POSNER, Chief Judge.
The defendants, Pickard and Hollings-worth, were convicted by a jury of money laundering in violation of federal law. 18 U.S.C. § 1956(a)(3); 31 U.S.C. § 5324(3) (1988). (Section 5324(3) has since been revised and renumbered 5324(a)(3).) They were sentenced to 24 and 18 months in prison respectively. The main issue on appeal is whether a reasonable jury could have found beyond a reasonable doubt that the government had not entrapped the defendants into committing their crimes.
Pickard is an orthodontist practicing in Fayetteville, Arkansas. Hollingsworth is a farmer and businessman, also in Arkansas. Although Pickard’s dental practice is successful, he has repeatedly tried to augment his income by business ventures, all of which have failed. The last and most disastrous failure began in 1988 when he and Hollings-worth decided to become international financiers — a vocation for which neither had any training, contacts, aptitude, or experience. Pickard formed a Virgin Islands corporation, CIAL (Compagnie dTnvestement de Les Antilles Limitee), to conduct international banking. The corporation was financed by capital contributions totaling $400,000. Almost all the money came from Pickard and his family, but Hollingsworth and a Taiwanese investor made small contributions. With this money, the corporation advertised for customers and obtained two foreign banking licenses, one Grenadan. No customers were obtained through advertising or otherwise, and with the enterprise steadily losing money the corporation decided to sell the Grenadan license to raise additional working capital. Pickard placed a classified ad in the May 4, 1990, issue of USA Today offering to sell the unused license for $29,950. The ad listed CIAL’s phone number and told callers to ask for “Bill.”
Enter U.S. customs agent J. Thomas Roth-rock, working out of the Indianapolis office of the customs service, who that very day was attending a seminar on money laundering. Rothrock read USA Today and his eye lit on Pickard’s ad. Knowing that foreign banks are sometimes used for money laundering, Rothrock “assumed that someone who wanted to sell one would possibly be interested in money laundering.” So on May 11 he called the phone number listed in the ad. He left a message for “Bill,” but no one returned the call. He called again on the seventeenth and this time Pickard returned his call. Using as his nom de guerre “Tom Hindi,” Rothrock told Pickard that he had money from an organization and wanted to deposit it offshore. Pickard responded that he had a bank for sale, and other vehicles or instruments for achieving “Hindi's” purposes that might be less expensive; and in a later call he described a variety of international financial services, all lawful. Hinch explained that his organization had a lot of cash, that the profit margin generated by the organization’s activities was very large, and that the organization wanted to accumulate cash and deposit it somewhere. Pickard pointed out that a cash deposit of less than $10,000 would not have to be reported to federal banking authorities, and hence that a larger sum could be broken up into smaller ones and deposited in different banks; alternatively the whole sum could be deposited outside the United [596]*596States. Rothrock expressed interest in the first maneuver. After this conversation, which occurred on May 18, Rothrock opened a formal investigation “to determine the past and present unlawful activities of William Pickard” and his corporation. In a subsequent conversation with Rothrock, Pickard retracted the suggestion that the money might be deposited outside the United States, remarking that that would violate the law. (There is no evidence that he realized that “structuring” a large cash deposit to avoid federal reporting requirements would also violate the law.) He asked “Hinch” for assurance that the cash wasn’t from drug sales and that Hinch himself was not a federal agent or informer, and Hinch gave him the requested assurances. In another telephone conversation, this one at the end of May, Pickard asked Hinch whether he wanted Pickard merely to “clean and polish” funds or for “extended services”; Hinch was evasive. In subsequent conversations Pickard turned coy, indicating that he was interested only in a long-term banking relationship.
Matters were at a standstill between August 20, 1990, the date of the last of the conversations in which Pickard expressed his lack of interest in providing spot services, and February 9, 1991, when Rothrock, having obtained $200,000 in sting money from his superiors, called Pickard, told him that he was “getting overwhelmed and I’m gonna be in need of your services,” and arranged to meet Pickard in St. Louis ten days later. In this, their first face to face meeting, “Hinch” explained that the source of his cash was the smuggling of guns to South Africa. They agreed that Pickard would travel to a hotel room in Indianapolis where he would be shown $20,000 plus Pickard’s fee of $2,405 in cash. The deal was that Pickard would arrange a wire transfer of $20,000 to Hinch’s bank account and after the transfer was confirmed would take possession of the cash. The transaction took place on April 3, 1991, and subsequent transactions brought the total transferred in this manner to $200,000. Hollingsworth made one of the trips to Indianapolis, bringing back $30,000 in cash for Pickard in exchange for $405 in fee and expenses — all that Hollingsworth ever realized from the dealings with Hinch, so far as the record discloses. A further transaction was scheduled for September 13, at which Pickard was to transfer $235,000 for Hinch, but when Pickard showed up he was arrested. Hollingsworth was arrested at the same time back in Arkansas. When arrested Pick-ard was carrying false-name passports for himself and Hollingsworth issued by the mythical “Dominion of Melchizedek.” So far as appears, before becoming involved with Hinch neither Pickard nor Hollingsworth had ever engaged in financial or for that matter any other wrongdoing, the Melchizedekian passports having been obtained after Hinch appeared on the scene. Nor did CIAL ever attract a single customer other than Hinch— who also was the only person who responded to the ad for the Grenadan banking license.
Once a defendant who has pleaded the defense of entrapment makes a colorable case that he was indeed entrapped, the government to convict is required to prove lack of entrapment beyond a reasonable doubt, Jacobson v. United States, — U.S. —, —, 112 S.Ct. 1535, 1540, 118 L.Ed.2d 174 (1992); and the government concedes that Pickard made a sufficient showing to activate the requirement. (We discuss Hollings-worth’s case separately at the end of this opinion.) The burden of proving anything beyond a reasonable doubt is heavy. But we must affirm if a reasonable jury could have found that the government carried it even if we doubt that we would have reached the same conclusion had we been on the jury. United States v. Kamel, 965 F.2d 484, 489-90 (7th Cir.1992); United States v. Jones, 950 F.2d 1309, 1315 (7th Cir.1991). The fact that the government had no basis other than Rothrock’s hunch — which so far as appears was a pure shot in the dark — for believing that Pickard and Hollingsworth had engaged or were engaging in illegal money laundering does not by itself establish entrapment. United States v. Allibhai, 939 F.2d 244, 249 (5th Cir.1991); Kadis v. United States, 373 F.2d 370, 373 (1st Cir.1967). The government is no more required to establish probable cause, or even a lesser degree of cause such as reasonable suspicion, before launching a sting operation than it is required to establish probable cause or reasonable suspi[597]*597cion in order to employ an undercover agent to worm his way into the confidence of persons suspected (whether or not reasonably) of being criminals in order to obtain evidence of their criminal activity. United States v. Miller, 891 F.2d 1265, 1269 (7th Cir.1989); United States v. Harvey, 991 F.2d 981, 989-92 (2d Cir.1993); United States v. Jannotti 673 F.2d 578, 608-09 (3d Cir.1982) (en banc); United States v. Luttrell, 923 F.2d 764 (9th Cir.1991) (en banc) (per curiam); cf. Hoffa v. United States, 385 U.S. 293, 87 S.Ct. 408,17 L.Ed.2d 374 (1966). Indeed, a sting operation is merely a theatrically elaborated method of deploying undercover agents in criminal investigations.
To defeat a defense of entrapment the government must show either that it did not induce the defendants to commit the crime for which they are being prosecuted or, if it did, still they were predisposed to commit it. Mathews v. United States, 485 U.S. 58, 62-63, 108 S.Ct. 883, 886, 99 L.Ed.2d 54 (1988); United States v. Jones, supra, 950 F.2d at 1315; United States v. Evans, 924 F.2d 714, 716 (7th Cir.1991). The elements of inducement and predisposition have tended to merge. Id. at 716-17, and eases cited there. More precisely, inducement has tended to merge into predisposition, now often described as the principal element of the defense. Mathews v. United States, supra, 485 U.S. at 63, 108 S.Ct. at 886; see also United States v. Russell, 411 U.S. 423, 433-36, 93 S.Ct. 1637, 1643-45, 36 L.Ed.2d 366 (1973). They started out distinct. The defendant had to show that he would not have committed this crime, and the government could rebut by showing that he was predisposed, that is, that he would have committed the same type of crime sooner or later with-, out government intervention. Sorrells v. United States, 287 U.S. 435, 458, 53 S.Ct. 210, 218, 77 L.Ed. 413 (1932) (concurring opinion); United States v. Sherman, 200 F.2d 880, 882-83 (2d Cir.1952). The distinction became blurred when in later cases the burden was placed on the government to prove both elements, lack of inducement and predisposition. An additional reason for this blurring is that the nature of the inducement is often the key to predisposition. The stronger the inducement, the more difficult it is for the government to prove that the defendant would have committed the crime on a different occasion had the particular inducement not been offered. The direction of inference can be reversed. The more predisposed the defendant was to commit the type of crime in question, the less likely it is that the inducement offered by the government did anything more than alter the timing of the crime.
The sense of these inquiries can be made perspicuous by asking why there is a defense of entrapment (always a good question to ask when trying to locate the boundaries óf a legal doctrine). The answers offered in the eases are various but convergent. Judge Learned Hand said that it was because of “a spontaneous moral revulsion against using the powers of government to beguile innocent, though ductile, persons into lapses which they might otherwise resist.” United States v. Becker, 62 F.2d 1007, 1009 (2d Cir.1933). In Sherman v. United States, 356 U.S. 369, 376, 78 S.Ct. 819, 822, 2 L.Ed.2d 848 (1958), the Supreme Court spoke of “play[ing] on the weaknesses of an innocent party and beguiling] him into committing crimes which he otherwise would not have attempted.” An earlier decision by the Supreme Court had called it “unconscionable” “to punish a man for the commission of an offense of the like of which he had never been guilty, either in thought or in deed, and evidently never would have been guilty of if the officers of the law had not inspired, incited, persuaded, and lured him to attempt to commit it.” Sorrells v. United States, supra, 287 U.S. at 444, 53 S.Ct. at 214; see also id. at 451, 53 S.Ct. at 216. We have said that the doctrine’s purpose “is to prevent the police from turning a law-abiding person into a criminal,” United States v. Evans, supra, 924 F.2d at 717 — from corrupting him, Kadis v. United States, 373 F.2d 370, 373 (1st Cir.1967), in other words. “The function of law enforcement is the prevention of crime and the apprehension of criminals. Manifestly, that function does not include the manufacturing of crime.” Sherman v. United States, supra, 356 U.S. at 372, 78 S.Ct. at 820. “The power of government is abused and directed to an end for which it was not constituted [598]*598when employed to promote rather than detect crime and to bring about the downfall of those who, left to themselves, might well have obeyed the law.” Id. at 384, 78 S.Ct. at 826 (concurring opinion). In its most recent decision on entrapment the Supreme Court said that “when the Government’s quest for convictions leads to the apprehension of an otherwise law-abiding citizen who, if left to his own devices, likely would have never run afoul of the law, the courts should intervene.” Jacobson v. United States, supra, — U.S. at —, 112 S.Ct. at 1543 (emphasis added).
The passage just quoted states as clearly as any what we take to be the animating idea behind the doctrine of entrapment: the federal government shall not use its resources to increase the criminal population by inducing people to commit crimes who otherwise would not do so. The reason that this is a matter of judicial concern rather than of unreviewable prosecutorial discretion is not that the courts want to economize on the costs of running the criminal justice system — the responsibility for the efficient allocation of resources to criminal prosecution is lodged elsewhere in our governmental system — but because the proper use of the criminal law in a liberal society is to regulate potentially harmful conduct for the protection of society, rather than to purify minds and to perfect character. A person who would not commit a crime unless induced to do so by the government is not a threat to society and the criminal law has no proper concern with him, however evil his thoughts or deficient his character. The moral law is different; Eve’s plea of entrapment by the serpent was rejected. The criminal law of a secular polity has a more limited domain.
A person who will commit a particular type of crime without being induced to do so by government agents — who in other words is predisposed to commit this type of crime although, for want of a suitable opportunity, he would not have committed it when he did had it not been for the government’s inducement — is a threat to society. The likelihood that he has committed this type of crime sometime in the past or that he will do so sometime in the future is great, and by arranging for him to commit it now, in circumstances that enable the government to apprehend and convict him, the government punishes and prevents real crimes at lower cost than would be possible if the circumstances had been allowed to develop without government intervention. United States v. Evans, supra, 924 F.2d at 717-18; United States v. Manzella, 791 F.2d 1263, 1269 (7th Cir.1986). The type of case just described is one in which the “officers or employees of the Government merely afford opportunities or facilities for the commission of the offense,” United States v. Russell, supra, 411 U.S. at 435, 93 S.Ct. at 1644 (quoting Sorrells and Sherman) (emphasis added), a tactic permitted because it affects only the timing of the defendant’s crime. The crime itself is not “the product of the creative activity of [the government’s] own officials.” Sorrells v. United States, supra, 287 U.S. at 451, 53 S.Ct. at 216.
The requisite “predisposition” is usually understood to mean that the defendant was ready and willing to commit the crime that the government has set up before the government set it up. Jacobson v. United States, supra, — U.S. at—n. 2, 112 S.Ct. at 1540-41 n. 2; United States v. Cervante, 958 F.2d 175, 178-79 (7th Cir.1992); United States v. Evans, supra, 924 F.2d at 717. Although United States v. Ulloa, 882 F.2d 41, 44 (2d Cir.1989), dropped the “ready,” on the ground that predisposition is purely a mental state, it was decided before Jacobson; and the Supreme Court’s formulation of the doctrine in that case, which we quoted earlier — that it bars the punishment of one who if left to his own devices probably would never have run afoul of the law — shows that willingness, the pure mental state, is not enough; there must also be readiness, in the sense that the defendant was poised, was likely, to engage in criminal activity. A person who had dreams of criminality, as Pickard may have had, but no means of living them would be harmless and must be left alone.
That was the situation in Jacobson (decided after the trial in this ease but applicable, the government concedes, to it), where the Court held as a matter of law that the defendant had been entrapped. Over a period of [599]*59926 months government agents through correspondence with the defendant attempted, eventually successfully, to induce him to purchase in violation of federal law magazines containing photographs of young boys engaged in homosexual activities. There were no extraordinary inducements, the sort of thing that might have tempted irresistibly even a person of law-abiding disposition; nor did Jacobson ever express a reluctance to purchase such materials — rather the contrary, as the dissent emphasized. The length of the period of inducement seems to have reflected nothing more than the desire of overimaginative and underemployed law enforcement agents to play an elaborate game of eat and mouse with him. Nevertheless the Supreme Court held that he had been entrapped. It could find no evidence that Jacobson would have violated the law had it not been for the government’s efforts. He was a farmer in Nebraska. He had bought some questionable — but not illegal — magazines from a bookstore in California, which is how the government identified him as a potential violator of the child-pornography laws, but there was no evidence (at least the Court referred to none) that he was on the mailing list of any distributor of unlawful materials or likely to be in the future. So far as appears, had the government left Jacobson alone he would never have committed the crime for which he was convicted, not because he was difficult to persuade to commit it (there is no indication that he even knew at what point photographs of nude boys cross the line that separates lawful expression from child pornography, just as Pickard seems not to have known at what point methods of lawfully securing financial privacy become illegal “structuring”) but because his opportunities were so limited. By convicting him the government did not remove a threat to society; it merely increased our already staggeringly large criminal population by one. It turned a harmless man with impure thoughts into a felon.
In this case it turned two harmless, though weak, foolish, and in Pickard’s case at least, greedy, men into felons. There is no evidence that before “Hineh” began his campaign to inveigle them into a money-laundering scheme either Pickard or Holl-ingsworth had contemplated engaging in such behavior, beyond what little can be inferred from Pickard’s evident familiarity with the requirement of reporting large cash deposits and his suspicion of government informers. Pickard and Hollingsworth wanted to become international financiers. No significance can be attached to their obtaining foreign banking licenses; they could not have obtained American licenses — they hadn’t the background or the resources or the connections. When the opportunity to become crooked international financiers beckoned, they were willing enough, though less willing than Jacobson had been to violate the federal law against purchasing child pornography through the mails — Jacobson never evinced reluctance. A reasonable jury could have found Pickard and Hollingsworth “predisposed” if the term refers merely to a psychological state of willingness to break the law. But if the concept of predisposition is to serve the purpose of the doctrine of entrapment, it must mean more — must connote opportunity (what We are calling “readiness”) as well as willingness. Only then will it illuminate what the Supreme Court in Sor-rells called “the controlling question 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.” 287 U.S. at 451, 53 S.Ct. at 216. See also United States v. Becker, supra, 62 F.2d at 1008-09.
Pickard and Hollingsworth had no prayer of becoming money launderers without the government’s aid. Their solicitations for financial business had produced a tiny investor, but no customers. Their corporation was running out of money when they placed the ad in USA Today for the Grenadan banking license. No one responded to the ad, except “Hineh.” Suppose he hadn’t responded. What would Pickard and Hollingsworth have done next? Flashed their passports from the Dominion of Melchizedek? Even if they had wanted to engage in money laundering, they had no way of obtaining customers. You do not advertise that you are a money launderer. You need to know criminals, or at least know people who know criminals. (It is a lot harder to become an inter[600]*600national money launderer than to buy an obscene magazine through the mails.) Whatever it takes to become an international money launderer, there isn’t an iota of evidence that Pickard or Hollingsworth had it. Had Hineh not answered the ad, Pickard would soon have folded his financial venture. It would have joined his other failures — his movie theaters that failed, his amusement park that failed, his apartment building that failed, his attempt to market cookbooks written by his wife that failed. By the time he turned with quixotic persistence to international banking he had already lost almost $300,000 in his business ventures. He plunged his remaining life savings and those of his family into CIAL. They were rapidly hemorrhaging when Hineh popped up. Had it not been for that contrived ray of hope Pickard would have been forced to abandon international financing in order to avoid financial ruin. He was a threat to himself and his family. He was never a threat to society. All this is even clearer with respect to Holl-ingsworth, who functioned in CIAL purely as a minor investor and factotum.
It would be different if CIAL had had an up-and-running bank, for then it would have had a realistic opportunity to engage in money laundering, in much the same way that a public official to whom a government undercover agent or informant might offer a bribe would have a real opportunity to sell his office, as in United States v. Jenrette, 744 F.2d 817, 822 (D.C.Cir.1984). Pickard and Hollingsworth didn’t have a bank or a public office or any other facility that made it even remotely likely that they would have engaged in criminal activity if the government had not set their minds to it.
We do not wish to be understood as holding that lack of present means to commit a crime is alone enough to establish entrapment if the government supplies the means. Suppose that before Hineh chanced on the scene (for Jacobson makes clear that a predisposition created by the government cannot be used to defeat a defense of entrapment), Pickard had decided to smuggle arms to Cuba but didn’t know where to buy a suitable boat. On a hunch, a government agent sidles up to Pickard and gives him the address of a boat dealer; and Pickard is arrested after taking possession of the boat and setting sail, and is charged with attempted smuggling. That would be a case in which the defendant had the idea for the crime all worked out and lacked merely the present means; and if the government had not supplied them someone else very well might have. Our case is different. Our two would-be international financiers were at the end of their tether, making it highly unlikely that if Hineh had not providentially appeared someone else would have guided them into money laundering. No real criminal would do business with such tyros. Or so it appears; for the government could have tried to present evidence that Pickard and Hollingsworth were predisposed in the sense of being not only willing but at least potentially, plausibly, conceivably, able to commit the crime without prodding by the government here protracted over a period of many months. It might have presented evidence that a Grenadan banking license has no other use but money laundering and that sooner or later Pickard and Hollingsworth would have gotten into money laundering even without the government’s aid. No such evidence was presented.
The emphasis that our analysis places on a defendant’s ability or opportunity or what we are calling readiness to commit the crime without the government’s assistance may seem new, but it is implicit in the authoritative formulations of the doctrine of entrapment and compelled by the doctrine’s function, in a liberal society, of confining criminal law to the prevention of dangerous activities. It is true that Pickard and Hollingsworth did not merely dream; they also acted. But they would not have acted had the government not persuaded them to act. The government manufactured a crime; it turned bad thoughts into bad acts. Perhaps the hair-trigger reactions of agent Rothrock to the remotest sign of possible money laundering will, if this conviction is upheld, send tremors through the money-laundering community, though probably his abilities could have been put to better use elsewhere, in the investigation of real money launderers — who could not interpose a plausible defense of entrapment. That is none of our business. [601]*601We recognize the separation of powers. The doctrine of entrapment protects the privacy of the citizen rather than economy in law enforcement. The case is well within the scope of the doctrine, if purpose determines scope, and is unusual only because the government rarely initiates a sting operation without a strong suspicion that the targets are engaged in criminal activity; and when they are, their ability to engage in the crime that the government has set up cannot be questioned. Our decision has no implications at all for the garden-variety drug cases in which the defense of entrapment is most frequently, but futilely, raised. One who sells drugs to or buys drugs from a government informant or undercover agent has by that very act demonstrated his ability to commit the crime. United States v. Dion, 762 F.2d 674, 687-88 (8th Cir.1985), rev’d on other grounds, 476 U.S. 734, 106 S.Ct. 2216, 90 L.Ed.2d 767 (1986).
We have spoken mainly so far of Pickard. Hollingsworth, without quite saying that he himself was entrapped, argues that it would be “fundamentally unfair” to convict him if Pickard’s defense of entrapment succeeds. The government’s brief construes this as an argument for entrapment and responds that Hollingsworth was entrapped not by Rothrock but by Pickard and that private entrapment doesn’t count. If Hollingsworth waived entrapment by putting all his eggs in the “fundamental fairness” basket — and maybe he did waive it,. United States v. Bradley, 820 F.2d 3, 7 n. 5 (1st Cir.1987) — the government bailed him out by waiving waiver. United States v. Caputo, 978 F.2d 972, 975 (7th Cir.1992). So we proceed to the merits.
There is of course no defense of private entrapment. United States v. Jones, supra, 950 F.2d at 1315; United States v. Manzella, supra, 791 F.2d at 1269. A person hired to commit a crime cannot defend on the ground that the hirer offered him so much for the crime that it broke down his resistance. Such a plea is actually an argument for a heavier sentence for such a crime, in order to offset the inducement. The severe punishments for violation of the drug laws may reflect the profitability of drug trafficking: the more profitable a crime, the more costly must the punishment be to the criminal in order to deter, him from committing it. But Pickard did not induce Hollingsworth to commit a real crime. He transmitted Roth-rock’s inducement to commit a phony crime. Relative to Hollingsworth he was Rothrock’s agent, albeit an unwitting one; and it is settled that the defense of entrapment will lie even though the entrapper was a government informant rather than a government employee. Sherman v. United States, supra, 356 U.S. at 373-74, 78 S.Ct. at 821-22, To acquit Pickard but convict Hollingsworth would produce the absurdity of acquitting the principal while sending the agent to prison for 18 months even though the principal had rendered no assistance to the government, the agent did not have a longer criminal record (no evidence was presented at trial that either defendant had had any previous scrapes with the law), and no other circumstance authorizing heavier punishment of the lesser criminal was present either.
In Manzella we left open the question whether there is a doctrine of vicarious entrapment. 791 F.2d at 1269-70. When Manzella came down,.the Second Circuit had held that there was such a doctrine. United States v. Valencia, 645 F.2d 1158, 1168-69 (2d Cir.1980). Since then, the First Circuit has held that there isn’t, United States v. Bradley, supra, 820 F.2d at 6, and the Second Circuit has retrenched, United States v. Pilarinos, 864 F.2d 253, 256 (2d Cir.1988)— though how far is unclear, since the defendant in Pilarinos was predisposed and therefore not entitled to invoke the defense however expansively it should be defined. Our subsequent decision in United States v. Marren, 890 F.2d 924, 931 n. 2 (7th Cir.1989), while suggesting in dictum that there is no doctrine of vicarious entrapment, held that if there were one it would be inapplicable to a defendant himself predisposed, as was'the defendant in that case; and of course we agree. But Hollingsworth was no more predisposed than Pickard. Like Pickard he was willing enough, but he was even less likely than Pickard to be able to commit the crime of money laundering without the government’s assistance. If entrapment is “the apprehension of an otherwise law-abiding citizen who, if left to his own devices, likely [602]*602would have never run afoul of the law,” Jacobson v. United States, supra, — U.S. at —, 112 S.Ct. at 1543, Hollingsworth was as much entrapped as Pickard, and possibly more so. And entrapped by the government. As we said earlier, there is no defense of private entrapment. But when a private individual acts as agent or conduit for governmental efforts at entrapment, the government as principal is bound.
The concern with recognizing a defense of vicarious entrapment is that it would enormously complicate the trial of criminal cases. In any case in which a government undercover agent or informant had been used, defendants with whom he had not dealt face to face or even over the phone could argue with more or less plausibility that the real criminals with whom they had dealt had merely been transmitting the inducements furnished by the agent or informant. But we need not decide in this case how closely the defense should be confined. Rothrock dealt directly with Hollingsworth as well as with Pickard. They were a threesome. If Pickard was entrapped, so was Hollingsworth, even if on some occasions Rothrock was as it were speaking to Hollingsworth through Pickard.
At sentencing some facts emerged about Pickard’s and Hollingsworth’s previous activities that suggest a greater readiness to commit financial crimes than the trial record discloses. And at the oral argument of the appeal the government’s lawyer complained that some evidence which might have rebutted the defense of entrapment was excluded from the trial, although his brief made no such complaint. But the defendants cannot be convicted on the basis of evidence presented after they were tried.
The judgment of the district court is reversed with directions to acquit both defendants, and the government’s cross-appeal, which attacks the defendants’ sentences as too lenient, is dismissed as moot.
REVERSED.