Rеspondent below was a customs inspector on the ferry dock at Detroit. Prohibition agents, being informed that intoxicating liquor was coming in at this point through Scriber’s collusion, arranged to prepare a test — or, as is said, a trap — for him. They hinted to him their wishes to bring in the whisky; he seemed favorably inclined; they arranged that he would that afternoon pass their automobile coming in from Canada containing whisrky; and he accepted the money which they paid him for his expected favors. Later in the same day, before actual importation was attempted, they arrested him for accepting a bribe, contrary to section 117 of the Penаl Code (Comp. St. § 10287). 1 His defense was that he intended to let them go along to *98 the point of importation, and 'then seize the machine and the liquor, and have them prosecuted under the correlative section 39 (Comp. St. § 10203), or other appropriate statute, and that he accepted and kept the money, to be used as evidence when the plan was consummаted. The merits of this defense were fairly submitted to the jury, which found against Seriber.
The court refused to submit the defensе of entrapment, and did this on the theory that defendant’s testimony was inconsistent with that defense. In a propеr ease, it would seem that defendant should have the benefit of this defense, even though such inconsistency еxists. To apply the rule in a case of this general class: A jury might conclude that defendant’s claim of goоd intent was untrue and that he really intended to take the money and keep it, but might also conclude that he had been by the government officers unduly persuaded and influenced into the crime, and thus ought not to be held guilty.
The dеfense of entrapment may be said to have taken its recent vogue from the opinion of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in Woo Wai v. U. S.,
Nor can we see that the defense of entrapment, more accurately defined, can be applicablе to a situation, where the offense charged is the accepting of a bribe by a public officer, аnd where the supposed instigators do nothing except to give the officer opportunity to accept a bribe, and to expose him to what might be called the ordinary degree of temptation to whiсh such officers are likely to be subjected at any time in the daily discharge of their duties. 4 Whether this defense rightly rеsts upon the rule of public policy that 'the government will not be permitted to lead its citizens into crime and then punish them, or rests on the theory that in such a case the true criminal intent does not exist, makes no difference here. The prohibition agents did nothing to overcome Scriberis shrinking or reluctance. So far as they observed, he did not shrink. In such a case as that, we think it clear that a crime, otherwise rightly to be inferred, cаnnot be escaped by the aid of this defense. '
Nor is it important, in this class of cases, to decide just how fаr the government agents were justified in suspecting that the person to be tested was habitually guilty. A relatively slight amоunt of reason to suspect should be sufficient to justify this mere test or opportunity, if, indeed, any such reason is nеcessary as to a particular public officer or employe, where the results of official dеreliction by some one are widespread, and where the officer has official duty to enforcе the law proposed to be violated. It is rather when there has been a considerably greater degree of co-operation-/ by the government agents in helping along the commission of the crime—е. g., the Billingsley Case, supra — that the question of their reasonable cause to believe in defendant’s habituаl guilt becomes more important.
Our discussion of this defense should be read in connection with our opinion this dаy filed in Cermak v. U. S. (No. 4177)
The judgment is affirmed.
Notes
Upon the trial, the indictment was treated as if depending on particular sections of Tаriff Acts, but it plainly stated an offense under section 117, as well.
Goldman v. U. S.,
3 U. S. v. Wight (D. C.)
The bribe offered was $20, not a substantial temptation to a first offense.
