|

Advice on Legal
Entrapment
Entrapment
is either an illegal or a legal procedure that can lead to mistrials,
overturning of verdicts, and so forth. Officers are notorious for setting
up traps to lure alleged criminals into confessing or making mistakes
that lead to their arrest.
For example, in a
small town, a drug task force is setup where undercover officers frequent
bars to monitor the crowd while acting like a customer in the
establishment. What the officers are really doing is gathering
information, witnesses, and other evidence that will lead to the arrest
of a local drug dealer. Officers also use entrapment procedures to lure
in pedophiles over the Internet.
When does entrapment
become illegal? This is one of the main questions asked pertaining to entrapment–and
the answer is surprisingly simple. If an officer lures an ordinary
citizen into committing a crime that this person would not have otherwise
committed, then this is a legal act of entrapment, which transfers the
blame to the officer, who has committed the act of “manufacturing a crime
where none would otherwise exist.”
Then what is legal
entrapment? Legal entrapment must include that the perpetrator has prior
record of committing the same or similar crimes that will lead the
officer to believe that the suspect has shown probable cause of the crime
in action. The perpetrator must have a history of committing similar, same
or else relevant crimes of nature. Thus, the suspect must show probable
cause that he⁄she is mentally capable of
committing and is probably contemplating or acting out the crime in question.
As you can see,
entrapment is a tricky legal situation, which is why it is important to
know what your rights are if you have been tricked into committing a
crime that you normally would not have normally be involved in.
|