CJA 354 Week 2 DQ 1 NEW .pdf
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CJA 354 Week 2 DQ 1 NEW
Check this A+ tutorial guideline at
http://www.cja354entirecourse.com/CJA354-NEW/CJA-354-Week-2-DQ-1-NEW
Here are two typical undercover police operations:
1.
Undercover officer approaches Able and asks where he can buy
some crack cocaine. Able steers the undercover (u/c, in the biz) to Baker
and says, “My man here can help you.” The u/c then asks Baker for “two.”
Baker reaches to a window sill and removes two vials containing crack,
hands them to the u/c who gives Baker $10. The u/c leaves the scene,
radios a description of Able and Baker and watches, from a safe distance,
as his back-up team swoops down and makes the arrest, recovering the
rest of the “stash” by the window sill and the $10 bill in Baker’s pocket.
2.
A police officer in plainclothes, lies on the floor on a subway
platform, appearing drunk and asleep. He has several $20 bills sticking
out of his pocket just ripe for the picking. And pick someone does.
Charlie, a man with no criminal record, comes along, sees the sleeping
“drunk”, bends down and takes one of the bills from the officer’s pocket.
He walks away but is quickly apprehended and charged with grand
larceny: taking property from the person of another (in New York, a lowlevel felony).
Is either of these scenarios entrapment? Why or why not? What
differentiates each of these examples, if anything? Compare and contrast
these operations.
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