The State of California appeals from the grant of Ronald R. Shaw’s petition for habeas corpus.
As part of an undercover operation aimed at dealers in stolen property, San Jose Police Officer James L. Emmons became a regular customer at the bar that Shaw operated. Shaw introduced Emmons to someone who sold Emmons some steeply discounted suits of clothing. Emmons in turn sold Shaw a microwave oven for a fraction of its value.
Over a period of several months, Emmons sold Shaw food stamps at forty per cent of their face value. Emmons took the lead in offering the stamps and in arranging the sales. He told Shaw that the stamps were stolen but that Shaw would have “no problem” with them. Emmons also gave Shaw some hints on how to pass the stamps. While there is no evidence that Shaw had dealt in food stamps before, once they were available he purchased them willingly and without pressure.
On the food stamp purchases, a California jury found Shaw guilty of attempting to receive stolen property. Cal.Penal Code §§ 664, 496 (West 1986). 1 The jury also convicted him of unauthorized possession of food stamps. Cal.Welf. & Inst.Code § 10980 (formerly Cal.Penal Code § 396). It rejected his state law entrapment defense. These convictions were affirmed in the state courts. The district court, relying on the state court trial record, granted Shaw’s federal habeas corpus petition. It ruled that Emmons’ tactics constituted “outrageous government conduct,” barring prosecution under the due process clause.
We reverse. Government conduct is “outrageous” so as to preclude prosecution only when it is a violation of “fundamental fairness, shocking to the universal sense of justice.”
United States v. Russell,
The police conduct here was not so shocking as to violate this standard. Government agents are permitted to assume false identities in order to gain the confidence of their targets.
United States v. Marcello,
Other courts have rejected the “outrageous conduct” defense in food stamp “sting” cases.
United States v. Lambinus,
Shaw relies on the only two cases where federal appellate courts have upheld the “outrageous government conduct” defense.
United States v. Twigg,
REVERSED.
ORDER
The petition for rehearing is denied.
The earlier case,
Shaw v. California Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control,
Notes
. On this appeal, Shaw claims that his purchases were not criminal because the food stamps were not actually stolen. This is a state law question decided adversely to him by the state courts, and the district court properly ruled against him on this point. Under California law, one who buys property in the mistaken belief that it is stolen commits the offense of attempting to receive stolen property.
People v. Rojas,
. In deciding this appeal, we have independently examined the state court trial record.
Pierre v. Thompson,
