What is the incoherence objection to legal entrapment
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/17495Date
2020-02-25Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Abstract
Some legal theorists say that legal entrapment to commit a crime is incoherent. So far, there is no satisfactorily precise statement of this objection in the literature: it is obscure
even as to the type of incoherence that is purportedly involved. (Perhaps consequently,
substantial assessment of the objection is also absent.) We aim to provide a new statement of
the objection that is more precise and more rigorous than its predecessors. We argue that the
best form of the objection asserts that, in attempting to entrap, law-enforcement agents lapse
into a form of practical incoherence that involves the attempt simultaneously to pursue contrary
ends. We then argue that the objection, in this form, encompasses all cases of legal entrapment
only if it is supplemented by appeal to the premise that law-enforcement agents have an
absolute duty never to create crimes.
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