Oscar Dovalina and Rodolfo Soliz were convicted of distributing twenty-four grams of cocaine to a Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) undercover agent in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1).
1
At their jury trial, Dovalina testified that he had received the cocaine in question from the same Government informer who had helped to arrange the sale. Defendants’ main contention on appeal is that under
United States v. Bueno,
5 Cir., 1971,
The series of events leading to the apprehension of Dovalina and Soliz began with the introduction of Dovalina to Robert Havens, a DEA agent, by David Pedigo, a paid Government informant. Following a number of conversations between Havens, Pedigo, and Dovalina, a meeting was arranged. On the afternoon of April 26, 1973, the parties gathered near the French Quarter Apartments in Corpus Christi, Texas, at which time all four went for a ride in a car driven by Dovalina. Prior to embarking, Dovalina handed the cocaine to Soliz so that he would be free to drive. During the course of the ride, Soliz passed the cocaine to Havens, after being signaled to do so by Dovalina. Defendants maintain that Soliz was merely “along for the ride” and was not more deeply implicated in the transaction, whereas testimony introduced by the Government indicates that both Soliz and Dovalina were dealers capable of procuring substantial quantities of cocaine and heroin.
At trial, Dovalina testified that Pedigo had repeatedly asked him to get some cocaine for Havens, and that even as late as two hours prior to the meeting, during the 3 p.m. telephone call which finalized arrangements, Pedigo “still wanted some.” However, Dovalina claimed that he had been unable to acquire any, and that he proceeded to the meeting point only because Pedigo had told him to come anyway. After arriving at the French Quarter Apartments, Dovalina continued, there was a thirty-second period when he and Pedigo were outside of Havens’ hearing at the rear of the Dovalina vehicle. During that time, Pedigo was said to have slipped Dovalina the cocaine, explaining that he had been able to obtain it from another source and that he needed Dovalina to consummate the sale because he already owed Havens some money and was unable to negotiate the sale directly.
To rebut Dovalina’s entrapment testimony, the Government called Havens, who testified that he had subjected Pedigo to a routine “strip search” just prior to the meeting and that he had thereby determined that Pedigo was carrying no contraband or concealed weapons on his person or in his clothing. After the search, Havens and Pedigo spent a few minutes together in Pedigo’s sparsely furnished apartment, and then walked together down a stairway to the parking lot where they met Dovalina and Soliz. Pedigo was thus continually in the presence of Havens from the time of the search until the consummation of the sale. Despite Havens’ concession on cross-examination that it might have been possible for Pedigo to obtain cocaine from some independent source during this period, if the jury believed Havens’ testimony, the possibility was clearly remote. Similarly, although Havens admitted that he had not checked Pedigo’s hair, if the jury accepted his testimony that the uncompressed package of cocaine was approximately the size of a tennis ball, it is beyond belief that Havens would have overlooked a tennis ball-size protuberance underneath Pedigo’s hair. As has previously been noted, the Government failed *955 to produce Pedigo himself, apparently because the Government had lost contact with Pedigo and because there had been no indication prior to trial that a Buenotype entrapment defense would be raised.
In Bueno, we held that entrapment exists as a matter of law where a defendant sells contraband to one Government agent that has been furnished to him for distribution purposes by another Government agent or informer. 2 Further, we held that once a defendant has testified to facts tending to establish such a defense,
the government has the duty to come forward with contrary proof, if it is to carry its ultimate burden of proving guilt beyond all reasonable doubt. If the government cannot come forward with evidence that contradicts Defendant’s testimony, then he is entitled to discharge, as a matter of law. If the government produces evidence sufficient to raise a jury question, then the case should be submitted with proper instructions [to the jury] . . ..447 F.2d at 906 .
In
Bueno,
the Government failed to submit any evidence contradicting the defendant’s entrapment testimony, arguing that the jury was entitled to assess the credibility of the defendant’s testimony and had the right to reject it
in toto.
Of course, Pedigo was not unavailable at trial in the same absolute sense as the
Soto
or
Gomez-Rojas
informants, but the crucial consideration is not the availability of the informant so much as the availability of Government evidence, whether direct or circumstantial, on the basis of which a jury could conclude beyond reasonable doubt that no
Bueno
entrapment occurred.
3
Lan
*956
guage in some earlier cases suggests that once a defendant has testified that he obtained contraband from a Government agent, “the Government must produce the undercover agent to contradict the defendant’s allegations in order to take the case to the jury.”
United States v. Mosley,
5 Cir., 1974,
[i]t is clear that this is not the intendment of this line of entrapment cases . . See United States v. Gomez-Rojas,507 F.2d 1213 (5th Cir. 1975); United States v. Soto,504 F.2d 557 (5th Cir. 1974). The failure of the government to produce the informer who allegedly supplied the contraband may well result in a dismissal of the charges, not because of some wooden application of a general rule, but rather because of both the heavy burden of proof which is borne by the government when the Bueno defense is raised and the usual lack of evidence other than the informant’s account available in the Bueno situation. See, United States v. Gomez-Rojas, supra at 1218.
United States v. Visuna,
S.D.Fla., 1975,
We wish to emphasize that the question of whether the Bueno defense has been established is for the jury as long as the government has come forward with sufficient evidence contravening the defendant’s allegations.490 F.2d at 164 .
In Soto, there was evidence that the informant lacked the financial resources to acquire the contraband and testimony from a surveillance officer that the informant had not been at Soto’s house for at least forty-five minutes before the arrival of the agent who made the purchase. This Government evidence was in contrast to Soto’s claim that the informant had given him the contraband “just prior” to the sale. If anything, the evidence in the instant case of the strip search and the continual observation of Pedigo by Havens, and at least for part of the time, by other surveillance officers, is even more persuasive on the non-entrapment point than the evidence available in Soto. Where, as here, the Government has introduced substantial circumstantial evidence which, if believed, would negate the existence of a Bueno defense, the jury may properly be allowed to resolve the conflict in the evidence. To hold otherwise might allow a wily defendant to establish an effective entrapment defense either by testifying that a nonexistent (and thus nonproducible) agent had supplied the contraband involved in his case, 4 or short of that, it *957 might allow him to succeed with such a defense by strategically delaying disclosure of plans to claim entrapment until trial had begun, jeopardy had attached, and the Government had possibly lost its opportunity to locate and produce the informant. 5
Having decided that the Government presented sufficient evidence to reach the jury on the
Bueno
defense, it is a short step to the conclusion that Dovalina’s conviction should be affirmed. Examining the sufficiency of the evidence in the light most favorable to the Government, as we must,
Glasser v. United States,
Two additional points warrant mention in connection with our affirmance of Soliz’s conviction. First, in light of our disposition of the
Bueno
issue with regard to Dovalina, we need not reach the question whether or not Soliz is covered by our holding in
United States v. Rodriguez,
5 Cir., 1973,
The convictions of both appellants are
Affirmed.
Notes
. Dovalina was sentenced to serve 12 years with a special parole term of 4 years, and Soliz was sentenced to 10 years with a special parole term of 4 years.
. This circuit has taken the view that
Bueno’s
vitality was not eroded by
United States v. Russell,
. Once the
Bueno
defense reaches the jury, the Government has the burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant did not receive the contraband in question from a
*956
Government agent.
United States v. Gomez-Rojas,
5 Cir., 1975,
. Presumably, such a conjuring act could be undermined by testimony indicating that there was no such agent. Note, however, that in establishing the entrapment defense, “it makes no difference that government agents involved are unaware that their informer is the defendant’s supplier.”
United States v. Soto,
5 Cir., 1974,
. We are aware, as was Judge Cox below, that language in
Sorrells v. United States,
