There was evidence that in October and November 1963, the Georgia Revenue Department was conducting an investigation of the illegal sale and possession of whiskey in the area of Gainesville and the officer in charge of the investigation had received several reports and complaints of violations existing at the Holiday Motel. Revenue Agent Garrett was sent to Gainesville and checked in at the Holiday Motel for the specific purpose of getting someone there to sell him some whiskey. At that time he did not know the defendant and did not know who was the bell boy at the motel. The defendant accompanied Agent Garrett to his room, assisting with his luggage. Agent Garrett testified that when they reached the room he asked the defendant if he could get him some whiskey; the defendant replied that he could get some at a price of $5.00, but he would have to go to the club after it. The agent gave the defendant the price and a $1.00 tip and the defendant went out and returned in about ten minutes with a bottle of whiskey. Officer Garrett checked in at the motel on two subsequent occasions and after some conversation with the defendant purchased whiskey in similar transactions, and gave the defendant 50 cents or 75 cents as a tip. On the second occasion other officers had the motel under surveillance and they did not see the defendant leave the premises between the time he left Agent Garrett’s room and the time he returned there with the whiskey.
The defendant contends that the verdicts were not authorized because the evidence proved his defense of entrapment as a matter of law. The Georgia cases are in accord with the general view that the defense of entrapment is not successful when the conduct of the investigating officers toward the accused would not likely have “enticed into crime an unwary innocent who would otherwise have struggled within himself and resisted
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ordinary temptations,” but would be likely to induce only those ready and willing to commit a crime. Accardi v. United States, 257 F2d 168, 173 (5th Cir. 1958);
Bienert v. State,
We must concede that the evidence in this case authorized a finding that the officer’s conduct, considered with all the facts and circumstances, did not as a matter of law violate the standard approved by the authorities cited. See Accardi v. United States, 257 F2d 168, 173, supra. The evidence does not show that the money given the defendant by the officer on the occasions when liquor was purchased was an unconscionably tempting inducement, but indicates that it was no more than a customary voluntary tip.
The rule that officers “may not induce persons, who would not otherwise have committed crime, to violate the laws and then prosecute for it” is dictated by a “sound public policy and a decent fairness.” United States v. Wray, 8 F2d 429, 430 (5th Cir. 1925); Sherman v. United States,
Ground 2 complains of an excerpt from the charge which stated verbatim in part and elaborated on
Code
§ 58-102 which prohibits the sale of liquor, of which the defendant was accused,
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as not being adjusted to the evidence, particularly that part of the charge referring to the sale of liquor as an agent for another. “Where a portion of an excerpt from the charge, complained of in its entirety, is not erroneous, the assignment of error is not good.”
Bennett v. George,
Grounds 3, 4 and 5 complain of excerpts from the charge in which the court, in charging on the law of entrapment, spoke of officers “furnishing an opportunity to a criminal.” The defendant contends that this was an expression of opinion by the court that the defendant was a criminal. The court was not in these instructions referring to the defendant but was charging the general law; and, giving the jury credit for ordinary intelligence, we believe they would so understand.
Adams v. State,
The trial court did not err in overruling the special grounds.
Judgment affirmed.
