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1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
2 STATE OF NEW MEXICO
3 Plaintiff-Appellee,
4 v. No. 33,667
5 ASHLEY RAMIREZ,
6 Defendant-Appellant.
7 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF OTERO COUNTY
8 Jerry H. Ritter, Jr., District Judge
9 Gary K. King, Attorney General
10 Santa Fe, NM
11 for Appellee
12 Jorge A. Alvarado, Chief Public Defender
13 Sergio Viscoli, Appellate Defender
14 B. Douglas Wood, III, Assistant Appellate Defender
15 Santa Fe, NM
16 for Appellant
17 MEMORANDUM OPINION
18 FRY, Judge.
19 {1} Defendant appeals from the district court’s judgment and sentence, entered
20 pursuant to a conditional plea of no contest. The plea was conditioned on Defendant’s
1 ability to appeal from the district court’s denial of Defendant’s motion to dismiss,
2 which she pursued under the theory of entrapment. Unpersuaded that dismissal was
3 appropriate under entrapment, we issued a notice of proposed summary disposition,
4 proposing to affirm. Defendant has filed a memorandum in opposition to our notice.
5 We remain unpersuaded that the district court erred. We, therefore, affirm.
6 {2} In her docketing statement, Defendant argued that the district court should have
7 ruled that Ms. Chacon was an agent of the police, and should have granted her motion
8 to dismiss, pursued under a theory of entrapment. [DS unnumbered 3] In our notice,
9 we observed that Defendant did not provide this Court with the information our rules
10 require, which included the exact theory of entrapment that Defendant pursued. See
11 State v. Vallejos, 1997-NMSC-040, ¶ 10, 123 N.M. 739, 945 P.2d 957 (recognizing
12 that there are two types of entrapment in New Mexico—subjective and objective—
13 and there are two varieties of objective entrapment—factual and normative). We
14 applied all theories of the entrapment defense, and proposed to affirm. Specifically,
15 we proposed to hold that the State demonstrated: Defendant had a predisposition to
16 drug trafficking; the conduct about which Defendant complained was not the police
17 officer’s, nor even the conduct of an agent of the police; and the undercover officer,
18 Agent Perry, directly solicited drugs from Defendant, and Defendant sold it directly
19 to him. On these grounds, we proposed to hold that the police’s conduct was not so
2
1 egregious or unconscionable and did not otherwise exceed the standards as a matter
2 of law.
3 {3} In response to our notice, Defendant states that she asserts an entrapment
4 defense of the objective normative variety. [MIO 5] Accordingly, Defendant needed
5 to have established that “both the methods and purposes of police conduct . . . offend
6 our notions of fundamental fairness . . . or are so outrageous that due process
7 principles [should] absolutely bar the government from invoking judicial processes
8 to obtain a conviction[.]” Id. ¶ 16 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). As
9 we recognized in our notice, normative entrapment recognizes two forms of
10 impropriety as part of the objective entrapment defense: (1) the police “employ
11 unconscionable methods in their attempts to ferret out crime,” id. ¶ 18; and (2) the
12 police ensnare a defendant for the illegitimate purpose of generating criminal charges
13 without regard to protecting the public or preventing future crime. Id. ¶¶ 17-19.
14 {4} Also in response to our notice, Defendant acknowledges that the allegedly
15 pressuring conduct to which she objected was that of Ms. Chacon, not Agent Perry.
16 [MIO 9] Relying on out-of-state case law, Defendant now asks us to recognize a
17 theory of entrapment through the use of an unwitting informant. [MIO 8-9] Defendant
18 gives us no indication that she raised this argument below, seeking an extension of the
19 objective normative entrapment defense to encompass the actions of an unwitting
3
1 participant in an undercover investigation. See State v. Varela, 1999-NMSC-045, ¶ 25,
2 128 N.M. 454, 993 P.2d 1280 (stating that in order to preserve an issue for appeal, the
3 defendant must make an objection that specifically apprises the trial court of the
4 nature of the claimed error and invokes an intelligent ruling thereon). Defendant also
5 does not present us with any argument indicating why she may raise this matter for
6 the first time on appeal. See In Re Aaron L., 2000-NMCA-024, ¶ 10, 128 N.M. 641,
7 996 P.2d 431 (stating that on appeal, the reviewing court will not consider issues not
8 raised in the trial court unless the issues involve matters of jurisdictional or
9 fundamental error).
10 {5} Even assuming that Defendant’s arguments below were sufficient to preserve
11 this matter for our review, and even assuming our case law may contemplate a theory
12 of entrapment through the use of an unwitting participant, [MIO 9-11] we are not
13 persuaded that the police conduct in this case was so manipulative or otherwise
14 egregious to warrant this kind of vicarious entrapment defense. There is no indication
15 that the drug transactions between Defendant and Agent Perry were conducted for the
16 purpose of satisfying Ms. Chacon’s pleas to procure drugs for her sick husband. Nor
17 is there any indication that Agent Perry asked Ms. Chacon to request drugs from
18 Defendant for Ms. Chacon’s sick husband. Thus, we are not persuaded that Ms.
19 Chacon’s actions could be sufficiently linked to police to constitute the level of police
4
1 misconduct contemplated by the entrapment defense, even under a vicarious theory
2 of entrapment.
3 {6} For the reasons stated in this opinion and in our notice, we affirm the district
4 court’s denial of Defendant’s motion to dismiss.
5 {7} IT IS SO ORDERED.
6
7 CYNTHIA A. FRY, Judge
8 WE CONCUR:
9
10 MICHAEL E. VIGIL, Judge
11
12 J. MILES HANISEE, Judge
5