United States v. Sligh ( 1998 )


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  •                                                Filed:   May 20, 1998
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 97-4284
    (CR-96-335-CCB)
    United States of America,
    Plaintiff - Appellee,
    versus
    Vaughn Monroe Sligh,
    Defendant - Appellant.
    O R D E R
    The Court amends its opinion filed April 29, 1998, as follows:
    On page 2, first paragraph of opinion, line 1 -- a comma is
    added in "$7,000."
    On page 4, first full paragraph, line 4 -- a comma is added
    after the phrase "in Sligh's mind."
    On page 10, first full paragraph, line 2 -- a comma is added
    after the word "overtures."
    For the Court - By Direction
    /s/ Patricia S. Connor
    Clerk
    PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.                                                           No. 97-4284
    VAUGHN MONROE SLIGH,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Maryland, at Baltimore.
    Catherine C. Blake, District Judge.
    (CR-96-335-CCB)
    Argued: January 26, 1998
    Decided: April 29, 1998
    Before LUTTIG, Circuit Judge, PHILLIPS, Senior Circuit Judge,
    and MORGAN, United States District Judge for the
    Eastern District of Virginia, sitting by designation.
    _________________________________________________________________
    Reversed and remanded by published opinion. Judge Luttig wrote the
    majority opinion, in which Judge Morgan joined. Senior Judge Phil-
    lips wrote a dissenting opinion.
    _________________________________________________________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Harry Levy, SCHULMAN, TREEM, KAMINKOW &
    GILDEN, P.A., Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellant. William Warren
    Hamel, Assistant United States Attorney, Baltimore, Maryland, for
    Appellee. ON BRIEF: Kenneth W. Ravenell, Andrew H. Levine,
    SCHULMAN, TREEM, KAMINKOW & GILDEN, P.A., Baltimore,
    Maryland, for Appellant. Lynne A. Battaglia, United States Attorney,
    Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellee.
    _________________________________________________________________
    OPINION
    LUTTIG, Circuit Judge:
    Defendant Vaughn M. Sligh paid a $7,000 bribe to an IRS agent to
    change his tax debt to "uncollectible" status, and was thereafter
    indicted for bribery, payment of an illegal gratuity, and interference
    with the administration of the Internal Revenue Laws. At trial, Sligh
    admitted to paying the bribe to the IRS employee, but offered the
    defense of entrapment in his opening statement. After the close of the
    government's evidence and after most of the defense case (but prior
    to the defendant's testimony), the defense sought a ruling as to
    whether the court intended to instruct the jury on entrapment. The
    court ruled that Sligh was not entitled to an entrapment defense
    because there was insufficient evidence from which a jury could find
    government inducement. J.A. at 327-28.
    Sligh then entered into a plea agreement, which preserved his right
    to appeal the district court's ruling on entrapment and the court's
    related evidentiary ruling, which barred the defense from presenting
    evidence about the IRS agent's attendance at a bribery awareness
    seminar and her training and experience in bribery. The court sen-
    tenced Sligh to five months imprisonment.
    Because a jury could reasonably conclude that Sligh was entrapped
    by the IRS agent with whom he dealt, Sligh was entitled to the entrap-
    ment instruction he requested. Accordingly, we vacate Sligh's convic-
    tions and remand to the district court for further proceedings.
    I.
    An entrapment defense has two elements: government inducement
    and the defendant's lack of predisposition to commit the crime. See
    United States v. Daniel, 
    3 F.3d 775
    , 778 (4th Cir. 1993). Entrapment
    2
    is an affirmative defense, and the defendant has the initial burden to
    "produce more than a scintilla of evidence that the government
    induced him to commit the charged offense," 
    id., before the
    burden
    shifts to the government to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the
    defendant was predisposed to commit the crime, United States v.
    Jones, 
    976 F.2d 176
    , 179 (4th Cir. 1992) (noting that once a defen-
    dant has met "his initial burden of presenting evidence that the gov-
    ernment induced him to commit the crime, the government has the
    burden of proving ``beyond reasonable doubt that the defendant was
    disposed to commit the criminal act prior to first being approached by
    Government agents'" (quoting Jacobsen v. United States, 
    503 U.S. 540
    , 549 (1992)) (other citations omitted)); see also United States v.
    Singh, 
    54 F.3d 1182
    , 1189 (4th Cir. 1995) ("[T]he defendant must
    produce ``sufficient evidence from which a reasonable jury could find'
    that the government induced him to commit the charged offense."
    (citation omitted)). A defendant is not entitled to an entrapment
    instruction unless he can meet this initial burden of producing some
    evidence of government inducement. See United States v. Osborne,
    
    935 F.2d 32
    , 38 (4th Cir. 1991).
    "``Inducement' is a term of art: it involves elements of governmen-
    tal overreaching and conduct sufficiently excessive to implant a crim-
    inal design in the mind of an otherwise innocent party. Solicitation,
    by contrast, is the provision of an opportunity to commit a criminal
    act." 
    Daniel, 3 F.3d at 778
    (citation omitted). A showing of mere gov-
    ernment solicitation is insufficient to merit an entrapment instruction
    "because solicitation by itself is not the kind of conduct that would
    persuade an otherwise innocent person to commit a crime, or that
    would be ``so inducive to a reasonably firm person as likely to dis-
    place mens rea.'" 
    Osborne, 935 F.2d at 38
    (citations omitted).
    Applying these principles, we believe a jury could readily conclude
    that the IRS crossed the line between solicitation and inducement in
    its interactions with the defendant. From the telephone conversations
    discussed below, a jury could find that the IRS agent first refused to
    provide Sligh with even rudimentary information concerning the
    agency's guidelines on debt reduction which would have enabled him
    to evaluate whether he was entitled to relief, thus forcing him to play
    a guessing game with her as to whether his circumstances would enti-
    tle him to relief under the agency's rules. It could find that, despite
    3
    the IRS agent's efforts to characterize Sligh's necessarily uninformed
    questions as offers of wrongdoing, it was not Sligh, but the agent her-
    self, who actually initiated the suggestion of wrongdoing. It could fur-
    ther find that Sligh repeatedly ignored the agent's invitations to
    wrongdoing, but that the agent nevertheless persisted in her baiting of
    Sligh. It could also reasonably find that when Sligh still did not accept
    the agent's overtures to wrongdoing, the agent introduced, as well, the
    specific idea of a bribe. And, finally, the jury could find that Sligh
    continued to ignore even these official invitations to bribery until the
    moment the bribe was offered.
    Based upon these findings, the jury in turn could reasonably con-
    clude that the IRS did much more than provide Sligh with an opportu-
    nity for criminal conduct to which he was predisposed. It could
    conclude that the IRS implanted the criminal design in Sligh's mind,
    and, in a deliberate effort to realize the design it implanted, the
    agency overreached in a manner and to a degree that it must be said
    that Sligh was the victim of government entrapment.
    II.
    Sligh had numerous contacts and conversations with the IRS before
    the day on which he offered the bribe which is the subject of this
    appeal. After initial conversations with two other IRS agents, Sligh's
    primary contacts were with Nancy O'Neill, manager of the Auto-
    mated Collection group in Baltimore. Between May 16 and June 13,
    1996, Sligh spoke with O'Neill five times, sometimes for as long as
    an hour.
    During these conversations, Sligh told O'Neill that he intended to
    complete and file his tax returns, and O'Neill established a deadline
    for him to do so. J.A. at 57-59, 96. Sligh and O'Neill discussed a levy
    the IRS had placed on Sligh's bank account, numerous letters Sligh
    had sent to the IRS requesting that the IRS explain why he was obli-
    gated to pay taxes, and the possibility of payment of outstanding taxes
    through a home equity loan. J.A. at 57-59, 95-96. They also discussed
    the possibility that Sligh might not owe money or might be entitled
    to a refund, and O'Neill stated that, under those circumstances, she
    would consider removing the levy from Sligh's bank account. J.A. at
    4
    98-99. O'Neill advised Sligh that she had the power to remove the
    levy on his account. J.A. at 99.
    Sligh initiated several of these conversations, calling to update
    O'Neill on his progress in completing his tax returns. On June 4,
    1996, Sligh called O'Neill to request some additional forms in order
    to file his return. J.A. at 61. On June 6, 1996, Sligh contacted O'Neill
    and spoke with her briefly to inform her that he had completed his
    1995 tax return and that he owed several thousand dollars in 1995
    taxes. J.A. at 102-03. On June 13, 1996, Sligh spoke with O'Neill for
    a fifth time and requested additional time to file his returns. O'Neill
    granted him a short extension to June 24, 1996. J.A. at 63, 104-06.
    O'Neill admits that during these many conversations, Sligh did not
    offer a bribe, suggest that he was willing to offer a bribe, or in any
    way allude to a bribe. J.A. at 105. Nor did Sligh allude to any other
    form of wrongdoing. In fact, O'Neill testified that, during this time,
    she believed Sligh was endeavoring to complete his tax returns. J.A.
    at 99. And, indeed, all evidence indicated that Sligh intended to file
    his missing returns and arrange for payment.
    Then, on June 14, 1996, O'Neill attended an IRS bribery aware-
    ness course. J.A. at 106.*
    Ten days later, Sligh telephoned O'Neill again. And, again, in this
    sixth conversation, Sligh did not even allude to, much less offer, a
    bribe to O'Neill. In fact, in this conversation, Sligh informed O'Neill
    that he had gone to the IRS office in Baltimore; that he had obtained
    assistance in preparing his tax returns; that he wanted to provide
    O'Neill with information from the completed forms for 1990, 1991,
    and 1994; that he owed taxes for all three of those years; and that he
    was mailing the tax returns. J.A. at 63-64, 155-57.
    _________________________________________________________________
    * The district court excluded evidence regarding O'Neill's attendance
    at the bribery awareness seminar and her training and experience in iden-
    tifying bribery attempts. Because, apart from its relevance to the IRS
    agent's subjective state of mind, this evidence is of obvious relevance to
    an objective evaluation of the government's interaction with Sligh, the
    exclusion of this evidence was in error.
    5
    Three days later, Sligh again called O'Neill and requested a short
    extension of time for filing his 1994 return so that he could investi-
    gate a possible moving expenses deduction. J.A. at 163-64. During
    this call, O'Neill reviewed Sligh's financial statement and calculated
    a monthly payment figure for Sligh to pay off his tax debt. J.A. at 64-
    68. The conversation lasted approximately an hour. J.A. at 68, 163-
    64. At the end of the conversation, O'Neill asked Sligh if he had any
    questions. J.A. at 68. According to O'Neill, Sligh "lowered his voice
    and asked me how much power do I have." 
    Id. O'Neill replied,
    "[W]hat do you mean?", J.A. at 69, and Sligh asked, "[C]an you take
    care of part of it?" 
    Id. At this,
    although Sligh had said nothing at all that would prompt
    a reasonable person to conclude that he was offering or about to offer
    O'Neill a bribe, O'Neill later testified: "a chill went down my spine
    because I knew at that point he was going to try to bribe me or do
    something." 
    Id. Based only
    upon Sligh's question whether O'Neill had the power
    to take care of part of his existing debt, O'Neill asked if she could call
    Sligh back. She then immediately contacted the IRS Internal Investi-
    gation Office, which placed a listening device on O'Neill's telephone
    and arranged for her to make a recorded call to Sligh later that day.
    J.A. at 70-71.
    During the later, recorded conversation that same day, O'Neill con-
    firmed to Sligh that she did have the power to take care of part of the
    debt under certain circumstances: "I have the uh, power to adjust your
    balance due under certain criteria, but I need a reason." J.A. at 482.
    Upon this confirmation of O'Neill's power, Sligh did not offer a bribe
    as O'Neill had apparently expected he would. Rather, in an attempt
    to offer reasons that would bring him within the agency's guidelines
    for debt reduction, Sligh explained that he had not received a timely
    response to his letters to the IRS and that he wanted to pay about half
    of what he owed. J.A. at 482-83. O'Neill then explained two legal
    options for reducing what Sligh owed the IRS -- offer and compro-
    mise or penalty abatement requests -- and that she would need a "rea-
    sonable cause" to pursue either option. J.A. at 483. Sligh offered a
    variety of reasons that his debt should be reduced, including work
    stress, white racism, and his lack of information about how the system
    6
    worked. J.A. at 483-85. O'Neill responded that she understood his sit-
    uation and wanted to help, and stated "I just need some way or rea-
    son"; she also explained that reasons like racism were not going to
    "cut it" as the "official reason." J.A. at 485.
    Throughout this conversation, and indeed throughout all of her
    conversations with Sligh, O'Neill withheld from Sligh the informa-
    tion that would permit him to make an informed decision as to
    whether he had a reason for reduction of his debt that would fit within
    the guidelines. Indeed, O'Neill refused to give Sligh any guidance
    about what sort of reasons were legitimate or sufficient under the
    guidelines. Sligh, thus, continued to offer a variety of reasons for
    reducing his tax debt, none of which apparently fit within the IRS
    guidelines, including the fact that the IRS had not answered his letters
    asking why he had to pay taxes, that he had a daughter he needed to
    put through college, and that he was hard-working. J.A. at 486-88.
    Eventually, as Sligh continued to offer reason after reason that
    might possibly justify reduction or waiver of his debt, O'Neill initi-
    ated a suggestion that Sligh might ask her to engage in wrongdoing
    by departing from what the guidelines required:
    O'Neill: I need a legitimate reason to cut [your] balance
    in half.
    Sligh:   Yes, ma'am.
    O'Neill: Unless, you're asking me to [do] something
    otherwise. Is that what you're asking?
    J.A. at 496 (emphasis added). In response to what O'Neill presumably
    believed was a direct solicitation of the bribe she had concluded Sligh
    intended to offer her, Sligh said only the following:
    Sligh: Well, I don't know what you're able to do.
    Really, I don't, I don't know what you're able to
    do. You know?
    O'Neill: I can do anything within reason.
    7
    Sligh: Yes ma'am.
    
    Id. Then almost
    as if she had been urged to do so to avoid a suggestion
    of improper inducement, O'Neill corrected herself to say not that she
    could do anything within reason, but that she needed a reason, in
    order to reduce Sligh's debt: "Oh, and I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I mis-
    spoke, I mean, I need a reason." 
    Id. Still, Sligh
    never even as much
    as suggested wrongdoing, much less a bribe. He simply repeated his
    request that O'Neill tell him what the guidelines were: "Well, see I
    can't, I can give you my reason, you know, but my reason just might
    not fit within your guidelines. So, I guess what I'm saying to you, you
    give me the guidelines and I can work out a reason within those
    guidelines." 
    Id. Despite O'Neill's
    initiation of the suggestion that Sligh ask her to
    depart from the guidelines, Sligh did not do so, and merely continued
    to offer reasons that might satisfy the guidelines which O'Neill
    refused even to describe to him. And, although Sligh had done noth-
    ing other than ask O'Neill to exercise whatever power she possessed
    to reduce his tax debt and attempt, not knowing what the IRS' guide-
    lines were, to provide her with legitimate reasons for doing so,
    O'Neill persisted in her suggestion that Sligh might (or should) ask
    her to do something unauthorized:
    O'Neill: . . . unfortunately, based on what you've told me,
    there's not really anything I can do.
    Sligh:     (Sighs) You're saying there's nothing you can do.
    O'Neill: Not, not for those reasons.
    Sligh:     Hum. So you're saying the reasons that I gave
    you are not within the guidelines that you have
    before you?
    O'Neill: Right.
    Sligh:     That's what you're saying.
    8
    O'Neill: Yes.
    Sligh:     Okay. But you're not at liberty to tell me what
    the guidelines are?
    O'Neill: No, I mean I have to do it based on what you tell
    me, not me giving you the guidelines, unless you
    wanted me to deviate.
    J.A. at 501 (emphasis added).
    Still, rather than take the agent's bait, Sligh simply replied, "Well,
    you know, for, you know, if it's a matter, (Laughter) if it deviates, I
    don't you know, I don't care, you know," id . -- an answer that
    appears to reflect no more than Sligh's understandable indifference as
    to whether, in his case, the IRS followed the technical guidelines,
    which the agent refused even to explain to him, or made an exception
    for him.
    Obviously aware at this point that Sligh had no apparent intention
    to offer a bribe and that she was having no success in steering him
    toward the offer of a bribe, O'Neill then invited a bribe more explic-
    itly by asking Sligh, in essence, "What's in it for me?":
    O'Neill: But why would I take that risk?
    Sligh:     Cause you love me? (Laughter) You know, I
    don't know. I mean, you know what --
    O'Neill: I'd be risking my job.
    
    Id. (emphasis added).
    At this point, Sligh had still never suggested that O'Neill engage
    in any sort of wrongdoing, much less suggested that he would offer
    a bribe. Nevertheless, O'Neill continued to act as though Sligh had,
    in fact, already suggested as much, and stated that what Sligh was
    asking her to do "[wa]sn't really right." J.A. at 503. Despite O'Neill's
    explicit recharacterization of Sligh's entirely appropriate request for
    9
    guidance as a request that she engage in wrongdoing or that she
    accept a proffered bribe, Sligh yet again resisted O'Neill's overtures
    and continued to try to convince her to reduce his balance by citing
    other reasons he believed might be legitimate, like the fact that the
    house he grew up in was lost to taxes. 
    Id. O'Neill, seemingly
    frustrated that Sligh had not responded to any
    of her overtures, then resorted to even more explicit invitations:
    O'Neill: Okay. Um, you know, what you were saying
    before, I mean, I'd like to help you out, um,
    you're asking me to do a favor that I have to fal-
    sify for some reason why I need a reason to take
    such a, take a risk in that kind of situation.
    [Sligh said that he could be suicidal if it made her feel better
    and that he wished God would give him the words to say to
    her.]
    O'Neill: Oh. Um, Do you want me to make up a reason?
    Sligh:     (Sighs)
    O'Neill: Is that what you're asking?
    Sligh:     Ma'am, I don't want to go to jail okay? And um,
    you know, I don't know, who, is this recorded?
    O'Neill: No, uh uh.
    Sligh:     Um, then um, yeah. (Laughter.) And I would say
    that I would be forever in your debt and I would,
    uh --
    O'Neill: Well, I could go to jail, too.
    Sligh:     Ma'am, anything you would say I would agree
    with.
    O'Neill: Uh huhn.
    10
    Sligh:     So, you know, only thing I have is me, and you
    and God right now. That's all I have. That's it.
    O'Neill: Yeah, I mean I, I just can't take that kind of risk.
    J.A. at 506-07 (emphasis added).
    Sligh, at this point, finally appears to have assented at least to
    O'Neill's suggestion that she make up a reason to justify reducing his
    tax debt, but he still had not given any indication whatsoever that he
    intended to offer her a bribe. Indeed, when O'Neill continued to state
    that she did not think taking the "risk" was worth it for her, rather
    than offer her a bribe to make it "worth" her while, Sligh instead only
    attempted to appeal to her sympathies by urging her to meet with him
    and his family. J.A. at 507-10.
    O'Neill then took the extraordinary step of agreeing to meet with
    Sligh, and the further extraordinary step of refusing to allow Sligh's
    wife to be present, explaining, despite any predicate from Sligh, that
    she did not want Sligh's wife to know that he was "doing something
    that's not legal, necessarily." J.A. at 510. Thus, O'Neill once again
    reintroduced the idea of a bribe into her conversation with Sligh, even
    though Sligh had never made such an overture and in fact had ignored
    O'Neill's multiple suggestions of wrongdoing and her initial sugges-
    tions of a bribe.
    Even so, Sligh yet again explicitly and categorically resisted
    O'Neill's attempt to solicit a bribe, responding: "No ma'am, that's not
    what I'm saying. . . . I just want to, to comfort you. To let you know
    that, you know, I'm not, you know, I'm a genuine person." 
    Id. Finally, even
    during the lunch meeting at which Sligh eventually did
    offer to make O'Neill a bribe, he initially continued to offer other rea-
    sons why O'Neill should reduce his tax debt, J.A. at 529-533, before
    eventually offering to make the bribe for which he now stands con-
    victed. And, of course, Sligh did not even have with him at this meet-
    ing the money that he ultimately promised O'Neill in return for her
    reduction of his tax debt.
    We are convinced that a jury quite well could conclude, and rea-
    sonably so on the strength of these facts, that Sligh's bribe of O'Neill
    11
    was, in reality, the crime of an overzealous bureaucrat who, because
    of her recent "training," if not for other reasons also, was bent upon
    finding the nefarious in the wholly innocent; that this employee not
    only implanted the bribery scheme in a mind that had never contem-
    plated bribery, but then overreached in her zeal to have that design
    acted upon. That is, we are satisfied that a jury could reasonably con-
    clude that the IRS, far from merely creating the opportunity for ille-
    gality, conceived and inspired the illegality in the face of the
    defendant's demonstrated lack of predisposition to any crime at all.
    The defendant therefore was entitled to an instruction that would
    enable a jury to find that he was a victim of government entrapment,
    and it was error for the court not to have agreed to give such an
    instruction.
    III.
    The judgment of the district court is reversed, and the case
    remanded for such further proceedings as may be necessary.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED
    PHILLIPS, Senior Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    I think the district court properly ruled that the evidence did not
    suffice to require submission of an issue of entrapment to the jury.
    Though Agent O'Neill's endeavors leading up to Sligh's offer of a
    bribe were persistent, possibly deceitful in some respects, and surely
    intended to invite the end result, they fell well short of the kind of
    overreaching government conduct that we have considered necessary
    to support an entrapment defense. I therefore dissent and would
    affirm the conviction for the conceded bribe offer.
    The majority correctly states the controlling legal principles of
    entrapment, both substantive and procedural. Under those principles,
    the only issue before us is whether there was evidence "more than a
    scintilla" from which a jury properly could find that O'Neill's con-
    duct crossed the line between permissible "solicitation" of the bribe--
    merely providing an opportunity for its offer--and possibly exculpat-
    ing "inducement" of the offer--actually causing a criminal intent in
    12
    Sligh's mind that would not otherwise have existed. See United States
    v. Daniel, 
    3 F.3d 775
    , 778 (4th Cir. 1993) (differentiating the two).
    While the weight or quantity of the required evidence of inducement
    is slight, the content requirement is rigorous. The conduct evidenced
    must be so severe and pervasive that it can legitimately be viewed as
    sufficient to overcome the will of a reasonable person. See Crisp v.
    United States, 
    262 F.2d 68
    , 69 (4th Cir. 1958). As we have character-
    ized it more recently, it must involve "governmental overreaching"
    sufficient "to implant a criminal design in the mind of an innocent
    party," United States v. Phan, 
    121 F.3d 149
    , 154 (4th Cir. 1997), cert.
    denied, 
    118 S. Ct. 1038
    (1998) (footnote omitted), and as conduct
    "likely to displace mens rea." United States v. DeVore, 
    423 F.2d 1069
    , 1072 (4th Cir. 1970). And it is insufficient to meet this induce-
    ment requirement merely to establish that the government was the
    first to suggest the illegal conduct. See United States v. El-Gawli, 
    837 F.2d 142
    , 149 (3d Cir. 1988).
    Short of conduct actually calculated to "implant a criminal design"
    in an innocent mind--no inconsiderable feat--federal law has long
    permitted, out of perceived necessity, law-enforcement endeavors that
    invite criminal conduct, or make it convenient, or that employ
    "[a]rtifice and stratagem" in order to "catch those engaged in criminal
    enterprises." Jacobson v. United States, 
    503 U.S. 540
    , 548 (1992)
    (citing Sorrells v. United States, 
    287 U.S. 435
    , 441 (1932); Sherman
    v. United States, 
    356 U.S. 369
    , 372 (1958); United States v. Russell,
    
    411 U.S. 423
    , 435-36 (1973)). In deference to this recognized neces-
    sity, the federal courts have in general found a basis for allowing an
    entrapment issue to go to the jury only in unique and compelling situ-
    ations. See United States v. Gendron, 
    18 F.3d 955
    , 961-62 (1st Cir.
    1992) (collecting cases). Examples include physical threat, see United
    States v. Becerra, 
    992 F.2d 960
    , 963 (9th Cir. 1993) (physical threats
    to defendant's family); and falsely-based appeals to sympathy, see
    United States v. Nations, 
    764 F.2d 1073
    , 1080 (5th Cir. 1985) (false
    claims of cancer to induce aid in selling stolen cars).
    The evidence here, though it surely could be thought to demon-
    strate a relentlessly pursued "artifice or stratagem" by O'Neill to
    "catch" Sligh, shows no such overreaching. No threats were ever
    made. Compare United States v. Skarie, 
    971 F.2d 317
    , 320 (9th Cir.
    1992) (finding threats of impaling the defendant and harming her son
    13
    sufficient to constitute inducement). Requests to violate the law (even
    if made) were not consistent and overwhelming. Compare United
    States v. Joost, 
    92 F.3d 7
    , 13 (1st Cir. 1996) (finding evidence of
    inducement where government created a dependent relationship
    between agent and known felon and where governmental contacts
    were repeatedly made over an extended period of time); United States
    v. Groll, 
    992 F.2d 755
    , 759 (7th Cir. 1993) (finding inducement
    where government agent called defendant every day for over a month
    and then threatened her when she appeared to be backing out of drug
    sale). Nor was Sligh "wined and dined" in a manner that could have
    implanted any previously unheld criminal design in his mind.
    Compare United States v. Fedroff, 
    874 F.2d 178
    , 184-85 (3d Cir.
    1989) (finding inducement where government agents paid for defen-
    dant's expensive meals and gambling trips in an effort to get him
    accustomed to the lifestyle). No fraudulent misrepresentations were
    put forth and there was never an attempt to play on the feelings or
    personal weaknesses of Sligh. Compare United States v. Martinez,
    
    122 F.3d 1161
    , 1164-65 (9th Cir. 1997) (finding inducement where
    government agent repeatedly promised friendship and wealth); United
    States v. Montanez, 
    105 F.3d 36
    , 39 (1st Cir. 1997) (reversing drug
    distribution conviction because jury was not instructed on appeals to
    sympathy as a basis for inducement). In short, my reading of the evi-
    dence is that up to the very end of the obviously wary negotiations
    being conducted with O'Neill, had Sligh not wanted all along to offer
    O'Neill a bribe "all he had to do was say no and walk away." United
    States v. Wilson, 
    129 F.3d 949
    , 951 (7th Cir. 1997). Consider the final
    exchange leading up to the fatal offer. It opens with O'Neill's legiti-
    mately closing off the several routes of a possible legal fix that had
    been intimated over the course of the protracted conversations--
    prolonged as much by Sligh as by O'Neill,
    O'Neill: So, based on that particular route, there's nothing
    I can do.
    Sligh:     Right. But you know, that something can be
    done.
    O'Neill: Uh huhn.
    Sligh:     Because that's what you do.
    14
    O'Neill: Yeah.
    Sligh:     And I'm sure you seen many different types of
    case changes, where they were able to be han-
    dled. So, if that's something that's possible, and
    uh, only thing I need to know--
    O'Neill: Okay--
    Sligh:     --is what I need to do to make that uh, transpire.
    O'Neill: Okay. I guess I need to know from you, what
    exactly are you asking me to do (Laughter).
    Sligh:    Uh, oh boy, oh boy, oh boy. Is it just you and
    me?
    O'Neill: Yeah, just you and me.
    Sligh:     You drove a car?
    O'Neill: Yup. I have my own car, yup, they gave me a
    license . . . .
    Sligh:     So, how much you owe on it?
    O'Neill: Twenty-three hundred . . . .
    Sligh:     All right. So, uh, as a, as a, kind and giving per-
    son, I can help you own it.
    These are not the words of an overwhelmed wary innocent whose
    will to obey the law has been overborne by the implanting of a crimi-
    nal design not his own. A jury should not be permitted to speculate
    on that possibility as the district court quite properly concluded.
    In conclusion, I venture that the majority has been led astray from
    the proper entrapment analysis by an undue absorption with and
    apparent outrage at the objective nature of O'Neill's conduct--to the
    15
    point of suggesting that it amounted to the "crime of an overzealous
    bureaucrat." Slip op. 12. The Supreme Court long ago in Sorrells spe-
    cifically rejected, as decisive of the entrapment issue, the objective
    purity or impurity of the Government's conduct. See 
    Sorrells, 287 U.S. at 441
    . The specific motivation for O'Neill's conduct, whether
    prompted by her attendance at a bribery seminar, or by innate zeal,
    or vigor, or whatever, is irrelevant under federal-entrapment doctrine
    as I understand it. Accordingly, I think that the district court, properly
    recognizing this, rightly declined to allow in the proffered evidence
    of O'Neill's attendance at the seminar.
    I would affirm the conviction for this conceded violation of the
    federal bribery statute.
    16