OPINION
In this сase we are called upon to review an order entered by the district court dis *959 missing, on grounds of entrapment, a criminal complaint filed by the Municipality of Anchorage. 1
The essential facts are not in dispute. During the month of January, 1981, John H. Chandler worked on a voluntary basis as a reserve officer for the Anchorage Police Department. While reading a lоcal advertising tabloid, Chandler spotted an advertisement for the “North Star Dating Service.” He mentioned the ad to members of the Anchorage Police Department’s vice squad, with whom he occasionally worked, and was encouraged to call the dating service. Chandler placed a call on January 31, 1981. The call was answered by a woman who gavе Chandler directions to the dating service and told him that he could receive a “body massage” for the price of forty dollars.
In order to ascertain whether the North Star Dating Service was involved in prostitution, Chandler, with the approval of vice squad officers, agreed to go to that establishment and pose as a prospective customer. Chandler followed the directions he had been given to reach the dating service; upon arrival, he knocked at the door. Lynda Flanagan answered the door and asked Chandler to enter. Flanagan asked Chandler if he was the person who had just called, and when Chandler responded that he was, Flanagan led him to a bedroom.
In the bedroom, Chandler asked Flanаgan a number of questions about her willingness to perform specific sexual acts in return for payment of money. Although Flanagan initially indicated some suspicion that Chandler might be an undercover police officer, she eventually told him that she would perform a body massage for forty dollars, fellatio for fifty dollars, and a combination of fellatio and sexual intercourse for sixty dollars.
Chandler told Flanagan that he wanted her to perform both fellatio and sexual intercourse, and he paid her sixty dollars. He was then directed by Flanagan to take off his clothes and lie down on the bed; Flanagan also disrobed. Once Chandler was undressed and on the bed, Flanagan gave him a brief back massage after which she asked him to turn оver. Chandler complied with this request, and when he did so, Flanagan stroked his penis several times with her hand. After a period of several seconds, Flanagan prepared to engage in fellatio with Chandler. At this point Chandler stopped Flanagan and placed her under arrest. She was charged with assignation for the purpose of prostitution, a misdemeanor under Anchorage Municipal Code (AMC) Section 8.14.020.
Flanagan filed a pretrial motion to dismiss the complaint against her on the ground of entrapment. In the motion she argued that Chandler had waited an imper-missibly long period of time before performing an arrest and that Chandler’s willingness to engage in sexual contact with Flanagan before arresting her was unconscionаble conduct, amounting to entrapment under Alaska law.
After conducting an evidentiary hearing, the district court granted Flanagan’s motion to dismiss. In granting the motion, the court relied primarily on a portion of the holding in
Pascu v. State,
Flanagan at no time asserted, nor did the district court find, that Chandler’s conduct before he disrobed and permitted Flanagan to engage in sexual contact with him was improper. Indeed, it would be difficult to claim entrapment based solely on Chandler’s adoption of an undercover role and his involvement' in a conversation with Flanagan in the course of which he arranged to obtain sexual favors in return for the payment of money. As the court in Pascu noted:
*960 [I]t is quite proper for the police to provide the opportunity for one engaged in criminal activities to ply his trade.
Pascu v. State,
We do not believe, however, that the defense of entrapment, as provided for in Pascu, can properly be invoked as to the challenged conduct on the part of Chandler. We reach this conclusion because we find that those aspects of Chandler’s conduct which have been challenged were not causally related to Flanagan’s commission of the crime charged.
The entrapment doctrine has traditionally been regarded as a safeguard against the use of unfair inducement by law enforcement officers to instigate commission of crimes by individuals who would otherwise be innocent of wrongdoing. This view of the defense of entrapment was espoused by the Alaska Supreme Court in
Grossman v. State,
It is plain enough that the underlying basis of entrapment is found in public policy, as discerned and announced by the courts. As Judge Learned Hand perceptively observed in United States v. Becker,62 F.2d 1007 , 1009 (2d Cir. 1933), ‘The whole doctrine derives from a spontaneous moral revulsion against using the powers of government to beguile innocent, though duсtile, persons into lapses which they might otherwise resist.’
This view of the entrapment defense presupposes the existence of some form of active inducement that leads to the commission of an offense by the accused.
The need for a causal link between police conduct and the commission of a crime by the accused as a рrecondition to invocation of the entrapment defense was recently noted by the Michigan Court of Appeals. In
People v. Moore,
[W]e cannot find a causal connection between the acts of the officer and those of the defendant that could be properly characterized as inducement or incitement. The acts were independent of each other, so do not warrant invocation of the entrapment sanction.
In this case, even assuming that the mere acquiescence by Chandler to Flanagan’s sexual contact with him could be construed as a form of police conduct inducing or instigating commission of an offense, it is manifest that this conduct was independent of and unconnected to Flanagan’s commission of the offense of assignation. In no realistic sense could it be said that Flanagan’s decision to commit the crime of assignation was prompted by, or causally related to the questioned conduct on Chandler’s part. In fact, Flanagan accepted Chandler’s money and agreed to commit an act of prostitution, thus in effect committing the crime charged, 3 prior to Chandler’s acquiescence to sexual contact.
*961 The district court apparently recognized the absence of any causal nexus between the challenged conduct of Chandler and the commission of assignation by Flanagan. Nevertheless, the court interpreted our supreme court’s decision in Pascu v. State as dispensing with any requirement of policе inducement or persuasion as a prerequisite to the defense of entrapment.
Pascu
undeniably expanded the scope of the entrapment defense by abandoning the objective, “average person” standard of entrapment previously adopted by the court in
Grossman v. State,
In this case, the district court chose to emphasize the language of Pascu in which the Alaska Supreme Court stated:
In determining whether entrapment has occurred, the trial court must focus ‘upon the particular conduct of the police in the case presented.’ The quеstion is really whether that conduct falls below an acceptable standard for the fair and honorable administration of justice.
Pascu v. State,
In our view, however, this language of the Pascu decision cannot properly be read in isolation; it must be read in the context of the paragraph in which it appears:
Since announcing our decision in Gross-man we have come to realize that there are certain difficulties in applying . .. [the “average person”] standard. An ‘average person’ probably cannot be induced to commit a serious crime except under circumstances so extrеme as to amount to duress. Yet it is clear that entrapment may occur where the degree of inducement falls short of actual duress. What is prohibited, by Grossman, is unreasonable or unconscionable efforts on the part of the police to induce one to commit a crime so that he may be arrested and prosecuted for the offense. In determining whether entrapment has occurred, the trial court must focus ‘upon the particular conduct of the police in the cáse ' presented.’ The question is really wheth *962 er that conduct falls below an acceptable standard for the fair and honorable administration of justice.
Pascu v. State,
Because the police conduct that served as the basis for Flanagan’s claim of entrapment in this case cannot realistically be viewed as having induced or instigated Flanagan’s commission of the offense of assignation for the purpose of prostitution, and because this conduct appears to have had no other causal connection to the crime with which Flanagan was charged, we hold that the defense of entrapment was inapplicable and could not properly be invoked as the basis for dismissal of the complaint.
Flanagan has alternаtively maintained that the district court’s order of dismissal must be upheld on the ground that Chandler’s conduct violated her constitutional right to due process.
6
The question whether police conduct that does not constitute entrapment can be held to violate due process absent a violation of an independent constitutional right of the accused was the subject of passing but inconclusive reference by the United States Supreme Court in
United States v. Russell,
A number of cases have expressly applied the duе process theory. However, these cases have invariably dealt with situations involving extensive and elaborate efforts by law enforcement officers to induce criminal activity or manufacture crime; they have uniformly arisen in jurisdictions that adhere to the subjective theory of entrapment and have involved situations where the defendant was foreclоsed from raising entrapment as a result of affirmative evidence of his subjective predisposition to commit the offense charged.
See United States v. Twigg,
*963
However, in the present case, we need not decide whether dismissal of a criminal charge on due рrocess grounds might be compelled under appropriate circumstances. It is sufficient to observe that the circumstances of the present case involve conduct falling short of a due process violation. Any case involving a potentially tenable due process claim would require the existence of outrageous police cоnduct, shocking the universal sense of justice and violating the concept of fundamental fairness.
United States v. Russell,
Our conclusion in this regard is bolstered by the recent decision in
State v. Putnam,
The order of the district court dismissing the complaint in this case is REVERSED, and this case is REMANDED for further proceedings.
Notes
. A petition for review of the district court’s order of dismissal was filed with this court by the Municipality of Anchorage pursuant to Appellate Rule 402; we subsequently issued an order granting review. We notе that, in accordance with our decision in
State v. Michel,
.
See also United States v. Becker,
[I]t has been uniformly held that when the accused is continuously engaged in the proscribed conduct, it is permissible to provoke him to a particular violation which will be no more than an instance in a uniform series.
. This is true regardless of whether or not the offense of assignation for the purpose of prostitution is considered to be a continuing offense. Even if Flanagan’s touching of Chandler is deemed to be an act in furtherance of the initial assignation, thus rendering the offense a continuing one, evidence of such continuing cоnduct is not necessary to prove assignation. Under the terms of AMC 8.14.020 and 8.14.-010(a), all acts necessary to establish the crime
*961
of assignation were completed when Flanagan made an engagement with Chandler for an act of prostitution.
Cf. Rubey v. City of Fairbanks,
. A causal relationship — in the form of inducement, persuasion or instigation — between police conduct and commission of an offense by the accused was clearly contemplated as an essential component of the entrapment defense under the objective standard adopted in
Grossman v. State,
We feel that the proper solution is the objective test which focuses the determination upon the particular conduct of the police in the case presented. Inducements should be limited to those measures which, objectively considered, are likely to provoke to the сommission of crime only those persons, and not others, who are ready and willing to commit a criminal offense.
The objective test can be stated as follows: unlawful entrapment occurs when a public law enforcement official, or a person working in cooperation with him, in order to obtain evidence of the commission of an offense, induces another person to commit such an offense by persuasion or inducement which would be effective to persuade an average person, other than one who is ready and willing, to commit such an offense. Conversely, instigations which would induce only a person engaged in an habitual course of unlawful conduct for gain or profit do not constitute entrapment.
Id.
(footnote omitted).
Cf. Braham v. State,
.An additional indication that the court in Pas-cu did not intend to enlarge the entrapment defense to include all “unfair” or “dishonorable” police conduct, regardless of whether it involved inducement, is found in the court’s concluding remarks on the entrapment issue:
[W]e .. . subscribe to the view that officials cannot ‘implant in the mind of an innocent person the disposition to commit the alleged offense and induce its commission in order that they may prosecute.’ ‘[U]nder standards of civilized justice, there must be some control on the kind of police conduct which can be permitted in the manufacture of crime.’
Pascu v. State,
. U.S.Const. amend. V and XIV; Alaska Const, art. I, § 7.
.
But see Hampton v. United States,
