The narrow but troublesome issue presented on this appeal is whether the trial judge properly refused to submit the question of entrapment to the jury. Arther Dehar was found by a jury to be guilty of concealing and transporting approximately 82 kilograms of marijuana in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 176a and was sentenced to 5 years’ imprisonment. 1 In his opening statement Dehar’s counsel made it crystal clear that Dehar did not deny having committed the substantive offense but that his defense to the charge would be that he was entrapped into committing it. For the reasons we shall set forth, we hold that the trial judge erroneously refused to submit the defense of entrapment to the jury.
The government’s case consisted primarily of the testimony of 2 agents of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics. In substance, they testified that during the evening of September 21, 1966, a man later identified as Dehar telephoned a government informer, Harvey Steinberg, at an unlisted Bureau of Narcotics telephone to arrange for a delivery of marijuana later that night. 2 During the course of the conversation, Dehar stated that he would deliver 45 kilos and that he was working at a profit of between $10 and $15 a kilo. Because Steinberg told Dehar that the “customer” would not trust Dehar, it was agreed that Steinberg was to examine the drugs in Dehar’s automobile before the “customer” would complete the sale. Later that night, the agents testified, Steinberg met Dehar, entered his station wagon and removed several “shiny” packages from a large trunk lying on the rear deck. Soon after Steinberg left the station wagon, Dehar was arrested and approximately 86 kilograms of marijuana were found in the car. Appellant took the stand in his own behalf and admitted believing that the trunk contained marijuana and that he had called Steinberg on September 21. He also stated that sometime earlier he had been approached by one Henry Fillet 3 who told him that he had some marijuana for sale. According to Dehar, he and Steinberg had been roommates but in the early summer of 1966 he “threw him [Steinberg] out because he was too much trouble.” He claimed that Steinberg began calling him during August and September to ask for drugs and that he told Steinberg he would let him know if any became available only “because it was a nice way of getting rid of him.” Under cross-examination, however, Dehar stated that he “might have” telephoned Steinberg on September 9 and that “[w]hen he asked me whether I had anything [marijuana] I said, ‘Yes, pick it up next week.’ ”
In rebuttal, the government called Steinberg as its witness and he confirmed the account given by the narcotics agents with respect to the activities on the evening of September 21. He “would say,” Steinberg testified, that he and Dehar parted on friendly terms when he left their shared apartment although he conceded that he did not leave of his own volition. And, it was his version that the first time he spoke to Dehar (after leaving the apartment) was on September 9 when Dehar phoned to ask him if he was interested in purchasing some marijuana. But, on cross-examination, Steinberg admitted that 2 *432 days before hearing from Dehar he [Steinberg] had been arrested for the sale and possession of hashish (a purified version of marijuana) and that the following day he was “offered the opportunity * * * to work off the bust.”
After this episode at the trial, Dehar once again took the stand and testified that Steinberg had caused him a great deal of difficulty, was a source of concern to him [Dehar] and that he was “sort of afraid of what he [Steinberg] could do.” Moreover, he claimed that Steinberg had threatened him “that if I ever did anything against them [sic] he had some people that would take care of me.” And, this time appellant stated unequivocally that Steinberg had called him on September 9; moreover, that Steinberg continued to call him throughout the month of September. In sum, Dehar’s later testimony was that Stein-berg placed the first call that led to the September 21 transaction and that he went along with the sale only because Steinberg “persisted in calling me [Dehar] * * * [and] I was still afraid of him.”
We note at the outset that the question before us is the reverse of that presented in United States v. Bishop,
Although the cry “I was entrapped” is heard with mounting frequency in narcotics prosecutions, it is a defense whose “meaning, purpose, and application, are problems that have sharply divided [the Supreme Court],” Lopez v. United States,
“(1) did the agent induce the accused to commit the offense charged in the indictment; (2) if so, was the accused ready and willing without persuasion and was he awaiting any propitious opportunity to commit the offense? On the first question the accused has the burden; on the second the prosecution has it.” 5
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Judge Hand’s use of the word “induce” in formulating the first question has led some courts mistakenly to equate “induce” with “entrap,” see Notaro v. United States,
On the second issue raised by the entrapment defense — the accused's so-called “propensity” to commit the crime —we agree with the government that there was sufficient evidence in the record to support the conclusion that Dehar was “ready and willing” and was “awaiting any propitious opportunity to commit the offense.” During the telephone conversation of September 21 Dehar gave no indication that he was less than anxious to complete the deal and his testimony on rebuttal seemed calculated to meet the hornbook requirements of the entrapment defense; thus, it is understandable that the trial judge viewed his claims with a somewhat jaundiced eye. But, we attempted to make clear in
Riley,
that once the government’s inducement or initiation of the crime was put in issue, the judge was required to charge the jury on the law of éntrapment unless the accused’s propensity was established by “uncontradicted proof.”
In sum, we find that there was sufficient evidence on the issue of entrapment so that it should have been submitted to the jury after an appropriate charge on the law. As long as the view of the majority in Sorrells v. United
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States,
We can well understand the reluctance of a trial judge to repeat in case after case the rather tedious, complex and tortuous entrapment charge, particularly where he believes the defense is concocted and the defendant is clearly not innocent. But, there is no escape from this where contested factual issues are presented. To follow any other course will mean either costly retrials or an obviously guilty defendant avoiding a just judgment.
Reversed.
Notes
. Dehar had also been indicted with two others on a charge of conspiracy to conceal and transport marijuana in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 176a, but on the government’s motion the conspiracy count was severed and Dehar proceeded to trial on the substantive violation.
. A tape recording of the conversation was later introduced into evidence. The appellant does not question the propriety of the recording or its receipt in evidence.
. Henry Fillet was one of the alleged co-conspirators with whom Dehar was indicted.
. In Sorrells v. United States,
. We note that in Kadis v. United States, supra, the First Circuit has rejected Judge Hand’s analysis of the entrapment defense in terms of inducement and predisposition in favor of a formulation that would submit to the jury a single “ultimate question of entrapment.”
