Dear Chief Agnew:
Your request for an opinion regarding the constitutionality of "reverse sting" operations has been forwarded to me for research and reply. While your letter was not specific as to the exact information you were requesting, Captain Dorman Pritchard explained to me during a telephone conversation on September 12, 1995 that your office is contemplating placing an undercover officer into the community in the guise of a drug dealer.
Employment by law enforcement officers of a "reverse sting" operation raises questions of whether the accused was entrapped and whether the sting operation constituted government misconduct. Both Louisiana and federal cases reviewing incidents involving employment of a "reverse sting" operation have upheld the constitutionality of using a "reverse sting" operation as an investigation device.
In State vs. Smith,
merely stood in an area known for it's drug activity and waited or prospective drug purchasers to stop their vehicles or otherwise approach them. There was no further enticement designed to cause persons to stop. Any contact with the undercover officers was necessarily initiated by the perspective drug purchasers. Persons in the area were free to pass by or stop solely at their own option. Smith, supra, at 780.
Thus, the court enunciated the bright line test for entrapment under circumstances under which a "reverse sting" operation is employed. The governmental misconduct offense is recognized only when the government does not simply inject itself into the charged crime, but also involves a defendant who is only passively involved in the crime.
In State v. Kotwitz,
Using these cases, copies of which are attached to this letter, as a guide to the prevailing line of case law in Louisiana, you may conclude that under certain circumstances employment of a "reverse sting" operation will both meet constitutional scrutiny and withstand defenses of entrapment and governmental misconduct.
Sincerely,
RICHARD P. IEYOUB Attorney General
BY: ____________________________ Douglas W. Freese Assistant Attorney General
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Enclosures
