Mark Ball appeals from his conviction of unlawful possession with intent to distribute a controlled substance in violation of D.C.Code § 33 — 541(a)(1) (1993), on the ground that the trial court should have granted his motion to suppress physical evidence — drugs and $953 in cash — found during a search following his arrest. Ball pled guilty, reserving the right to appeal the denial of his motion to suppress evidence for lack of probable cause. We conclude that the officer’s plain feel of a large medicine bottle, enhanced by the officer’s observations of appellant’s conduct and experience with the practice of drug traffickers, gave the officer probable cause to search, and affirm.
*973 FACTUAL SUMMARY
At the suppression hearing, the only witness was Officer Richard Harger, a three and one-half year veteran of the Metropolitan Police Department. He testified that at approximately one o’clock on the morning of November 12, 1997, he and his partner, Officer Howard Howland, were traveling north on North Capitol Street when Officer Howland observed an automobile, a Lincoln Continental, without a front license plate. The officers turned around to follow the Lincoln, and made a traffic stop after they observed that it had a homemade license plate made of cardboard in the rear window. Officer Harger approached the stopped car from the passenger side and, when the officer illuminated the back passenger area with his flashlight, he saw appellant seated in the back seat. Officer Harger then spoke with the front seat passenger, who claimed to be the owner of the vehicle. Although it was a cool night, the front seat passenger “started to perspire from his forehead” and was “starting to get excited”; the situation “start[ed] to get slightly more intense the longer [the officer] was standing there.” The officer obtained the front-seat passenger’s consent to search the automobile, and frisked him. As Officer Harger was frisking the front seat passenger, he observed appellant “start[ ] to move his left hand and he was trying to cover his abdomen area with a newspaper which was seated on the seat next to him,” whereupon he had appellant exit the vehicle, concerned that he might have a gun or other weapon on his person. As he exited the vehicle, appellant “immediately put his hands in his jacket pocket.” The jacket was “a sweatshirt type coat that had pockets on the front where you enter hands from the side.” Officer Harger ordered appellant to remove his hands from the jacket pockets and place them on top of the vehicle. As appellant did so, he once again attempted to place his right hand in his right front jacket pocket, at which point the officer pushed him against the car and asked for his name and identification. Appellant responded that the identification was in his left rear pants pocket. As appellant reached for the identification with his left hand, “[a]t the same time he was trying to go to his right front jacket pocket” with his right hand for a third time. Officer Harger grabbed appellant’s right hand and proceeded to perform a protective “frisk of his outer garment, particularly the right front pocket of his jacket.”
As the officer frisked appellant, he “felt a large cylinder container which [he] thought to be a large medicine bottle,” and immediately thought that “it was some kind of contraband or narcotics because [appellant] made several attempts to go into his pocket and remove it.” Officer Harger removed the medicine bottle from appellant’s pocket, opened it, and saw a large number of ziplock bags containing a white rock-like substance. 1 Appellant then snatched the bottle from Officer Harger’s hand, threw it a short distance, striking the officer in the face with the throwing motion, and began to flee. Appellant was caught and arrested, and in a search following his arrest, $953 in cash was found on his person. The officer testified that he had been involved in more than one hundred drug-related arrests, that he is familiar with the ways that drugs are packaged and hidden, and that he has arrested numerous people who have hidden narcotics in medicine bottles.
The trial court credited Officer Harger’s testimony and found that appellant’s actions in calling attention to the front right *974 pocket of his jacket provided a reasonable basis for the officers to believe that he may be armed and justified a protective frisk. The trial court further credited that the object in appellant’s pocket was immediately apparent to Officer Harger as a medicine bottle and ruled that “the combination of feeling the bottle, knowing it was a bottle, the size of a bottle, 2 the experience of the officer with regard to the packaging of narcotics in this kind of container and the defendant’s actions constituted probable cause and justified the search.”
ANALYSIS
Appellant contends that the police unlawfully seized the medicine bottle during the Terry frisk. 3 Specifically, he argues that Officer Harger’s tactile detection of the closed medicine bottle, even when viewed in conjunction with other circumstances — such as the officer’s narcotics experience and appellant’s continued attempts to access the jacket pocket — failed to establish probable cause for the officer to believe that the bottle contained contraband.
When reviewing the denial of a motion to suppress, this court defers to the trial court’s findings of fact, unless they are clearly erroneous or not supported by the record.
See Powell v. United States,
“ ‘[P]robable cause is a flexible, common-sense standard’ that ‘does not demand any showing that [the officer’s belief that he has witnessed criminal behavior] be correct or more likely true than false.’ ”
Coles v. United States,
I. The “Plain Feel” Doctrine
The Supreme Court has recognized the existence of a “plain feel” exception to the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement, analogous to the “plain view” exception, that permits warrantless seizures of obvious contraband discovered during the course of a lawfully conducted frisk or search.
See Minnesota v. Dickerson,
If a police officer lawfully pats down a suspect’s outer clothing and feels an object whose contour or mass makes its identity immediately apparent, there has been no invasion of the suspect’s privacy beyond that already authorized by the officer’s search for weapons; if *975 the object is contraband, its warrantless seizure would be justified by the same practical considerations that inhere in the plain-view context.
Id.
at 375-76,
II. “Plain Feel” of Innocent Objects
In
(Kenneth) Dickerson,
we explained that although the “contour or mass” of some items may make their identity as contraband immediately apparent, “[ojther shapes, sizes, and weights, of course, are likely to be more ambiguous — consistent, for example, with drug packages but also with cigarette, candy, and other small packages.”
*976 We have not directly addressed this issue in the context of the plain feel doctrine. Other courts have split on whether, under the plain feel doctrine, an officer may seize a container that is not in itself contraband and does not conform to the shape of contraband (such as a medicine bottle or matchbook), yet is known to be routinely used to package or contain drugs. The difference between the approach of the courts which have found probable cause when considering the officer’s tactile perception of an object that has both legitimate and illicit uses, 4 and *977 those which have concluded that the officer’s touch of a legal item gives rise to only a reasonable suspicion that the item might contain contraband, 5 is that the lat *978 ter courts focus on the tactile perception of the felt object to the exclusion of other attendant circumstances which may inform the officer’s belief of what he is touching. Although we have no case directly on point, our Fourth Amendment jurisprudence leads us to apply a contextual analysis in plain feel cases.
First, and most notably, in
(Kenneth) Dickerson
we recognized that the tactile perception of an object may be informed by the officer’s training and experience and other attendant circumstances.
See
In
Christmas v. United States,
*979
That additional evidence was presented in another plain view case,
Hicks v. United States,
In
In re J.D.R.,
These cases, in which probable cause was found based on the officer’s plain view, “recognizing distinctive packaging used in the drug trade for smaller quantities,” coupled with “evidence ‘describing the arresting officer’s experience with the particular packaging,’ ”
J.D.R.,
III. “Immediately Apparent”/Probable Cause Determination
A medicine bottle is an object with obvious legitimate use for prescription medication or as a container for small objects, but which can also, to the mind of a trained officer, be put to illicit uses.
See (Bertrand) Dickerson v. United States,
Although there was no evidence presented that the traffic stop and subsequent pat-down of appellant took place in a high crime area, as is often the situation in the cases cited, more than the mere tactile identification of a pill bottle informed Officer Harger’s probable cause determination. “Although a ‘furtive gesture’ is not sufficient standing alone to provide probable cause to believe a crime is being or has just been committed,”
Price,
We recognize that there are fewer circumstances attendant to the officer’s tactile identification of the medicine bottle in this case than in some of the cited cases which concluded there was probable cause. Those cases generally have had multiple attendant facts in addition to the tactile identification of an object that is not contraband and the officer’s knowledge that the object might be used to transport and conceal contraband.
See, e.g., Rushing,
Nevertheless, although neither the officer’s recognition of the object in appellant’s pocket as a medicine bottle that could be used to conceal drugs nor appellant’s conduct independently establish probable cause in this case, the combination of the officer’s plain feel of the medicine bottle, the fact that the bottle was a large plastic container, the officer’s experience with the packaging of narcotics in this kind of container and, most important, the defendant’s numerous attempts to access the pocket where the medicine bottle was detected despite the officer’s multiple orders to the contrary, cf. Christmas, supra note 6, satisfy us that the officer could reasonably infer that the medicine bottle contained contraband and was thus authorized to seize the medicine bottle from appellant’s jacket pursuant to the “plain feel” exception to the warrant requirement. It is particularly telling that, even after appellant was being frisked by the officer, he continued to reach for the medicine bottle in his jacket pocket. Although probable cause imposes a stricter requirement than reasonable suspicion, it is not so demanding a standard as to have required more than became available to the officer as he frisked appellant. Viewed against the officer’s experience, appellant’s conduct added enough information to cross the threshold from reasonable suspicion that appellant might have a weapon in his jacket pocket to probable cause that he had drugs in the medicine bottle felt in the pocket.
We reject the argument that it was improper for the officer to open the medicine bottle after removing it from appellant’s pocket. As the officer had probable cause to believe that the medicine bottle contained contraband before he removed the bottle from appellant’s jacket, it follows that — in the absence of additional information gained after he retrieved the bottle to dissuade him from that belief — he had probable cause to arrest based on the belief that appellant possessed drugs, perhaps (from the size of the container) with the intent to distribute. That probable cause also justified the officer in opening the container as a search incident to a valid arrest.
See Horton,
Affirmed.
Notes
. The medicine bottle was received into evidence at the suppression hearing.
. The trial court stated that "[tjhis is not a small bottle that just contains a couple of pills, this is a fairly large bottle.”
. Ball does not appeal the trial court's ruling that the protective frisk was proper pursuant to
Terry v. Ohio,
. In
State v. Rushing,
Likewise, in
People v. Champion,
In
State v. Traylor,
Accord State v. Stevens,
. In
State v. Bridges,
In
Commonwealth v. Stevenson,
Accord United States v. Ross,
. Christmas is also distinguishable in that the passenger’s several movements which the officer had observed did not add to the probable *979 cause determination because the bottle was seized from where it lay on the front seat and not from under the seat, where the passenger was seen reaching. Christmas’ movements merely gave rise to the officers' suspicions that something was amiss and prompted their decision to stop the vehicle.
. In
Hicks
the court did not order suppression of the seized items because the officer had no lawful basis for being in a position to see the items in plain view.
.
United States v. Adell,
