Lead Opinion
OPINION
Appellant J.D.W., a seventeen-year-old minor, appeals from the trial court’s determination that J.D.W. was not entrapped into committing a drug offense.
FACTS
J.D.W. and a friend went to the Layton Hills Mall to buy a musical compact disc. While there, they were approached by officer Dave Wakefield of the Davis Metro Narcotics Strike Force. Wakefield asked if they were interested in a smoke. J.D.W.’s friend asked “smoke what?” and Wakefield made a gesture simulating smoking marijuana. Wake-field told them that he had some marijuana and hashish and that if they were interested they could go outside and look at it. J.D.W. and his friend thereupon followed Wakefield outside. Once outside, J.D.W.’s friend stopped while J.D.W. and Wakefield continued on a short distance further. Wakefield presented J.D.W. a baggy containing marijuana. J.D.W. took the baggy, “separated the buds from the shake” and smelled the contents.
J.D.W. was charged in a juvenile court petition with one count of possession of a controlled substance, a class B misdemeanor, in violation of Utah Code Ann. § 58-37-8(2)(a)(i) (1994). J.D.W. filed a motion to dismiss based on a claim of entrapment. After an evidentiary hearing on J.D.W.’s motion to dismiss, the trial court issued a memorandum decision in which it determined, based on the facts, that J.D.W. was not entrapped. J.D.W. entered a conditional guilty plea in which he preserved his right to challenge the trial court’s denial of his motion to dismiss. See State v. Sery,
ANALYSIS
J.D.W. asks this court to adopt the entrapment per se rule, that is, anytime the police or their agents provide drugs for sale, then that action automatically constitutes entrapment. See State v. Kummer,
Entrapment occurs when a law enforcement officer or a person directed by or acting in cooperation with the officer induces the commission of an offense in order to obtain evidence of the commission ... creating a substantial risk that the offense would be committed by one not otherwise ready to commit it. Conduct merely affording a person an opportunity to commit an offense does not constitute entrapment.
Several factors must be considered in determining whether government action induces criminal activity or, conversely, if it merely affords a person the opportunity to participate in criminal activity. State v. Taylor,
The facts in the record support the trial court’s determination that, by merely providing the opportunity for a drug purchase, Wakefield did not engage in any activity that “would be effective to persuade an average person ... to commit the offense.” Taylor,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Wakefield later testified that J.D.W.’s actions indicated that he “had a knowledge of marijuana, that he’d been around it, because somebody who doesn't know about that wouldn't even think [to separate the buds from the shake.]”
. On the day of J.D.W.’s drug purchase, Wake-field approached over one hundred people in the mall. No one but J.D.W. made a purchase.
. The trial court was concerned by the fact that Officer Wakefield sold drugs to a juvenile in a "drug-free zone.” There is nothing, however, in the statute that precludes such activity as a matter of law. Officers are specifically exempted from the provisions of the statute establishing "drug-free zones” so long as the officers are acting within the scope of their employment. See Utah Code Ann. § 58-37-8(12)(b) (1994). J.D.W. did not argue below, that Wakefield was acting outside the scope of his employment. J.D.W. also made no claim that Wakefield had entrapped J.D.W. because he sold drugs to a person that was not previously suspected of drug activity. Based on the facts and arguments presented at the evidentiary hearing, the trial court ruled that J.D.W. was not entrapped as the defense has been outlined by the legislature. It is not the prerogative of courts to modify the statutory scheme established by the legislature. See Salt Lake Child & Family Therapy Clinic, Inc. v. Frederick,
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring in the result):
Given clear and apparently controlling case law in Utah, I must reluctantly concur in this court’s judgment affirming the trial court’s ruling on this troublesome entrapment issue. In so doing, I must also note that, like the trial court, I am very concerned about the incident which led to charges in this case.
We have the situation in which an officer, newly assigned to drug enforcement responsibilities, takes marijuana from the police evidence room and goes to a nearby shopping mall where, for a period of some hours, he bothers innocent passers-by, many of whom are in the company of young children, and none of whom has been previously suspected of using drugs or has expressed to the officer any interest in procuring illegal drugs prior to his solicitation. Many of the shoppers were predictably annoyed that an apparent drug dealer would be openly purveying his wares in the common area of the local mall and several complained to mall management.
In what the Legislature has taken pains to characterize as a “drug-free zone,” the drug-
I think what the officer did is indefensible. The overall societal cost of such methods is simply too great to justify the arrest of a single juvenile purchaser. I regret that the current state of the law is such that I can do nothing more than fuss about it. My hope is that the Supreme Court will grant certiorari in this case and consider the advisability of adopting some kind of per se entrapment doctrine, see, e.g., State v. Kummer,
Subjecting the general public to unwelcome and unsolicited offers to buy drugs is simply not a police method which our society should embrace as a tactic in the war on drugs.
