This is an appeal from the judgment of sentence for burglary. Appellant contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress out-of-court and in-court identifications and physical evidence because (1) his arrest was unsupported by probable cause; (2) the out-of-court idеntification procedure was unduly suggestive. We agree that appellant’s arrest was unsupported by probable cause and that his motion to suppress should have been granted in regard to the out-of-court identification and the physical evidence. We disagree that the in-cоurt identification also should have been suppressed. Because illegally obtained evidence was used against appellant, the judgment of sentence is reversed and a new trial is awarded.
At 10:00 a.m. on the morning of April 25, 1983, the complainant heard noises coming from a second floor room in his house in West Philadelphia. He went to the room, and observed a black male attempting to pry open the window. The complainant stepped out of the room momentarily, returning with a shotgun which he trained on the perpetrator. Seeing the weapon, the perpetrator — who had not succeeded in entering the room — fled. The entire episode lasted ten to fifteen seconds. After the complainant contacted the police, the police radio broadcast the following description: black male, dark complexion, blue swеatshirt, about eighteen to twenty years old with close cropped hair. The police subsequently brought, over a period of two hours, five suspects to the complainant’s home for identification. He failed to identify any. During the course of this procedure, the complainant told рolice that the suspects did not match the description he had originally given when he reported the crime. He then supplemented the police description with the following facts: the suspect was taller than 5'8" to 5'9" and that the sweatshirt zipped up the front and had a red stripe running down thе arms. With the supplement, and over two hours after the crime occurred, police observed appellant standing on a street corner ap *470 proximately two blocks from the scene of the crime. Appellant was over 6' tall and wore a sweatshirt matching the descriptiоn given by the complainant. Police approached appellant and transported him to the scene of the crime where the complainant identified him as the perpetrator.
Appellant filed a pre-trial motion to suppress the out-of-court identification and the sweatshirt as fruits of an illegal arrest. The trial court denied the motion, ruling that there was probable cause to arrest appellant when he was picked up on the street corner. Appellant was then tried without a jury. At that trial he was again identified by the complainant. Appellant was convicted of burglary and sentenced to four-to-twenty-three months incarceration. This appeal followed.
Appellant contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress the out-of-court and in-court identifications and the sweatshirt. He argues that, as his arrest was not supported by probable cause, the above evidence should have been suppressed as fruits of the illegality. We agree that appellant’s arrest was not supported by probable cause and therefore hold that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress thе out-of-court identification and the sweatshirt. We disagree, however, that the in-court identification should have been suppressed.
To be constitutionally valid, a warrantless arrest must be supported by probable cause.
Commonwealth v. Voss,
333 Pa.Superior Ct. 331, 339,
Here, appellant matched the general description provided by the complainant. He did stand over 5'9" tall and wore a blue sweatshirt with a zipper up the front and red stripеs down the sleeves. N.T. August 3, 1983 at 32. He was observed standing on a street corner two blocks away from the scene of the crime over two hours after it had occurred. Id. at 33. There is, however, no evidence that appellant was acting suspiciously or that he tried to flee or evade the police. Unlike those cases cited above where we have found facts sufficient to establish probable cause, the only basis for such a determination in this case was appellant’s similarity to the general description provided by the victim. We hold that this similarity, taken by itself, was *472 not enough to provide the police with sufficient facts establishing probable cause to arrest.
The Commonwealth urges us to accept the proposition that when appellant was initially approached by the police officers and then transported to the scenе of the crime for identification by the victim, he was not under arrest but rather detained for investigatory purposes pursuant to
Terry v. Ohio,
In reaching this determinatiоn, we are guided by our Supreme Court’s decision in
Commonwealth v. Lovette,
[I]t is clear that the placing of appellant and his companions in the police vehicle for the purpose of transporting them to the scene of the offense, without their consent, constituted an arrest as that term has been defined under our cases. It is equally true that police action was a seizure of the person within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment of the federal constitution.
Id.,
As we have determined that appellant was under arrest at the time that he was initially detained and transported to the scene of the crime and that probable cause did not exist at the time of that arrest, we must next determine whether the subsequent out-of-court and in-court identifications, along with appellant’s sweatshirt, should have been suppressed as derived from the illegal arrest. In
Wong Sun v. United States,
The principle underlying our ruling that the out-of-court identification and the sweatshirt should have been
*474
suppressed,
i.e.
that the Commonwealth should not benefit from its illegal actions, does not compel a similar result regarding the admissibility of the in-court identification. Such subsequent identifications may be admissible if the Commonwealth can show, by clear and convincing evidence, that there was a basis for the identification independent of the illegal activities.
Commonwealth v. Jones,
324 Pa.Superior Ct. 359, 362,
Here, the victim testified that he had observed the perpetrator as he attempted to break into his house fоr approximately ten to fifteen seconds. N.T. supra at 9. Part of this time the victim looked at the perpetrator through the gunsight of a shotgun. Id. Additionally, the victim corrected the police officers after they brought five other suspects to his house for identification purposes, pointing out that thеy did not meet his description. Id. at 12. At trial, the victim displayed no hesitation in identifying appellant. Id. at 10. We therefore hold that the in-court identification had a basis sufficiently independent from the illegal activities so as to render it admissible.
As we have concluded that the trial court erred in finding that appellant’s arrest was supported by probable cause, and in admitting the out-of-court identification and the sweatshirt, we must next determine the remedy. An error by a trial court, whether involving state or federal constitutional law, “can be harmless only if the appellate court is convincеd beyond a reasonable doubt that the error is harmless.”
Commonwealth v. Story,
Here, a review of the record convinces us that the admission of the out-of-court identification and the sweatshirt was not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. The Commonwealth built its case primarily upon three pieces of evidence; the out-of-court identification, the sweatshirt, and the in-court identification. Appellant presented an alibi defense which contradicted the Commonwealth’s evidence. N.T. supra at 56-64. We cannot say that the erroneous admission of two of the Commonwealth’s three key pieces of evidence constituted harmless error. Without the out-of-court identification and the sweatshirt thе evidence against appellant is not so overwhelming so as to compel us to find *476 that the admission of the illegally obtained evidence was harmless. Absent the out-of-court identification and the sweatshirt, the trier-of-fact was left to decide between appellant’s alibi and the in-сourt identification provided by the victim. Because we believe that there is a reasonable possibility that the trier-of-fact may have relied upon the inadmissible evidence, the error was not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. We, therefore, conclude that the judgment of sentence must be reversed and appellant be awarded a new trial.
Judgment of sentence reversed. A new trial is ordered.
Notes
. The
Terry
standard was first adopted in Pennsylvania in
Commonwealth v. Hicks,
. The Commonwealth argues that the rule set out in
Lovette
has somehow been relaxed. We can find no evidence to support this assertion.
See Commonwealth v. Petrino,
332 Pa.Superior Ct. 13, 23,
. As we have ruled that the out-of-court identification should have been suppressed as a fruit of the poisonous tree of the illegal arrest, we need not reach appellant’s second issue concerning the allegedly suggestive nature of the identification.
