A jury convicted Lue of one count of conspiring to import heroin in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 952 and three counts of distributing heroin and possessing heroin with intent to distribute in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1).
He appeals asserting two errors: (1) that he was a victim of entrapment as a matter of law and (2) that the conduct of the law enforcement officers was so outrageous that his conviction constituted a denial of due process. We reject both of these contentions and affirm the judgment.
On March 5, 1972, Young Ah Jen (Young) approached Henry Monsen in Hong Kong and proposed that Monsen participate with him in smuggling morphine into the United States. After advising Young that he would “think about it,” Monsen contacted the agent in charge of the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs in Hong Kong (Shostrom) and told him of the proposal. Monsen was instructed to keep in contact with Young; later, Monsen agreed to participate with Young in the smuggling. After May 10, when Mosen came to San Francisco Shostrom became the contact with Young in Hong Kong.
On June 5, Young asked and Shostrom agreed to take a package to Monsen in San Francisco. On June 16, Young called Shostrom and asked him to have Monsen call Lue in Los Angeles. Young had previously met Lue in Hong Kong and had offered to send heroin to Lue in the United States. Young gave Shostrom Lue’s telephone number and said that Monsen should give the code phrase “Young has just come from the airport” when he spoke with Lue.
Monsen contacted Lue and repeated the phrase as directed, but Lue gave no indication he recognized the code. Mon-sen subsequently met with Lue in Los Angeles, at Monsen’s request, and told him to “contact his party in Hong Kong.” Later, on June 22, Lue contacted Monsen in San Francisco and informed him that he had talked to Young and asked Monsen “how much was coming.”
After the drugs arrived in San Francisco, Monsen met Lue, delivered a bag containing the heroin and received from him $2,000. Lue was followed by federal agents and was later arrested.
I. ENTRAPMENT
Lue maintains that he was the victim of entrapment as a matter of law. He claims he was unwilling to participate in narcotics smuggling but was overcome by the repeated importunings of the government agents. He also objects that the trial court instructed the jury *533 in accordance with the traditional concept of entrapment which focuses on the accused’s predisposition to commit the offense. He contends that the jury instructions should have focused on the degree of governmental activity.
In United States v. Russell,
We agree with Lue that this case differs from
Russell
in the degree of predisposition, but that does not call for a different result as a matter of law. In
Russell
the evidence clearly disclosed that, prior to the time of the government involvement, the defendant had actually been engaged in the criminal activity for which he was convicted. Russell even conceded in the court of appeals “that he may have harbored a predisposition to commit the charged offenses . . . .”
II. DUE PROCESS
Lue asserts that his conviction was obtained in violation of due process because of the conduct of the law enforcement officers. His contention is apparently based upon the following language from Russell:
While we may some day be presented with a situation in which the conduct of law enforcement agents is so outrageous that due process principles would absolutely bar the government from invoking judicial processes to obtain a conviction, cf. Rochin v. California,342 U.S. 165 [,72 S.Ct. 205 ,96 L.Ed. 183 ] (1952), the instant ease is distinctly not of that breed.
*534
Lue, however, attempts to thrust open completely that which was left slightly ajar by claiming the same type of government activity validated in Russell is now tainted under the banner of due process. In this he fails. Monsen and Shostrom were conduits in the transfer of the heroin from Young to Lue. As in Russell, where the government agents provided something of value in order to infiltrate the drug ring, here also the government provided something of value when it furnished the needed couriers to carry the heroin. The Court stressed in Russell that the defendants could have obtained the chemical ingredient supplied by the government from alternate sources and thereby achieved their criminal purpose without the assistance of the government. Similarly, if Monsen and Shostrom had not been available, someone else would have been employed by Young to carry the heroin to Lue.
In Russell, the Court, addressing itself to government activity similar to that involved in this case, stated:
[I]n drug-related offenses law enforcement personnel have turned to one of the only practicable means of detection: the infiltration of drug rings and a limited participation in their unlawful present practices. Such infiltration is a recognized and permissible means of investigation; if that be so, then the supply of some item of value that the drug ring requires must, as a general rule, also be permissible. For an agent will not be taken into the confidence of the illegal entrepreneurs unless he has something of value to offer them. Law enforcement tactics such as this can hardly be said to violate “fundamental fairness” or “shocking to the universal sense of justice,” Kinsella, [361 U.S. at 246 ,80 S.Ct. 297 ,4 L.Ed.2d 268 ].
Just as the Supreme Court concluded in Russell, we also conclude in this case:
The law enforcement conduct here stops far short of violating that “fundamental fairness, shocking to the universal sense of justice,” mandated *535 by the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment. Kinsella v. United States ex rel. Singleton,361 U.S. 234 , 246[,80 S.Ct. 297 ,4 L.Ed.2d 268 ] (1960).
Affirmed.
Notes
. The district court instructed in part:
The defendant asserts that he was a victim of entrapment as to the crimes charged in the indictment.
Where a person has no previous intent or purpose to violate the law, but is induced or persuaded by law-enforcement officers or'their agents to commit a crime, he is a victim of entrapment and the law as a matter of policy forbids his conviction in such a case.
On the other hand, where a person already has the readiness and willingness to break the law, the mere fact that government agents provide what appears to be a favorable opportunity is not entrapment.
If, then, the jury should find beyond a reasonable doubt from the evidence in the case that, before anything at all occurred respecting the alleged offense involved in this case, the defendant was ready and willing to commit crimes such as charged in the indictment, whenever opportunity was afforded, and that government officers or their agents did no more than offer the opportunity, then the jury should find that the defendant is not a victim of entrapment.
. In
Archer
the defendants asserted the due process defense based on the
Russell
dictum but the Second Circuit avoided the resolution of the “uncertainties and dimensions of this defense,” Comment, The Viability of the Entrapment Defense in the Constitutional Context, 59 Iowa L.Rev. 655, 665 (1974), and decided the case on other grounds. United States v. Archer,
2. In Archer the defendants asserted the due the Court has apparently tried to augment it with a separate non-entrapment defense based on due process. This defense is centered on the theory that although the predisposition of a defendant will render the traditional entrapment .defense unavailable to him, the fundamental fairness requirements of due process may prevent his prosecution.
Comment, The Viability of the Entrapment Defense in the Constitutional Context, 59 Iowa L.Rev. 655, 665 (1974).
