At 11:15 on the morning of November 18, 1975, plainclothes officers Herman J. Keels and T. J. Jones of the Metropolitan Police observed appellants Michael Childress and Alvin Martin acting in what they con *616 sidered a suspicious manner, looking into automobiles and apparently casing a bank in the vicinity of the 4500 block of Wisconsin Avenue, N.W. The officers had been assigned to that area because of a high rate of reported burglaries and larcenies from automobiles parked there.
The officers watched as appellants Chil-dress and Martin met appellant Ezekiel Pеebles and codefendant Aubrey Martin. 1 After the four men got into the car the officers noted its license number and radioed in for a “tag check.” As the officers followed appellants’ vehicle in an unmarked car, the police dispatcher responded that there were four traffic warrants outstanding for Childress, the car’s owner. The officers lost track of appellants’ vehicle in traffic, but relayed the information they had received to similarly assigned plainclothes officers Timothy Leach and Charles Madison.
Shortly after noon, both groups of officers sрotted appellants’ car as it turned into the campus of Washington" Technical Institute in the 4200 block of Connecticut Avenue, N.W. They stopped the car and ordered appellants out. In plain view within the now-unoccupied vehicle police observed a bent coat hanger, screwdriver, wire cutters, and a citizens’ band radio and tape player from both of which protruded cut wires.
Police told appellant Childress, the driver, that he was being stopped because of outstanding traffic warrants. In the course of the ensuing conversation, police requested and received appellant Childress’ permission to open the trunk, in which they found another citizens’ band radio with cut wires, bearing the name and Virginia address of another man. Police arrested appellant Childress on the traffic warrants and appellant Martin after a WALES chеck revealed an unrelated warrant outstanding for him. Appellant Peebles was allowed to go but was later arrested.
On February 9, 1976, the trial court denied appellants’ motions to suppress all evidence seized from the car in the course of appellant Childress’ arrest. Elevеn days later, a jury found appellants guilty of three counts of petit larceny (D.C.Code 1973, § 22-2202) and one count of destruction of property (D.C.Code 1973, § 22-403).
Appellant Childress was sentenced to concurrent terms of six months on each charge. Appellant Peebles was sentenced to concurrent terms of one year on each charge. Appellant Martin received an indeterminate sentence under the Federal Youth Corrections Act, 18 U.S.C. § 5010(b) (1976). We affirm.
I.
Appellants first assign error to the trial court’s finding that the outstanding traffic warrants justified the stop of appellant Childress’ vehicle. Appellants contend, and indeed it is undisputed, that on November 14, 1975, appellant Childress had posted collateral for his outstanding traffic warrants. Appellants argue that as a result the warrants were extinguished and did not exist four days later when appellant Childress’ vehicle was stоpped. Appellants maintain that appellant Childress’ arrest was supported only by the officers’ belief that warrants were outstanding for him, was unsupported by independent probable cause, and that all evidence seized thereafter should have been suppressed as the fruit of Chil-dress’ illegal arrest.
We hold that, under the circumstances here presented, the police officers’ good faith reliance on the radio report and the resultant reasonable belief that valid traffic warrants were outstanding provided probable cause to arrest appellant Childress.
This holding is mandated by our decision in
Patterson v. United States,
D.C.App.,
At the outset, we reject appellant’s contention that there was no probable cause for his arrest. Although the stolen car bearing the dealer tags in question had been recovered earlier on the day of appellant’s arrest, and for some unexplained reason, the police records did not accurately reflect that fact, this does not mean that the officer’s action, in reliance on these records, was unreasonable. .
Officer Nern was mistaken in his belief that appellant was driving a stolen car. However, at the moment of arrest, he clearly had probable cause to believe a crime had been committed and that appellant was the person who had committed it. [Id at 69.]
Appellants direct our attention to
Whitely v. Warden,
Whitely
does not control the instant case, however, because the warrant there under examination, unlike those at issue here and in
Patterson,
was void
ab initio.
2
As such, we read
Whitely
to stand for the proposition that the prosecution may not bootstrap itself to a legal arrest and resultant conviction by asserting that police relied reasonably on a warrant that never legally existed. Indeed, we so held in
Sanders v. United States,
D.C.App.,
We affirm also the trial court’s dеnial of appellants’ motions to suppress evidence obtained as a result of appellant Childress’ arrest. We uphold the trial court’s finding that evidence taken from the passenger area of appellants’ automobile was in the officers’ plain view after police had legitimately stopped the vehicle.
The plain view exception to the search warrant requirement is properly invoked when a police officer has
a prior justification for an intrusion in the course of which he [comes] inadvertently across a piecе of evidence incriminating the accused. The doctrine serves to supplement the prior justification— whether it be a warrant for another object, hot pursuit, search incident to a lawful arrest, or some other legitimate reason for being present unconnected with a seаrch directed against the accused — and permits the warrantless seizure. [Coolidge v. New Hampshire,403 U.S. 443 , 466 (91 S.Ct. 2022 ,29 L.Ed.2d 564 ) (1971).]
In the instant case, appellant Chil-dress’ lawful arrest legitimized the officers’ presence at the point of observation and we find that under the circumstances, police had requisite probable cause to seize the items which they observed.
4
See Coolidge v. New Hampshire, supra,
II.
Appellants contend that, in any event, the trial court erred in finding that appellant Childress had consented to the search of the trunk of his automobile, and in denying suppression of evidence there seized.
We are bound to uphold the trial court’s finding thаt a search was consensual unless such a finding is clearly erroneous.
Terrell v. United States,
D.C.App.,
III.
Appellant Martin contends individually that the trial court erred in denying his motion for judgment of acquittal.
*619
In deciding to submit a case to the jury, the trial judge need only have been satisfied that the government introduced enough evidence so that a reasonable person might find guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
Curley v. United States,
81 U.S. App.D.C. 389, 392-93,
In the instant case, appellant Martin was apprehended in an automobile containing three recently stolen items and tools with which a jury could infer the thefts were accomplishеd. While a mere showing of appellant Martin’s presence in the car in the proximity of stolen items would not suffice,
see United States v. Bethea,
On the facts of the instant case, the trial court properly submitted the question of appellant Martin’s culpability to the jury. 5
The judgments appealed from are hereby
Affirmed.
Notes
. Codefendant Aubrey Martin did not appeal his conviction.
. Similar to
Whitely,
and thus distinguishable from the instant case, is
Gilchrist v. United States,
D.C.App.,
. Justifiable administrative delay distinguishes this case from
United States v. Mackey,
that a computer inaccuracy of this nature and duration, even if unintended, amounted to a capricious disregard for the rights of the defendant as a citizen of the United States. . . . Once the warrant was satisfied, five months before defendant’s arrest, there no longer existed any basis for his detention, and the Government may not now profit by its own lack of responsibility. [Id. at 1125 (emphasis added).]
In the instant case, collateral wаs posted, and the warrants were thus satisfied, on Friday, November 14. Appellant was arrested on the *618 following Tuesday, November 18. We find that the four-day delay, two days of which were attributable to the weekend, does not rise to the level of police administrative negligence fatal to the government in Mackey.
. The officers involved in the instant case had been assigned to work the casual clothes detail on upper Wisconsin Avenue because of a high rate of larcenies from automobiles parked in that area of items such as those observed in appellants’ vеhicle in plain view.
See Cooper v. United States,
D.C.App.,
. Appellants contend also that the trial court erred in denying their motions to strike the suppression hearing testimony of the sole government witness, Officer Keels, for failure of the government to comply with the Jencks Act. We have reviewed this contention carefully and find it to be without merit. We observe that neither of the forms of which apрellants assert they were improperly deprived— the P.D. 255 (arrest form) and the P.D. 47 (rights card) — contained a "statement" as that term is defined by the Jencks Act, see 18 U.S.C. § 3500(a) (1970), and that nothing written on either form was related to the subject matter of Officer Keels’ testimony, as is required to trigger application of the Act. See 18 U.S.C, § 3500(b) (1970).
