ours holds that the facts here constitute entrapment as a matter of law. The cases all hold that the State must be on both ends, the sale and purchase. Not on one end, as here.
At this juncture, I feel compelled to point out that the narcotics agents of this state, both State and local, receive very little money for the enforcement of narcotics laws other than that for necessary expenses and salaries. It is doubtful that the sums received are sufficient to catch the majority of the lowly street peddlers who stroll around offering these sales.
Sizeable sums of cash are always a good lure for a crook, and some that might not be predisposed to criminalty; another attractive bait for the big fish is the contraband. Cash comes from the honest taxpayer; contraband from illegal activity. It appears to me that societal need is better served by allowing those predisposed to criminally to furnish bait.
The appellants first mentioned entrapment in their motion for a new trial. There was no mention of entrapment in their motion for a directed verdict nor in any jury instruction, either granted or refused.
In most cases, the Court has held that a defendant cannot deny a criminal act and claim entrapment. Howard,
Had this Court determined that a reverse sale was not entrapment as a matter of law, as I suggest, the appellants would have waived their right to appeal on this ground, since they failed to request jury instructions or otherwise assert the defense before the jury. In addition, Kemp, Curtis and Ray Collins now improperly maintain both their innocence and their entrapment.
Yet, even if the appellants had offered evidence of entrapment and requested a proper jury instruction, the State provided ample evidence, proving a predisposition to commit the crime. For example, (1) Houston Collins immediately agreed to the sale, even mentioning a partner, (2) Houston Collins was aware of the marijuana's value, commenting that $12,000 for forty pounds was "a little bit too steep," (3) Houston Collins was previously convicted of selling marijuana, (4) Kemp commented on the bale's quality, (5) Kemp and Curtis expressed familiarity with varieties of marijuana, and (6) there was absolutely no evidence that the undercover MBN agents exerted any pressure on the appellants.
Other jurisdictions have found such evidence sufficient to rebut an entrapment defense. Mack v. State,
Drug dealers represent the basest element of our society. They prey upon the young and imprudent, destroying their physical and emotional health, futures, and reputations, while causing untold heartache to their families and friends. Consequently, this Court should encourage every law enforcement effort against these dealers, consistent with our laws.
In Turner,
In summation, I believe that the reverse sale is not entrapment as a matter of law. Rather, under the facts of each case, it is for the jury to determine, except, of course, under the factual situation of Jones, supra, and its progeny. This was the law before Barnes and should be the law now.
I would affirm.
HAWKINS, P.J., and ANDERSON, J., join this opinion.
