Opinion by
The Commonwealth appeals from an order of Judge Charles I). McCarthy of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County suppressing evidence obtained against appellee Barbara Anderson and dismissing charges against her for possession of narcotic drugs.
On January 7, 1972, Pittsburgh police department detectives acting on information from a confidential informant, obtained a warrant to search the Pittsburgh apartment leased by one Karen Gilliam. Executing the warrant, the police were admitted to the apartment by lessee Gilliam. Gilliam subsequently attempted to dispose of two foil packets of white powder she was holding and was arrested.
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When questioned, she revealed that appellee Anderson, her guest, was asleep in the bedroom of the apartment. Anderson was a resident of New York City and had been a house guest for approximately four days. The officers knocked on the bedroom door and granted appellee a few minutes to dress. Upon searching the bedroom, the officers found two beds, only one of which had been slept in. Atop a dresser, one to four feet from the slept-in bed,
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the officers found $151 in cash. The unfolding of a dollar bill atop this pile of money revealed a quantity of white powder and further search of the dresser drawers produced a quantity of marijuana. The officers then arrested appellee and advised her of her rights. Subsequent to the arrest, the officers summoned a police matron who searched the person of appellee, finding no additional narcotic substances. On the living room couch, however, a discarded bathrobe was searched, revealing a quantity of cocaine. As the robe allegedly
We are called upon to decide whether, as tbe Commonwealth contends, probable cause existed for appel-lee’s arrest. It is axiomatic that a lawful arrest must be predicated upon probable cause and that if an arrest lacks such justification a warrantless search incident thereto is constitutionally impermissible. Commonwealth
v. Hicks,
It is clear that mere presence at tbe scene of a crime does not present probable cause for arrest.
Com
That such evidence may not be sufficient to convict appellee of possession or control of the contraband is not the consuming concern in reviewing the legality of arrest. There is a clear distinction between what is required for purposes of establishing probable cause for a warrantless arrest or search and what is required
Having so concluded, all evidence seized incident to the arrest was admissible.
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Draper v. U. S.,
The order of the court below is reversed. The case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
Gilliam pleaded guilty to possession of narcotics and was sentenced.
There was conflicting testimony on the actual distance from the bed to the dresser containing the narcotics.
The questions of the visibility to appellee of the contraband in the folded dollar or in the dresser or of the access of the respective defendants to the bedroom may affect appellee’s guilt or innocence of possession, but not the reasonableness of arrest by an officer who properly discovers the narcotics.
Indeed, in Whitner, the defendant was found sleeping in a friend’s apartment some three feet from a dresser on which the contraband in question was sitting.
The evidence obtained in the search of the dresser prior to the arrest would be admissible on grounds independent of the subsequent arrest, i.e., that it was obtained in executing a valid search warrant
