Show pageBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Predisposition: The Ultimate Guide to the Entrapment Defense ====== **LEGAL DISCLAIMER:** This article provides general, informational content for educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional legal advice from a qualified attorney. Always consult with a lawyer for guidance on your specific legal situation. ===== What is Predisposition? A 30-Second Summary ===== Imagine you're driving exactly the speed limit when a friend in the passenger seat starts egging you on. "Come on, let's see what this car can do! Floor it!" If you immediately slam the accelerator, it's because the desire to speed was already there; your friend just provided the excuse. But what if you refuse, and for the next 20 miles, your friend relentlessly badgers you, insults your driving, and even offers you $100 to go faster, until you finally give in? In that moment, were you acting on a pre-existing desire, or did your friend's intense pressure create one that wasn't there before? This is the central question behind the legal concept of **predisposition**. In the world of criminal law, particularly in the [[entrapment]] defense, **predisposition** refers to a person's readiness or inclination to commit a crime *before* law enforcement ever got involved. It's the difference between police catching a criminal who was already looking for an opportunity and police creating a criminal out of an otherwise innocent person. Understanding this concept is absolutely critical, as it can be the single deciding factor between a conviction and an acquittal. * **What it is:** **Predisposition** is a defendant's pre-existing state of mind, showing they were ready and willing to commit the charged crime before being approached by government agents. * **Why it matters:** In most U.S. jurisdictions, if the prosecution can prove you had a **predisposition** to commit the crime, the [[entrapment]] defense will almost always fail, no matter how much the government encouraged you. * **What you need to know:** A successful entrapment defense hinges on proving two things: that the government improperly induced you to commit the crime, and—most importantly—that you had **no predisposition** to do so. ===== Part 1: The Legal Foundations of Predisposition ===== ==== The Story of Predisposition: A Historical Journey ==== The idea that the law shouldn't punish a person for a crime the government itself manufactured is deeply rooted in American principles of fairness. While the defense of [[entrapment]] is a relatively modern American invention, its philosophical seeds can be traced back to a fundamental distrust of unchecked government power. The concept truly came to life during the Prohibition era of the 1920s and 30s. With the nationwide ban on alcohol, federal agents frequently went undercover, posing as eager buyers to bust illegal brewers and distributors. This led to a critical legal question: what happens when an overzealous agent doesn't just find a criminal, but actively creates one? The U.S. Supreme Court first formally addressed this in **//Sorrells v. United States// (1932)**. A Prohibition agent repeatedly pressured a respectable war veteran, Mr. Sorrells, to sell him illegal liquor. Sorrells refused multiple times before finally giving in. The Court recognized that this wasn't right. They established the entrapment defense, but they created a crucial fork in the road. The majority opinion focused on the defendant's mind, asking, "Was this person an 'unwary innocent' or an 'unwary criminal'?" This question gave birth to the legal doctrine of **predisposition**. The focus wasn't on the agent's behavior, but on whether Sorrells was already "predisposed" to break the law. This became known as the "subjective test" for entrapment, and it remains the standard in federal courts and most states today. ==== The Law on the Books: Statutes and Codes ==== Unlike many crimes defined by specific laws passed by Congress, the entrapment defense and the concept of predisposition are primarily products of [[common_law]]—that is, they were developed by judges through court decisions over many decades. At the federal level, the law is entirely judge-made, based on the precedent set by Supreme Court cases like **//Sorrells//**, **//Sherman v. United States//**, and **//Jacobson v. United States//**. There is no single "Federal Entrapment Statute." Instead, federal courts follow the **subjective test**, which involves a two-part analysis: 1. Did the defendant present evidence of government [[inducement]]? 2. If so, did the prosecution prove beyond a [[reasonable_doubt]] that the defendant was predisposed to commit the crime anyway? Many states have followed the federal model, either through their own court decisions or by writing the subjective test into their state criminal codes. For example, the **New York Penal Law § 40.05** states that entrapment is an [[affirmative_defense]] when a defendant was "induced or encouraged" by an official, and that the defense is unavailable if the defendant was "predisposed to commit it." A minority of states, however, have rejected this approach. They follow an **objective test**, which focuses almost exclusively on the government's conduct. In these states, the defendant's predisposition is largely irrelevant. The only question is whether the police's actions were so extreme that they would have tempted a normally law-abiding person to commit the crime. ==== A Nation of Contrasts: Jurisdictional Differences ==== Where you are charged can dramatically change whether your personal history or state of mind matters at all. The distinction between the subjective (predisposition-focused) and objective (police-conduct-focused) tests is one of the most significant splits in American criminal law. ^ Jurisdiction ^ Entrapment Test Used ^ Role of Predisposition ^ What This Means For You ^ | **Federal Courts** | Subjective | **Absolutely Critical.** If the government proves you were predisposed, the defense fails. | Your past actions, statements, and character are the central focus of the case. A prior conviction for a similar crime can be devastating. | | **California** | Objective | **Irrelevant.** The court does not consider the defendant's predisposition at all. | The entire case focuses on what the police did. Your past is not on trial; their conduct is. This is much more favorable to defendants with a record. | | **Florida** | Subjective | **Critical.** Florida law follows a subjective test similar to the federal standard. | Similar to federal court, your state of mind and prior conduct will be the key battleground. | | **Texas** | Subjective | **Critical.** The Texas Penal Code specifically requires the defendant to have been induced to act, and predisposition is the government's primary rebuttal. | The prosecution will work hard to find any evidence of your past behavior that suggests you were "ready and willing" to commit the offense. | | **Pennsylvania** | Objective | **Irrelevant.** Like California, Pennsylvania focuses on whether police conduct would ensnare a law-abiding citizen. | Your defense attorney will concentrate on showing how the police went too far, regardless of what they thought about your character. | ===== Part 2: Deconstructing the Core Elements ===== To truly understand predisposition, you have to break it down into its essential parts. It’s not a single, simple fact but a conclusion drawn from many different pieces of evidence about a person’s character, history, and state of mind. ==== The Anatomy of Predisposition: Key Components Explained ==== === Element: The Defendant's State of Mind Before Government Contact === This is the heart of the matter. The key question for the jury is what was in your head *before* the undercover agent or informant showed up. Were you already actively looking for a way to commit the crime, or was the idea completely foreign to you until the government planted it? * **Hypothetical Example:** An undercover agent approaches two people at a bar and offers to sell them illegal, unregistered firearms. * **Person A** says, "Funny you should ask, I was just searching online for a ghost gun yesterday. What have you got?" This statement is powerful evidence of a pre-existing state of mind, i.e., predisposition. * **Person B** says, "No thanks, I'm not interested in that stuff." The agent persists for weeks, sending texts about how Person B needs to protect their family and offering a steep discount. If Person B finally agrees, their initial and repeated reluctance is strong evidence of a *lack* of predisposition. === Element: "Ready and Willing" === This is the legal shorthand prosecutors use to describe a predisposed individual. It means more than just a passing thought. To be "ready and willing," a person must have demonstrated an existing desire or ability to commit the crime. Courts look for evidence of this, such as: * **Quick Acceptance:** Did the defendant agree to the criminal plan immediately and enthusiastically? * **Pre-existing Skills or Knowledge:** Does the defendant already possess the specialized knowledge needed for the crime (e.g., how to launder money, cook meth, or carry out a cyber-attack)? * **Possession of Tools or Supplies:** Was the defendant already in possession of equipment or materials for the crime before meeting the agent? * **Prior Convictions:** A history of committing very similar crimes is often the most damaging evidence of predisposition. === Element: The Line Between Opportunity and Inducement === This is the most challenging distinction in entrapment law. Law enforcement is legally allowed to provide opportunities for criminals to commit crimes. What they are **not** allowed to do is manufacture crime by improperly inducing an innocent person. * **Opportunity (Legal):** An undercover officer sets up a "sting house" and puts out the word that they are buying stolen electronics. When a known burglar shows up with a truck full of TVs, the officer has simply provided an opportunity for a predisposed criminal. * **Inducement (Illegal):** An undercover agent targets a person who just lost their job and is facing eviction. The agent spends weeks pressuring them, playing on their financial desperation, and eventually convinces them to participate in a fake robbery scheme they never would have considered on their own. This is not providing an opportunity; it is implanting the criminal idea through improper [[inducement]]. ==== The Players on the Field: Who's Who in a Predisposition Case ==== * **The Defendant:** The individual who must raise the entrapment defense and argue they were not predisposed. * **The [[Criminal Defense Attorney]]:** Their job is to build a compelling narrative that the defendant was an ordinary person who would not have broken the law if not for the government's extreme pressure and persuasion. They will highlight every instance of the defendant's hesitation and the government's aggressive tactics. * **The Prosecutor:** Their mission is to prove to the jury, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant was predisposed. They will introduce evidence of the defendant's prior bad acts, enthusiastic participation in the crime, or pre-existing criminal knowledge. * **The Judge:** The legal referee who decides what evidence related to predisposition the jury is allowed to hear. For example, a judge might rule that a 20-year-old conviction is too old and irrelevant to prove a defendant's current state of mind. The judge also provides the final [[jury_instructions]] that explain the legal standard. * **The Jury:** The twelve citizens who listen to all the evidence and make the final call. They must decide the crucial question: was this person a waiting criminal, or was this crime born from the government's own actions? * **The Undercover Agent or Confidential Informant:** The government actor whose testimony is central. Their credibility will be heavily scrutinized by the defense to see if they exaggerated the defendant's enthusiasm or omitted evidence of the defendant's reluctance. ===== Part 3: Your Practical Playbook ===== If you believe you have been illegally targeted or pushed into a crime by law enforcement, the steps you take—and the speed at which you take them—are critical. ==== Step-by-Step: What to Do if You Face a Predisposition Issue ==== === Step 1: Immediate Assessment and Silence === As soon as you are arrested or realize you are the target of a sting operation, the single most important thing to do is **invoke your right to remain silent**. Do not try to explain yourself. Do not say "they made me do it." Any statement you make can and will be twisted by the prosecution to show your knowledge of the crime, which they will argue is a sign of predisposition. Politely state, "I am invoking my right to remain silent, and I want a lawyer." === Step 2: Preserve All Evidence === The entire case will hinge on the interactions between you and the government agent. Do not delete anything. * **Save all communications:** Text messages, emails, voicemails, letters, and recordings of any conversations. These are a goldmine for your defense attorney to prove government inducement and your own hesitation. * **Write down everything:** As soon as possible, write a detailed timeline of every interaction. Who said what? When did they say it? Were there any witnesses? Your memory will fade, but these contemporaneous notes will be invaluable. === Step 3: Hire an Experienced Criminal Defense Attorney IMMEDIATELY === The entrapment defense is one of the most complex and difficult defenses in criminal law. This is not something you can handle on your own, nor is it a job for a general practice lawyer. You need a [[criminal_defense_attorney]] with specific, verifiable experience in successfully arguing entrapment and litigating predisposition issues in your jurisdiction. They will know the local judges, prosecutors, and legal precedents. === Step 4: Participate Fully in the Discovery Process === Your attorney will file a [[motion_(legal)]] for [[discovery_(law)]], demanding the government turn over all its evidence. This includes the agent's notes, audio/video recordings, and any internal agency memos about the operation. You must assist your attorney by reviewing this material and pointing out inaccuracies, omissions, or moments where the agent pressured you or you expressed reluctance. This is where the narrative of "no predisposition" begins to take shape. ==== Essential Paperwork: Key Forms and Documents ==== * **Notice of Affirmative Defense:** In many jurisdictions, the defense must formally notify the court and the prosecution that they intend to raise the entrapment defense. This is a critical procedural step that your attorney will handle. Failing to file it on time can result in the court barring you from even making the argument at trial. * **Motion in Limine to Exclude Prior Bad Acts:** This is a crucial pre-trial motion. Your attorney will file this document to ask the judge to prohibit the prosecutor from introducing irrelevant or unfairly prejudicial evidence about your past. For example, the motion might argue that a minor drug possession conviction from 15 years ago has no bearing on whether you were predisposed to commit a complex financial crime today. * **Request for Special Jury Instructions:** Your attorney will draft and submit a proposed set of instructions for the judge to read to the jury. These instructions will explain the law of entrapment and predisposition in the light most favorable to your defense, emphasizing the government's high burden of proof. ===== Part 4: Landmark Cases That Shaped Today's Law ===== The modern understanding of predisposition wasn't created overnight. It was forged in the fires of specific, high-stakes legal battles that reached the U.S. Supreme Court. ==== Case Study: *Sorrells v. United States* (1932) ==== * **The Backstory:** A federal Prohibition agent, Martin, went undercover and befriended Vaughn Sorrells. During a friendly conversation, Martin asked Sorrells if he could get him some illegal whiskey. Sorrells said no. Martin asked again. Sorrells said no again. Martin, a fellow WWI veteran, then played on their shared military experience, talking about his old army buddies. Only after this third, emotionally manipulative plea did Sorrells agree to help. * **The Legal Question:** Did the agent's persistent and manipulative conduct constitute entrapment? * **The Court's Holding:** Yes. The Supreme Court established the entrapment defense for the first time in federal law. Chief Justice Hughes wrote that the government cannot be allowed to "implant in the mind of an innocent person the disposition to commit the alleged offense and induce its commission in order that they may prosecute." * **Impact on You Today:** This case created the entire concept. It established that the focus of the defense is on the defendant's mind—their **predisposition**—making it the central battleground in most entrapment cases to this day. ==== Case Study: *Sherman v. United States* (1958) ==== * **The Backstory:** Kalchinian, a government informant, met Sherman at a doctor's office where both were being treated for drug addiction. Kalchinian played on their shared struggle, repeatedly asking Sherman to help him get narcotics and complaining that he was not responding to treatment. After resisting for weeks, Sherman finally gave in, got drugs for them both, and was promptly arrested. * **The Legal Question:** Can a defendant be considered predisposed if they have a prior criminal record but only succumbed to the crime after repeated pleas based on sympathy? * **The Court's Holding:** The Court found this was entrapment as a matter of law. They ruled that a "line must be drawn between the trap for the unwary innocent and the trap for the unwary criminal." Even though Sherman had prior drug convictions, the government's conduct—using an informant to exploit a shared vulnerability over a long period—was too much. * **Impact on You Today:** *Sherman* shows that even with a prior record, a defendant can win an entrapment defense if the government's [[inducement]] is sufficiently persistent and exploitative. It proves that **predisposition** isn't just about a person's past, but about their present state of mind and resistance. ==== Case Study: *Jacobson v. United States* (1992) ==== * **The Backstory:** In 1984, Keith Jacobson, a 56-year-old Nebraska farmer, ordered two magazines featuring nude boys, which was legal at the time. A later change in law made this illegal. For the next **two and a half years**, federal agencies sent Jacobson mail from five different fake organizations, including a "pen pal" club and a "support group," all designed to see if he would break the new law. They sent him surveys to gauge his sexual attitudes. After 26 months of this relentless government campaign, he finally ordered an illegal magazine and was arrested. * **The Legal Question:** Can the government prove predisposition when it spent years actively trying to coax someone into committing a crime? * **The Court's Holding:** No. In a landmark ruling, the Supreme Court overturned Jacobson's conviction. It held that the prosecution must prove the defendant was predisposed *before* the government ever started targeting them. The Court stated, "the Government may not play on the weaknesses of an innocent party and beguile him into committing crimes which he otherwise would not have attempted." * **Impact on You Today:** *Jacobson* is the most powerful weapon for defense attorneys. It establishes that the government cannot "implant" a predisposition and then use the resulting crime as proof. If law enforcement spends months or years tempting you, it becomes their burden to prove you would have committed the crime even without their extensive campaign. ===== Part 5: The Future of Predisposition ===== The legal battles over predisposition are far from over. As technology and society evolve, the lines between opportunity and inducement, and the methods for proving a person's state of mind, are becoming increasingly blurred. ==== Today's Battlegrounds: Current Controversies and Debates ==== * **Online Stings and Radicalization:** How do you prove predisposition in online terrorism or child exploitation stings? When an undercover FBI agent spends months in a chat room posing as a terrorist recruiter, are they identifying pre-disposed individuals, or are they grooming and radicalizing lonely, impressionable people who would never have acted on their own? Courts are struggling to apply the *Jacobson* standard to the digital world. * **The Subjective vs. Objective Test Debate:** The fundamental disagreement between the states continues. Legal scholars and civil liberties advocates argue that the subjective test is unfair because it puts a defendant's entire life and character on trial, often allowing highly prejudicial evidence of past mistakes to be heard by the jury. They advocate for a nationwide adoption of the objective test, which would shift the focus to policing the police, arguing that outrageous government conduct should never be tolerated, regardless of the target's character. ==== On the Horizon: How Technology and Society are Changing the Law ==== * **AI and Predictive Policing:** Law enforcement agencies are beginning to use algorithms to predict where crime will occur or even who is "at risk" of committing it. This raises a terrifying possibility: could a person be targeted for a sting operation because an algorithm flagged them as "predisposed"? This futuristic scenario poses profound challenges to [[due_process]] and the presumption of innocence. * **Social Media as Evidence of Predisposition:** Prosecutors are increasingly using a person's social media history—likes, shares, posts, and group memberships—as evidence of their state of mind. A sarcastic post, a "like" on a controversial page, or membership in a political group could be framed as proof of a pre-existing willingness to break the law. The legal system is only beginning to grapple with how to distinguish protected [[first_amendment]] expression from true evidence of criminal **predisposition**. ===== Glossary of Related Terms ===== * **[[affirmative_defense]]:** A legal defense where the defendant introduces evidence that, if found to be credible, will negate criminal liability, even if the government proved all elements of the crime. * **[[common_law]]:** Law that is derived from judicial decisions of courts rather than from statutes. * **[[confidential_informant]]:** A person who secretly provides information to law enforcement, often in exchange for money or leniency in their own criminal case. * **[[criminal_intent]]:** The mental state, also known as [[mens_rea]], that the prosecution must prove a person had when committing a crime. * **[[due_process]]:** A fundamental constitutional guarantee that all legal proceedings will be fair and that one will be given notice of the proceedings and an opportunity to be heard before the government can take away life, liberty, or property. * **[[entrapment]]:** A defense to criminal charges on the basis that the defendant was induced by a government agent to commit a crime they otherwise would not have committed. * **[[inducement]]:** Government action that persuades or encourages a defendant to commit a crime. * **[[jury_instructions]]:** The set of legal rules that a judge reads to the jury to guide their deliberations. * **[[objective_test]]:** A legal standard for entrapment that focuses on whether the government's conduct was likely to induce a normally law-abiding person to commit a crime. * **[[sting_operation]]:** An undercover law enforcement operation designed to catch a person committing a crime. * **[[subjective_test]]:** A legal standard for entrapment that focuses on the defendant's state of mind and whether they were predisposed to commit the crime. ===== See Also ===== * [[entrapment]] * [[affirmative_defense]] * [[criminal_intent]] * [[due_process]] * [[criminal_procedure]] * [[fourth_amendment]] * [[sting_operation]]