Defendant appeals his conviction and sentence on a charge of possession of a controlled substance (heroin) with intent to sell or deliver. F.S. § 893.13(l)(a)(l). Defendant was initially charged in a two-count information with Count I, sale of heroin, and Count II, possession of heroin with intent to sell or deliver. The jury found him guilty of Count II and not guilty of Count I.
The evidence was that the police contacted a girl friend of the defendant who was herself in jail on a heroin charge. They enlisted the aid of this “confidential informant” to “make a case” against the defendant. There is no evidence in the case as to the defendant’s reputation for prior drug dealings. In any event the police in some fashion secured the release from prison of the girl friend in exchange for her assistance as a confidential informant against the defendant.
Immediately upon her release the girl friend contacted the defendant and sought to obtain heroin from him. On three consecutive days she contacted him with her request for heroin. The defendant knew that the confidential informant was a heroin addict. On each of these three occasions the confidential informant was unsuccessful in getting any heroin from the defendant. On the fourth day it happened to be the birthday of the confidential informant. She again contacted defendant over the telephone and arranged to come over to a home not owned by the defendant and visit with him. On her birthday she went to the house with the defendant. The defendant had arranged a small party for the two of them. He provided a present, a birthday card, flowers, a cake and a bottle of champagne. The two began celebrating the birthday and after about an hour when the defendant was in the “right mood” the girl friend again began asking for heroin as a birthday present. He left the room and went to another part of the house. He returned with a small amount of heroin in a film can. The two of them, defendant and the C.I./ girl friend divided the heroin into small tinfoil packages and at this point defendant delivered the heroin to the girl friend.
There was no other evidence in the case other than from the police officers and the police chemist who testified about the rela
At this point the State rested and the defendant elected not to take the stand or present any evidence. The defendant, at a charge conference, requested that the Court charge the jury on the theory of entrapment. This request was denied and the case was submitted to the jury. The jury found the defendant guilty of possession of heroin with intent to deliver.
On appeal defendant raises numerous points. We reverse on the absence of an entrapment instruction. The facts outlined above, even though they were presented on cross-examination in the State’s case, constitute adequate evidence of entrapment to present this issue as one for jury consideration. There was arguable undue persuasion and coercion or unusual enticement by the confidential informant who was working directly for the police. See Story v. State,
It is our conclusion that entrapment was a proper jury issue here and the Court erred in failing to instruct thereon. We have considered all of the other points raised by appellant and find same to be without merit. The judgment and conviction below'is reversed and the matter remanded for a new trial on the merits.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
