*51 OPINION
Samuel Brown appeals his conviction for possession of cocaine. In two points of error, he contends the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress. Specifically, appellant argues the State failed to show probable cause for a warrantless arrest and failed to offer extrinsic proof that appellant was driving a stolen car. We affirm.
FACTS
The facts are undisputed. Dallas police officers Kovak and Price were on routine patrol when they observed appellant operating a motor vehicle listed on the officers’ “hot sheet.” The “hot sheet” is a computer printout listing all vehicles reported stolen in Dallas. The printout usually contains the year of the vehicle, the make, the color, and the license plate number.
The officers stopped the ear and detained the occupants. Officer Price notified the dispatcher that he had observed a vehicle with a “hit.” The dispatcher checked the National Crime Information Center (NCIC) computer, determined the car was currently listed as stolen, and reported to the officers the car had not been removed from the list of stolen vehicles.
The officers then handcuffed appellant and placed him under arrest for unauthorized use of a motor vehicle. 2 Officer Price conducted a search of appellant incident to the arrest and discovered a match box in appellant’s left front pocket. The match box contained a small baggie with cocaine residue.
The officers candidly admitted they observed no suspicious activity or other evidence of a crime. Appellant’s conduct was consistent with the conduct of a law-abiding citizen. He did not attempt to flee or make any furtive gestures. The steering column on the car was not broken, and the keys were in the ignition. The officers did not conduct any investigation other than confirming through the NCIC the car was reported stolen. The officers testified they were unaware whether appellant was charged with the offense of unauthorized use of a motor vehicle, and the record is silent whether any charges were filed against appellant other than possession of cocaine. When asked if the lack of a vehicle charge would indicate “a problem somewhere,” Officer Price testified, “If the problem was anywhere in the system, it was with the complaint itself on the stolen vehicle. I don’t know about that.” Neither the hot sheet nor any other tangible evidence was offered by the State to demonstrate the car was reported stolen.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review motions to suppress under the standard set forth in
Guzman v. State,
WARRANTLESS ARREST
[4,5] To justify a warrantless arrest, the State has the burden to prove probable cause
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existed when the officer made the arrest.
Roberts v. State,
DISCUSSION
In his first point of error, appellant contends the State failed to demonstrate probable cause for a warrantless arrest. Appellant relies principally on
Delk v. State,
Reasoning backwards from the result in
Delk,
appellant argues NCIC reports provide only reasonable suspicion for a stop but do not provide probable cause for an arrest. We believe appellant reads too much into
Delk.
In that case, the court of criminal appeals was not faced with the question of whether an NCIC identification of a stolen automobile is itself sufficient to establish probable cause for the arrest of one driving it. Our research reveals at least one instance in which the court of criminal appeals found probable cause to exist in such a situation.
See Stevens v. State,
In
Stevens,
the defendant was stopped for speeding.
Id.
at 534. After the initial stop, the officers ran an NCIC search and discovered the driver had two outstanding burglary warrants and was driving a stolen vehicle.
Id.
The officers then searched the vehicle and discovered items later used to convict the defendant of burglary.
Id.
The defendant sought to suppress the items seized from the vehicle on the ground that the arrest warrants were not supported by probable cause.
Id.
at 538. The State agreed the arrest warrants were not supported by probable cause.
Id.
Nonetheless, the court of criminal appeals upheld the search because the NCIC report provided independent probable cause to arrest the defendant for theft.
Id.
Federal cases have reached a similar result.
See, e.g., United States v. Davis,
We are not unsympathetic, however, to appellant’s contention that blind adherence to computer printouts is no substitute for constitutional analysis under the Fourth Amendment. As Justice O’Connor has not
*53
ed, “Certainly the reliability of recordkeeping systems deserves no
less
scrutiny than that of informants.”
Arizona v. Evans,
In his second point of error, appellant complains the trial court erred in failing to suppress the evidence because at the hearing on appellant’s motion to suppress the State did not produce extrinsic proof demonstrating the car appellant was driving was reported stolen. Appellant contends the State was required to offer into evidence either the hot sheet or an NCIC computer printout showing the car listed as stolen. We disagree.
First, appellant failed to assert this claim at the suppression hearing; therefore, it is waived.
See State v. Mercado,
We affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Notes
. Officer Kovak testified to the following sequence of events:
Q: So, you saw a car that you — that matched up on the hot sheet?
A: Correct.
Q: You pulled the car over?
A: Correct.
Q: Then what do you do?
A: Get the occupants out, pat them down for weapons, and right then and there they’re — right there they’re in our custody. We contact the Communications Division, have them contact NCIC and confirm that the vehicle is a good stolen and, at that point, arrest the driver.
. According to the FBI, the NCIC computer includes seventeen database files containing over ten million records. The system can he accessed by more than 80,000 law enforcement and criminal justice agencies in the United States, Canada, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. The NCIC computer handles nearly two million transactions daily. Although the NCIC computer is maintained by the FBI, local law enforcement agencies are responsible for entering into the system all investigatory information in their jurisdiction, and only the agency entering the information can update it or remove it. National Crime Information Center: 30 Years on the Beat, The Investigator, (Dec.1996 / Jan. 1997) <http://www.fbi.gov/2000/ncicinv.htm>. Obviously, with so many agencies entering information into the NCIC computer, the quality of information maintained in the system is likely to vary significantly.
.
See
Alitia F. Sockwell, Arizona v. Evans:
Isaac Evans and the Supreme Court Get Caught Driving the Wrong Way, 26
Sw. U.L.Rev. 1183, 1213 (1997) (noting 1985 study revealing that "at least 12,000 invalid or inaccurate reports on suspects wanted for arrest are transmitted each day to federal, state and local law enforcement agencies”). In
Evans,
the defendant was stopped for driving the wrong way and arrested after officers obtained an NCIC "hit” erroneously indicating an outstanding misdemeanor warrant for the defendant’s arrest.
Evans,
