United States v. Pedrin, No. 11-10623 (8-17-15)(Fletcher with Christen; dissent by
Noonan). This issue involves government
misconduct. It arises from yet another
gov't reverse sting involving a stash house robbery. The 9th affirmed the conviction, but Noonan
has a stinging dissent, lambasting the gov't and arguing that the court should
consider entrapment, even though the defense was not presented (!).
The decision is here:
http://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2015/08/17/11-10623.pdf
To
the facts: the agent was working with a CI.
The agent had done "hundreds" of these reverse stings, all
following a similar pattern. Here, the
CI told the agent that his nephew called to "ask for work." This
meant robbing drug houses. The uncle of course immediately alerted the agent,
who arranged for a meeting with the nephew and the defendant. The plans were hatched, and the defendant
agreed. He continued to go forward, only
to be warned on the way to the robbery that it was a sting. He and others fled, but he was eventually
arrested and charged with various drug trafficking counts. He was convicted at trial and appealed.
The
9th applied the Black test, (United States
v. Black, 733 F.3d 294 (9th Cir. 2013)), which identified six facts for
outrageous gov't misconduct: (1) criminal character of defendant; (2)
individualized suspicion; (3) gov't role; (4) encouragement; (5) nature of
gov't conduct; and (6) nature of crime.
The majority stated that the defendant (through the nephew) approached
the agent; it was not a case of the agent going into a bar, and asking
around. The other factors all pointed to
the defendant wanting to do this offense without much prodding. In short, the Black test was not met here.
Noonan, in a
spirited and anguished dissent, argued that the gov't entrapped. The concluding paragraph summarizes it
well: "As the case now stands, the
ATF enhances its reputation by its successful ruse. The government...is diminished by its
dependence on the duplicity of the agency.
Because of a choice made by Pedrin or his counsel, entrapment was not
argued and Jacobson was uncited. By the
rules governing litigation we can affirm Pedrin's conviction. By our commitment to a humane justice, we are
called to dismiss the case made by the entrappers."
The decision is here:
http://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2015/08/17/11-10623.pdf
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