Entrapment

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Entrapment is a practice in which a law enforcement agent or an agent of the state induces a person to commit a crime that the person would have otherwise been unlikely or unwilling to commit. [1] In US law, it is defined as "the conception and planning of an offense by an officer or agent, and the procurement of its commission by one who would not have perpetrated it except for the trickery, persuasion or fraud of the officer or state agent". [2]

Contents

Police conduct rising to the level of entrapment is broadly discouraged and thus, in many jurisdictions, is available as a defense against criminal liability. Sting operations, through which police officers or agents engage in deception to try to catch persons who are committing crimes, raise concerns about possible entrapment. [3]

Depending on the law in the jurisdiction, the prosecution may be required to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was not entrapped or the defendant may be required to prove that they were entrapped as an affirmative defense.

In the practice of journalism and whistle-blowing entrapment means "deceptive and trust-breaking techniques ... applied to trick someone to commit a legal or moral transgression." [4] [5]

Etymology and usage

The word entrapment, from the verb "to entrap", meaning to catch in a trap, was first used in this sense in 1899 [6] in the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit case of People v Braisted. [7] [8]

The 1828 edition of Noah Webster's American Dictionary of the English Language defines entrap as:

To catch as in a trap; to insnare [sic]; used chiefly or wholly in a figurative sense. To catch by artifices; to involve in difficulties or distresses; to entangle; to catch or involve in contraindications; in short, to involve in any difficulties from which an escape is not easy or possible. We are entrapped by the devices of evil men. We are sometimes entrapped in our own words. [9]

Canada

The Supreme Court of Canada developed the doctrine of entrapment in three major decisions: R. v. Amato, [1982] 2 S.C.R. 418, R. v. Mack, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 903, and R. v. Barnes, [1991] 1 S.C.R. 449.

There are two different forms of entrapment in Canadian law.

  1. Random virtue testing: This form of entrapment occurs when the police offer an individual the opportunity to commit a crime without reasonable suspicion that either that individual or where that individual is located is associated with the criminal activity under investigation. If police have such a reasonable suspicion, they are still limited to providing only an opportunity to commit the offence.
  2. Inducement of an offence: This form of entrapment occurs when the police go beyond merely providing an opportunity to commit an offence but actually induce the commission of the offense. Some factors a court may consider when deciding whether police have induced the offence include the type of crime being investigated, whether an average person would have been induced, the persistence and number of attempts made by the police, the type of inducement used (fraud, deceit, reward, etc.), and the existence of express or implied threats.

The question of entrapment is considered only after there has been a finding of guilt. If, after finding the accused guilty, the court determines that the accused was entrapped, the court enters a judicial stay of proceedings. That is similar to an acquittal.

History

In 2013, a British Columbia couple were found guilty of attempting to blow up the British Columbia Parliament Buildings. In 2016, the verdict was overturned because the couple were found to have been entrapped into the plot by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.

It was the first time entrapment had been successfully argued in a terrorism case. Three previous attempts failed. [10]

Germany

In German law, it is normally forbidden [11] to induce or persuade someone to commit a crime or to attempt to do so. [12] However, the German Federal Court of Justice has held that entrapment by undercover police agents is not a reason to stay the case per se . [13] If undercover agents have been used without proper justification, punishment for the committed offense may be reduced. [14]

In the case of persons who are not initially under suspicion and unlikely to commit a certain crime, a decision from 1999 [15] stated that entrapment of such persons violates the right to a fair trial, and the punishment for the committed offense may thus be reduced.

United Kingdom

England and Wales

The main authority on entrapment in England and Wales, held to be equally applicable in Scotland, is the decision of the House of Lords in R. v. Loosely (2001). [16] [17] A stay is granted if the conduct of the state was so seriously improper that the administration of justice was brought into disrepute. In deciding whether to grant a stay, the Court will consider, as a useful guide, whether the police did more than present the defendant with an unexceptional opportunity to commit a crime.

In Loosely, Lords Hoffman and Hutton indicated certain factors that should be considered in deciding whether proceedings against a defendant should be stayed:

It has been held that it is generally acceptable for the police to conduct test purchases (DPP v. Marshall) or pose as passengers to catch unlicensed taxi drivers (Nottingham City Council v. Amin).

Historically, entrapment was common in the eighteenth and nineteenth century, and was used frequently by the Bank of England and Royal Mint to catch people involved in currency crime during the Restriction Period of 1797–1820. [18]

Entrapment by plainclothes policemen was often used to prosecute gay men, even after the Sexual Offences Act 1967 exempted consensual gay sex in private from prosecution. [19] [20] [21] [22]

Scotland

In Scotland the main authority is the case of Brown v. HMA (2002) which stated that entrapment will occur when law enforcement officials cause an offense to be committed which would not have occurred had it not been for their involvement. [23] The remedies available correspond with those in England and are considered to be either a plea in bar of trial or a challenge to the admissibility of evidence obtained through entrapment.

United States

In the United States, two competing tests exist for determining whether entrapment has taken place, known as the "subjective" and "objective" tests. [24]

Contrary to popular belief, the United States does not require police officers to identify themselves as police in the case of a sting or other undercover work, and police officers may lie when engaged in such work. [25] The law of entrapment instead focuses on whether people were enticed to commit crimes they would not have otherwise considered in the normal course of events. [1]

History

Entrapment defenses in the United States have evolved mainly through case law.

Courts took a dim view of the defense at first. The New York Supreme Court said in 1864 that "[It] has never availed to shield crime or give indemnity to the culprit, and it is safe to say that under any code of civilized, not to say Christian, ethics, it never will". [26] [Note 1] Forty years later, another judge in that state affirmed that rejection, arguing "[courts] should not hesitate to punish the crime actually committed by the defendant" when rejecting entrapment claimed in a grand larceny case. [27]

Other states, however, had already begun reversing convictions on entrapment grounds. [28] Federal courts recognized entrapment as a defense starting with Woo Wai v. United States . [29] [30] The U.S. Supreme Court declined to consider the question of entrapment in Casey v. United States , [31] since the facts in the case were too vague to definitively rule on the question; but, four years later, it did. In Sorrells v. United States , [2] the Supreme Court unanimously reversed the conviction of a North Carolina factory worker who gave in to an undercover Prohibition officer's repeated entreaties to get him some liquor. It identified the controlling question as "whether the defendant is a person otherwise innocent whom the government is seeking to punish for an alleged offense which is the product of the creative activity of its own officials". [2]

In Sherman v. United States , [32] the Court considered a similar case in which one recovering drug addict working with agents of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics (a predecessor agency to today's Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA)) solicited another to sell him drugs on the premise that his own efforts were failing. Again unanimous, its opinion focused more clearly on the defendant's predisposition to commit the offense and, on that basis, overturned Sherman's conviction as well since, although he had two prior drug convictions, the most recent dated back five years. Furthermore, he was attempting to rehabilitate himself, he had made no profit on the sales, and no drugs were found in his apartment when it was searched, suggesting the absence of a predisposition to break drug laws. "To determine whether entrapment has been established", it said, "a line must be drawn between the trap for the unwary innocent and the trap for the unwary criminal". [33]

Prosecutors won the next two times entrapment came before the Court, in United States v. Russell [34] and Hampton v. United States , [35] albeit by narrow margins. In the former, the Court upheld the conviction of a Washington man for manufacturing methamphetamine even though an undercover agent had supplied some of the ingredients, and also pondered an outrageous government conduct defense, though it did not enable it. Hampton let stand, by a similar margin, the conviction of a Missouri man who had, upon seeing track marks on the arms of a DEA informant, expressed interest in obtaining heroin to sell. The DEA informant arranged a meeting between the Missouri man and undercover DEA agents in which the Missouri man sold a small quantity of heroin to agents and indicated that he could obtain larger quantities. After a second sale to the undercover agents, he was arrested. The defendant alleged that the informant supplied the drugs and that he had been led to believe, by the informant, that he was not selling heroin but a counterfeit with which he intended to defraud the buyers. Regardless, the Court found he was sufficiently predisposed to sell heroin so as to be criminally liable. [35]

The argument employed in the majority opinion on Hampton became known as the "subjective" test of entrapment, since it focused on the defendant's state of mind. However, in all cases, concurring opinions had advocated an "objective" test, focusing instead on whether the conduct of the police or other investigators would catch only those "ready and willing to commit crime". [36] Under the objective approach the defendant's personality (i.e., his predisposition to commit the crime) would be immaterial, and the potential for the police conduct to induce a law-abiding person considered in the abstract would be the test. This, supporters argued, avoided the dubious issue of an unexpressed legislative intent on which the Sorrells court had relied and instead grounded the entrapment defence, like the exclusionary rule, in the court's supervisory role over law enforcement. And like the exclusionary rule, they would have had judges, not juries, decide whether a defendant had been entrapped as a matter of law. [37]

Since the subjective test focusing on predisposition had, unlike the exclusionary rule, not been applied to the states, they were free to follow it as they saw fit. The state courts or legislatures of 37 states have chosen the subjective test, while the others use the objective test. [38] Some have allowed both the judge and the jury to rule on whether the defendant was entrapped. [37]

In the Supreme Court's last major ruling on entrapment, Jacobson v. United States , [39] which overturned the conviction of a Nebraska man for receiving child pornography via the mail, the subjective vs. objective debate was completely absent. Both the majority and dissenting opinions focused solely on whether the prosecution had established that the defendant had a predisposition for purchasing such material (which had only recently been outlawed at the time of his arrest). Since no other material was found in his home save what he had purchased from the undercover postal inspectors, Justice Byron White believed the operation had implanted the idea in his mind through mailings decrying politicians for assaulting civil liberties by passing laws such as the one the inspectors hoped he would break. Justice Sandra Day O'Connor disagreed in her dissent, arguing that the record did indeed establish that Jacobson was interested in continuing the purchases.

Entrapment by estoppel

A subset of the entrapment defense was first recognized by the Supreme Court in Raley v. Ohio. [40] There, four defendants were testifying before a committee of the Ohio State Legislature. The chairman of the committee told them that they could assert their right against self-incrimination. They asserted this right, and refused to answer questions. However, Ohio law provided them immunity from prosecution, so the right against self-incrimination was inapplicable, and they were subsequently prosecuted for their failure to answer questions. The Supreme Court overturned three of the four convictions based on the doctrine of entrapment by estoppel. (The fourth refused to state his address, at which point the committee expressed the view that the right against self-incrimination did not apply to that question.)

As described in United States v. Howell, [41] the defense "applies when, acting with actual or apparent authority, a government official affirmatively assures the defendant that certain conduct is legal and the defendant reasonably believes that official".

The entrapment by estoppel defense exists in both federal and city jurisdictions; however, case law remains inconsistent as to whether the misleading advice of e.g. a state official provides protection against federal criminal charges. Examples exist of an appellate court failing to allow an entrapment by estoppel defense where a municipal official provided misleading instructions regarding a state law. [42]

Federal court

Federal courts apply a subjective test for claims of entrapment. [43] In federal criminal prosecutions, if a defendant proves entrapment the defendant may not be convicted of the underlying crime. [44] A valid entrapment defense has two related elements: [45]

  1. government inducement of the crime, and
  2. the defendant's lack of predisposition to engage in the criminal conduct.

The federal entrapment defense is based upon statutory construction, the federal courts' interpretation of the will of Congress in passing the criminal statutes. As this is not a constitutional prohibition, Congress may change or override this interpretation by passing a law. [46]

State court

Each state has its own case law and statutory law that defines when and how the entrapment defense is available, and states may choose to adopt either the subjective or objective test for what government action constitutes entrapment. [43] The essential elements of an entrapment defense are:

  1. Improper inducement: the government induced the defendant to commit the crime; and
  2. Lack of predisposition: the defendant (or, under the objective test, an ordinary person in the position of the defendant) would not have committed the crime but for the government's inducement.

European Convention of Human Rights

Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights has been interpreted as forbidding prosecution of acts induced by undercover officers. In the case of Teixeira de Castro v Portugal, the European Court of Human Rights found that the prosecution of a man for drugs offences after being asked by undercover police to procure heroin was a breach of the defendant's rights under Article 6 as the investigating officers's actions "went beyond those of undercover agents because they instigated the offence and there is nothing to suggest that without their intervention it would have been committed". [47] The decision in Teixeira de Castro has been used by signatory countries in interpreting domestic law (e.g. in the United Kingdom in the Looseley case described above).

See also

Notes

  1. A fuller quote includes a reference to original sin. Even if inducements to commit crime could be assumed to exist in this case, the allegation of the defendant would be but the repetition of the plea as ancient as the world, and first interposed in Paradise: "The serpent beguiled me and I did eat." That defense was overruled by the great Lawgiver, and whatever estimate we may form, or whatever judgment pass upon the character or conduct of the tempter, this plea has never since availed to shield crime or give indemnity to the culprit, and it is safe to say that under any code of civilized, not to say Christian ethics, it never will.

Related Research Articles

In criminal law, mens rea is the mental state of a defendant who is accused of committing a crime. In common law jurisdictions, most crimes require proof both of mens rea and actus reus before the defendant can be found guilty.

Solicitation is the act of offering, or attempting to purchase, goods and/or services. Legal status may be specific to the time or place where it occurs. The crime of "solicitation to commit a crime" occurs when a person encourages, "solicits, requests, commands, importunes or otherwise attempts to cause" another person to attempt or commit a crime, with the purpose of thereby facilitating the attempt or commission of that crime.

In criminal law, criminal negligence is an offence that involves a breach of an objective standard of behaviour expected of a defendant. It may be contrasted with strictly liable offences, which do not consider states of mind in determining criminal liability, or offenses that requires mens rea, a mental state of guilt.

An attempt to commit a crime occurs if a criminal has an intent to commit a crime and takes a substantial step toward completing the crime, but for reasons not intended by the criminal, the final resulting crime does not occur. Attempt to commit a particular crime is a crime, usually considered to be of the same or lesser gravity as the particular crime attempted. Attempt is a type of inchoate crime, a crime that is not fully developed. The crime of attempt has two elements, intent and some conduct toward completion of the crime.

In criminal law, incitement is the encouragement of another person to commit a crime. Depending on the jurisdiction, some or all types of incitement may be illegal. Where illegal, it is known as an inchoate offense, where harm is intended but may or may not have actually occurred.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Criminal law of Canada</span>

The criminal law of Canada is under the exclusive legislative jurisdiction of the Parliament of Canada. The power to enact criminal law is derived from section 91(27) of the Constitution Act, 1867. Most criminal laws have been codified in the Criminal Code, as well as the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act, Youth Criminal Justice Act and several other peripheral statutes.

In criminal law and in the law of tort, recklessness may be defined as the state of mind where a person deliberately and unjustifiably pursues a course of action while consciously disregarding any risks flowing from such action. Recklessness is less culpable than malice, but is more blameworthy than carelessness.

In criminal law, intent is a subjective state of mind that must accompany the acts of certain crimes to constitute a violation. A more formal, generally synonymous legal term is scienter: intent or knowledge of wrongdoing.

Actual innocence is a special standard of review in legal cases to prove that a charged defendant did not commit the crimes that they were accused of, which is often applied by appellate courts to prevent a miscarriage of justice.

In the criminal law of Australia, self-defence is a legal defence to a charge of causing injury or death in defence of the person or, to a limited extent, property, or a partial defence to murder if the degree of force used was excessive.

Jacobson v. United States, 503 U.S. 540 (1992), is a case decided by the United States Supreme Court regarding the criminal procedure topic of entrapment. A narrowly divided court overturned the conviction of a Nebraska man for receiving child sexual abuse material through the mail, ruling that postal inspectors had implanted a desire to do so through repeated written entreaties.

Sorrells v. United States, 287 U.S. 435 (1932), is a Supreme Court case in which the justices unanimously recognized the entrapment defense. However, while the majority opinion by Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes located the key to entrapment in the defendant's predisposition or lack thereof to commit the crime, Owen Roberts' concurring opinion proposed instead that it be rooted in an analysis of the conduct of the law enforcement agents making the arrest. Although the Court has stuck with predisposition, the dispute has hung over entrapment jurisprudence ever since.

Sherman v. United States, 356 U.S. 369 (1958), was a United States Supreme Court case on the issue of entrapment. Unanimously, the Court overturned the conviction of a recovering New York drug addict who had been repeatedly solicited for drug sales by a fellow former addict who was working with federal agents.

United States v. Russell, 411 U.S. 423 (1973), is a Supreme Court case dealing with the entrapment defense. The court split 5-4 and maintained the subjective theory that had first been adopted in Sorrells v. United States, 287 U.S. 435 (1932). Although an undercover federal agent had helped procure a key ingredient for an illegal methamphetamine manufacturing operation, and assisted in the process, the Court followed its earlier rulings on the subject and found that the defendant had a predisposition to make and sell illegal drugs whether he worked with the government or not.

Hampton v. United States, 425 U.S. 484 (1976), is a United States Supreme Court decision on the subject of Entrapment. By a 5–3 margin, the Court upheld the conviction of a Missouri man for selling heroin even though all the drug sold was supplied to him, he claimed, by a Drug Enforcement Administration informant who had, in turn, gotten it from the DEA. The majority held that the record showed Hampton was predisposed to sell drugs no matter his source.

State v. Mitchell, 170 Mo. 633, 71 S.W. 175 (1902), is a precedent-setting decision of the Supreme Court of Missouri which is part of the body of case law involving the prosecution of failed attempts to commit a crime. In United States law, cases involving failed criminal attempts can bring up interesting legal issues of whether the crime was unsuccessful due to factual impossibility or to legal impossibility.

Rape is a statutory offence in England and Wales. The offence is created by section 1 of the Sexual Offences Act 2003:

(1) A person (A) commits an offence if—

(2) Whether a belief is reasonable is to be determined having regard to all the circumstances, including any steps A has taken to ascertain whether B consents.
(3) Sections 75 and 76 apply to an offence under this section.

(4) A person guilty of an offence under this section is liable, on conviction on indictment, to imprisonment for life.

Outrageous Government Conduct is a criminal defense that presupposes the defendant's predisposition to commit the crime but seeks dismissal of the indictment on the ground that the conduct of law enforcement agents was "so outrageous that due process principles would absolutely bar the government from invoking judicial process to obtain a conviction." The defense must prove that law enforcement agents' tactics violated "that 'fundamental fairness, shocking to the universal sense of justice,' mandated by the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment." The Outrageous Government Conduct defense is related to but distinct from the entrapment defense. The Outrageous Government Conduct defense is a bar to prosecution which is decided by the judge based on legal theory while entrapment is an affirmative defense which is considered, potentially, by a jury. Additionally, predisposition to commit a crime is irrelevant to the Outrageous Government Conduct defense and can succeed despite evidence of predisposition.

<i>Criminal law of the United States</i>

The criminal law of the United States is a manifold system of laws and practices that connects crimes and consequences. In comparison, civil law addresses non-criminal disputes. The system varies considerably by jurisdiction, but conforms to the US Constitution. Generally there are two systems of criminal law to which a person maybe subject; the most frequent is state criminal law, and the other is federal law.

References

  1. 1 2 Sloane (1990) 49 A Crim R 270. See also agent provocateur
  2. 1 2 3 Sorrells v. United States , 287 U.S. 435, 451.
  3. Missouri Law Review, Volume 70, Issue 2, Spring 2005: Sting Operations, Undercover Agents and Entrapment: by Bruce Hay http://scholarship.law.missouri.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3652&context=mlr
  4. Kampf, Zohar (17 April 2019). "To bark or to bite? Journalism and entrapment". Routledge Companion to Media and Scandal. Routledge Handbooks Online. pp. 245–253. doi:10.4324/9781351173001-25. ISBN   978-0-8153-8759-6. S2CID   191717797.
  5. Liebes, Tamar; Blum-Kulka, Shoshana (May 2004). "It Takes Two to Blow the Whistle: Do Journalists Control the Outbreak of Scandal?". American Behavioral Scientist. 47 (9): 1153–1170. doi:10.1177/0002764203262341. ISSN   0002-7642. S2CID   143852103.
  6. "Online Etymology Dictionary".
  7. People v Braisted (13 Colo. App. 532, 58 Pac. 796)
  8. THE DEFENCE OF ENTRAPMENT IN THE FEDERAL COURTS LESTER B. ORFIELD
  9. Noah Webster (1985). The American Dictionary of the English Language (Fourth ed.). San Francisco: The Foundation for American Christian Education. p. ENT. ISBN   978-0-912498-03-4.
  10. Omand, Geordon (29 July 2016). "B.C. bomb plotters set free after judge rules RCMP entrapped pair". The Globe and Mail. Archived from the original on 20 December 2018. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
  11. § 26 StGB
  12. § 30 StGB, in German
  13. e.g. GA 1975, 333, 334.
  14. 1st Senate's decision in 1 StR 148/84 - 23 May 1984.
  15. "18th of November, BGH 1 StR 221/99", in German
  16. "Regina v Loosely". Parliament.uk. House of Lords. 25 October 2001. Retrieved 25 October 2017.
  17. "Abuse of Process | The Crown Prosecution Service". www.cps.gov.uk. Retrieved 28 September 2021.
  18. Crymble, Adam (9 February 2017). "How Criminal were the Irish? Bias in the Detection of London Currency Crime, 1797-1821". The London Journal. 43: 36–52. doi: 10.1080/03058034.2016.1270876 . hdl: 2299/19710 .
  19. Livia, Anna; Hall, Kira (1997). Queerly Phrased: Language, Gender, and Sexuality. Oxford University Press. p. 337. ISBN   9780195104707 . Retrieved 4 February 2018.
  20. Tatchell, Peter (26 July 2017). "Men convicted under anti-gay laws deserve an apology". The Independent. Retrieved 4 February 2018.
  21. Thane, Pat (2010). Unequal Britain: Equalities in Britain Since 1945. A&C Black. p. 135. ISBN   9781847062987 . Retrieved 4 February 2018.
  22. Lavalette, Michael (2011). Radical Social Work Today: Social Work at the Crossroads. Policy Press. p. 81. ISBN   9781847428172 . Retrieved 4 February 2018.
  23. "CALUM JONES+JOHN DOYLE v. HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE".
  24. Criminal Law, Sec. 6.3 Entrapment. University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing. 17 December 2015. ISBN   9781946135087 . Retrieved 25 October 2017.
  25. "Snopes on Entrapment". Snopes.com. 12 March 1998. Retrieved 29 August 2009.
  26. Board of Commissioners v. Backus, 29 How. Pr. 33, 42 (1864) cited in Lord, Kenneth (1998). "Entrapment and Due Process: Moving Toward A Dual System of Defences" (PDF). Fl St. U. Law Rev. 25: 468. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 June 2007.
  27. People v. Mills, 70 N.E. 786, 791 (N.Y. 1904), cited at Lord, supra.
  28. See John D. Lombardo, "Causation and 'Objective' Entrapment: Toward a Culpability-Centred Approach", 43 UCLA L. REV. 209, 219-20 (1995). See, e.g., People v. McCord, 42 N.W. 1106 (Mich. 1889)
  29. Woo Wai v. United States223 F.1d 412 (9th Cir. 1915)
  30. Chin, Gabriel J., "The Story of Jacobson v United States: Catching Criminals or Creating Crime? Archived 21 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine ", Arizona Legal Studies Discussion Paper N. 06-12, February 2006, retrieved 10 August 2006, 39. This draft is described as a chapter in the author's forthcoming Criminal Law Stories.
  31. Casey v. United States 276 U.S. 413 (1928)
  32. Sherman v. United States 356 U.S. 369 (1958)
  33. Sherman v. United States , 356 U.S. 369, 375.
  34. United States v. Russell 411 U.S. 423 (1973)
  35. 1 2 Hampton v. United States 425 U.S. 484 (1976)
  36. Sorrells, Id., 287 U.S. at 384 (Frankfurter, J., concurring.
  37. 1 2 Chin, p. 6, citing Marcus, Paul, The Entrapment Defence.
  38. Paton, Scott C. (1994). "'The Government Made Me Do It': A Proposed Approach to Entrapment Under Jacobson v. United States". Cornell L. R. 79 (45): 995, 1002.
  39. Jacobson v. United States 503 U.S. 540 (1992)
  40. Raley v. Ohio 360 U.S. 423 (1959)
  41. United States v. Howell, 37 F.3d 1197, 1204 (7th Cir. 1994)
  42. "C.A. Bars Former Councilwoman's 'Entrapment by Estoppel' Defense".
  43. 1 2 Marcus, Paul (2015). The Entrapment Defense. LexisNexis. p. 118. ISBN   978-1579115258 . Retrieved 25 October 2017.
  44. "645. Entrapment—Elements". U.S. Attorneys' Manual, Criminal Resource Manual. U.S. Department of Justice. 19 February 2015. Retrieved 25 October 2017.
  45. "Mathews v. United States, 485 U.S. 58, 63 (1988)". Google Scholar. Retrieved 25 October 2017.
  46. Roth, Jessica A. (2013). "The Anomaly of Entrapment". Washington University Law Review. 91 (4): 1022. Retrieved 25 October 2017.
  47. Teixeira de Castro v Portugal, paragraph 39

Further reading