State v. Trost

244 N.W.2d 556, 1976 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1213
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 30, 1976
Docket58846
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 244 N.W.2d 556 (State v. Trost) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Trost, 244 N.W.2d 556, 1976 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1213 (iowa 1976).

Opinion

McCORMICK, Justice.

Defendant Mark Edwin Trost appeals his conviction and sentence for delivery of amphetamines in violation of § 204.401(l)(b), The Code. We reverse and remand for new trial because we find the trial court erred in overruling defendant’s exception to the court’s refusal to instruct the jury it could consider the conduct of a government informant on the issue of entrapment. We also adopt a rule in this case that the credibility of a witness may be attacked by any party, including the party calling him.

Four questions are presented: (1) did the court err in refusing to instruct the jury it could consider the conduct of a government informant on the issue of entrapment? (2) did the trial court err in refusing to give a limiting instruction regarding evidence of other crimes? (3) did the court err in refusing to permit defendant to inform the jury that a defense witness had been granted immunity? and (4) did the court err in putting the burden of proof on defendant, after conviction, to prove he was an accommodation offender?

The charge arose from the alleged sale of defendant of 2300 amphetamines to two state undercover agents for $315 on October 10, 1974, in Madison County. The undercover agents were Ernest Baty, Jr., and Harold James Grasman, special agents with the division of narcotics and drug enforcement of the Iowa department of public safety. In August 1974 the Crestón police chief introduced the agents to Charles Rib-bey, who was then incarcerated in the Cre-stón jail. The agents employed Ribbey to help arrange a drug purchase from defendant, a resident of rural Union County suspected by the police chief to be engaged in drug traffic. Ribbey and defendant were not acquainted.

A few weeks later Ribbey approached defendant in downtown Crestón and asked him if he knew where Ribbey could buy a half pound of marijuana. Defendant said he did not. Ribbey asked him about amphetamines and received the same response. Ribbey told defendant he had a friend who would like to talk to defendant that evening about the purchase of drugs.

Defendant was downtown that evening with a date. He was approached again by Ribbey, this time accompanied by agent Baty, whom he introduced to defendant as “Rex”. Baty told defendant he wished to purchase drugs. He said he had associates in Detroit who would pay large sums of money for a regular supply of amphetamines. Baty asked defendant to think about this and told him Ribbey would probably get in touch with him later.

About a week and a half after that incident, Ribbey approached defendant in a Crestón tavern. Defendant testified that Ribbey asked him if he had investigated the availability of amphetamines for sale by defendant to “Rex”. Defendant said he told Ribbey he had not and had forgotten about the matter completely. He then testified Ribbey reminded him of the large amounts of money to be made and urged him strongly to do business with “Rex”. Defendant testified he was unemployed and broke; he was interested in the possibility of making a large amount of money. Rib-bey told defendant “Rex” wanted to meet him to purchase drugs the following weekend. Defendant agreed to look for drugs to sell.

Defendant testified he was not able to locate any amphetamines. When he met Baty that weekend, defendant testified Baty was very upset, disgusted and impatient with him because of his failure to obtain amphetamines for sale. Defendant asked for more time. When he could not find any amphetamines to sell Baty that evening, he said he remembered he had several LSD tablets, called orange barrels, which a friend had given him earlier in the week. He said he sold these to Baty for *558 one dollar per tablet in an effort to mollify him. Baty seemed encouraged by this. He obtained defendant’s phone number and said he would get in touch with him again soon.

Defendant testified that the next morning he met a friend, Jim Means, at the county jail. He said Means told him he had amphetamines which he needed to sell to raise money for bail on a drug charge. Defendant said he agreed to help Means by selling the amphetamines to Baty. When Baty called him later in the morning, defendant told Baty he had amphetamines to sell and arrangements were made for Baty and Grasman to meet defendant to carry out the transaction. Later that day, after several additional phone conversations, the trio met. Baty introduced Grasman as “Hal”, his “money man” from Detroit. After negotiating for a few minutes, the agents paid defendant $315 for 2300 amphetamine tablets. The present conviction is based on that sale.

I. The entrapment instruction. In its instruction on the defense of entrapment, the trial court told the jury in part:

“In applying this instruction, you should consider the course of conduct between the agents of the police, Ernest Baty and Harold Grasman, and the defendant. The transactions leading up to the offense, the interaction between the agents and the defendant and the defendant’s response to conduct of the agents, are all to be considered by you in judging what the effect of the agents’ conduct would be on a normally law-abiding person.”

Defendant took timely exception to the court’s failure to mention informant Ribbey in this instruction as an agent of the police whose conduct should also be considered in relation to entrapment. The court overruled the exception, and the ruling is assigned as error.

If law enforcement officers use an individual to help them arrange the commission of a crime by another person, the officers cannot disassociate themselves from the inducement such individual offers in the course of his efforts for the officers. State v. Ostrand, 219 N.W.2d 509, 512 (Iowa 1974). In the present case, the officers admitted Ribbey was acting as a “go-between” for them. The jury could find Rib-bey’s statements to defendant were a material part of the inducement which led to defendant’s sale of amphetamines to the officers. If the jury believed defendant, it could find defendant would not have sold the drugs without persuasion from Ribbey when Ribbey approached him in the tavern a week and a half after introducing him to Baty. Defendant testified Ribbey led him to believe he could make $30,000 to $40,000 if he would take advantage of the opportunity to do business with Baty. Defendant said he assumed Ribbey had some kind of commission arrangement with Baty.

The trial court erred in refusing to inform the jury it should consider Ribbey’s conduct as well as that of Baty and Gras-man on the issue of entrapment.

II. The requested limiting instruction. The trial court admitted a tape recording of several telephone conversations between Baty and defendant which occurred on October 10, 1974, leading up to the sale. During one conversation Baty mentioned defendant’s earlier sale of LSD and the possibility of additional criminal activity if defendant would sell amphetamines to Baty. Defendant requested that the court instruct the jury at the time the tape was received in evidence to disregard mention on the tape of crimes other than the one charged. The court refused to do so but told defense counsel that any proposed cautionary instruction submitted by counsel would be considered by the court in connection with the court’s instructions to the jury upon submission of the case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
244 N.W.2d 556, 1976 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 1213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-trost-iowa-1976.