Lead Opinion
Kenneth Griesemer appeals his conviction for patronizing a prostitute, arguing the State failed to rebut his defense of entrapment. We are asked to decide whether the State disproved one element of that defense—either showing there was no police inducement or showing Griesemer was predisposed to commit the crime— beyond a reasonable doubt. Because we find the undercover detective merely presented Griesemer with an opportunity to patronize a prostitute, we find no inducement and therefore no entrapment. We affirm.
Facts and Procedural History
On a summer afternoon on the east side of Indianapolis, Detective Tabatha McLe-more was posing as a prostitute on a corner, when she noticed Griesemer driving past and staring at her. He looped around the block and returned a few minutes later, stopping near her just before a stop sign. Through his open car window, Griesemer asked Detective McLemore if she needed a ride. Detective McLemore declined, saying she “was trying to make some money.” Tr. at 7. Griesemer nodded his head toward his passenger seat, which Detective McLemore understood to be an invitation for her to get in his car. She then asked him how much money he had, and Griesemer again nodded toward his passenger seat. When she asked him about money a second time, he told her he had twenty dollars. Detective McLemore said she could “do head” for that amount, and Griesemer nodded his head, yes, and for a third time nodded toward his passenger seat. Tr. at 7-8. Instead of getting in his car, however, she told him to pick her up just down the street. He nodded, yes, and proceeded along the same route he had taken when he initially saw Detective McLemore. A police vehicle stopped Griesemer; he was arrested and charged with patronizing a prostitute, a Class A misdemeanor.
Griesemer appealed his conviction, arguing he raised the entrapment defense by showing police inducement—it was Detective McLemore who first mentioned money, sex, and the possibility of trading one for the other—and the State failed to offer any evidence of Griesemer’s predisposition to commit the offense. A majority of our Court of Appeals agreed, and it reversed Griesemer’s conviction. Griesemer v. State,
We granted transfer, thereby vacating the opinion below. Griesemer v. State,
Standard of Review
“We review a claim of entrapment using the same standard that applies to other challenges to the sufficiency of evidence.” Dockery v. State,
Griesemer’s Entrapment Defense Fails Because He Was Not Induced.
The government may use undercover agents to enforce the law. Sorrells v. United States,
Entrapment in Indiana is statutorily defined:
(a) It is a defense that:
(1) the prohibited conduct of the person was the product of a law enforcement officer, or his agent, using persuasion or other means likely to cause the person to engage in the conduct; and
(2) the person was not predisposed to commit the offense.
(b) Conduct merely affording a person an opportunity to commit the offense does not constitute entrapment.
To rebut the inducement element, the State must prove police efforts did not produce the defendant’s prohibited conduct, McGowan,
We reached the opposite conclusion in Albaugh v. State,
Here, neither side disputes the defense was adequately raised: Detective McLe-more was directly involved in the criminal act of patronizing a prostitute, which requires an “understanding” between two people, she and Griesemer. Ind.Code § 35-45-4-3. The burden of proving either no police inducement or predisposition to commit the crime thus shifted to the State.
We conclude the State presented sufficient evidence for a trier of fact to reasonably determine Detective McLemore’s policing efforts did not produce Griesemer’s criminal conduct. The evidence most favorable to the verdict suggests Griesemer stared at Detective McLemore from the road before turning around, he stopped his car near her to initiate their conversation, and he twice nodded his head to invite her into his car, all before she mentioned the opportunity to exchange money for a sexual act. And we find Detective McLemore’s abruptly and clinically stating “I could do head,” Tr. at 7, is more like the “flat logical assertion” of Williams,
Because a reasonable trier of fact could have found the State proved, beyond a reasonable doubt, the police did not induce Griesemer, his entrapment defense fails. We need not address the question of his predisposition to commit the crime.
Conclusion
For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the trial court.
Notes
. "A person who knowingly or intentionally pays, or offers or agrees to pay money or other property to another person ... on the understanding that the other person will engage in ... deviate sexual conduct with the person ... commits patronizing a prostitute.” Ind.Code § 35-45-4-3 (2008). Deviate sexual conduct includes acts that involve "a sex or
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Although citing portions of the dissenting opinion authored by Chief Judge Vaid-ik, my colleagues here apparently distance themselves from the dissent’s actual conclusion, namely: Griesemer was “predisposed” to commit the offense. See Griesemer v. State,
Because Griesemer clearly established inducement, “the burden shift[ed] ■ to the State to show the defendant’s predisposition to commit the crime.... The standard by which the State must prove the defendant’s predisposition is beyond a reasonable doubt.... If the defendant shows police inducement and the State fails to show predisposition on the part of the defendant to commit the crime charged, entrapment is established as a matter of law.” Dockery v. State,
DICKSON, J., concurs.
