Appellant challenges the legality of his arrest, several trial court rulings, and the effectiveness of counsel. We find these contentions meritless and, accordingly, affirm the order of the lower court.
*5 Rosenwald’s Meat Market was robbed on October 25, 1976, and again on October 29, 1976, by a man wearing white painter’s pants and a stocking mask and carrying a sawed-off shotgun. Police arrested appellant at his home on November 15, 1976, pursuant to a warrant, and seized several items, including a stocking mask and white painter’s pants, from appellant’s bedroom. While in custody, appellant made an inculpatory statement. At a suppression hearing on October 3, 1977, appellant unsuccessfully moved to suppress the confession as well as the stocking mask and painter’s pants. 1 After a jury trial on October 26, 1977, appellant was convicted of the October 29 robbery and sentenced to ten-to-twenty years imprisonment. Appellant’s notice of appeal was quashed as untimely. Following appellant’s subsequent Post Conviction Hearing Act (PCHA) petition, he was granted the right to request an appeal to this Court nunc pro tunc. This Court allowed the appeal on April 22, 1981.
Appellant contends first that his arrest was illegal because the warrant was not issued upon probable causé. Appellant relies on the two-pronged standard outlined in
Aguilar v. Texas,
*7 Appellant contends next that his confession should have been suppressed as an involuntarily coerced statement. He argues specifically that he was never taken to the bathroom, told of his right to make a phone call, or asked when he had last eaten, and was surrounded by several large detectives of heavy build. Appellant’s contention lacks merit. Appellant was arrested at 10:30 a.m. on November 15, 1976, and he gave his inculpatory statement between 12:30 p.m. and 2:30 p.m.; therefore, there was no undue delay. He received Miranda warnings and waived his rights to remain silent and to have an attorney present. He was not beaten. Additionally, because we have determined the arrest was lawful, the confession cannot be suppressed as the fruit of illegality. Under these circumstances, we agree with the lower court’s conclusion that appellant’s confession was knowing, intelligent, and voluntary.
Appellant contends also that the lower court’s consolidation of the two robbery charges denied him his right to a fair trial. “It is well established that the propriety of consolidating separate indictments for trial is a matter of discretion with the trial judge, and the exercise of this discretion will be reversed only for manifest abuse of discretion or prejudice and clear injustice to the defendant.”
Commonwealth v. Morris,
Appellant contends next that the lower court should have granted his motion for a mistrial because a statement made by a prosecution witness impermissibly referred to other criminal activity on the part of appellant. The prosecution cannot introduce evidence, either directly or by reasonable implication, of defendant’s prior criminal conduct.
Commonwealth v. Irwin,
Q. [PROSECUTOR]: What makes you so sure that Robert Moore is the man that walked into the store October 29?
A. [MR. Rosenwald]: I had dealings with him before. That is not the first time. I am sorry I can’t bring up the other stuff. He also lives around the neighborhood right there.
(N.T. October 24, 1977 at 1.86-1.87). The above testimony does not suggest prior criminality, but only prior familiarity *9 with appellant. The jury could have reasonably concluded that the other dealings referred to were commercial or personal. Accordingly, appellant’s contention is meritless.
Finally, appellant alleges ineffectiveness of trial counsel for failing to file pre-trial motions challenging his allegedly illegal arrest and to request a pre-trial lineup. Counsel is deemed ineffective if the issue not raised is of arguable merit and counsel had no reasonable basis for failing to assert it.
Commonwealth v. Evans,
*10 Because all of appellant’s contentions lack merit, we must affirm the order of the lower court. 5
Affirmed.
Notes
. Other physical evidence seized on November 15, i.e. a notebook, letters, and appellant’s personal identification, was suppressed. A photographic identification was also suppressed as impermissibly suggestive because the photographs shown to witnesses were Philadelphia Police Department photographs containing identifying legends.
. The
Aguilar-Spinelli
standard for determining the validity of a warrant requires that the affidavit set forth some of the “underlying circumstances” necessary to enable the magistrate independently to judge (1) the validity of the informant’s conclusions, and (2) the credibility of the informant and the reliability of his information.
Commonwealth v. Matthews,
. Appellant’s additional contention that the painter’s pants and stocking mask should have been suppressed as the fruit of an illegal arrest is clearly meritless because we have determined that the arrest was lawful and the evidence was seized in plain view pursuant to that arrest.
We recognize that Commonwealth v. Price, supra, is the first Pennsylvania appellate court case addressing the new standard and that our Supreme Court has not yet officially adopted Illinois v. Gates, supra. However, even under the Aguilar-Spinelli test, we believe there was probable cause for the arrest warrant in the instant case. The reliability and credibility of the informant derives from his role as an "unquestionably honest citizen” who talked to the police detective in *7 person. The basis of his knowledge is his eyewitness observations of the robberies as they occurred and his recognition of appellant, whom he had seen many times before, as the robber.
We also recognize that both Gates and Price dealt with search warrants whereas the instant case involves an arrest warrant. As under the Aguilar-Spinelli test, however, the new warrant standard applies equally to arrest warrants. See Gates, supra.
. Appellant also raises several additional claims in a
pro se
brief which was attached as an Appendix to counsel’s brief. We will not address the
pro se
arguments. In
Commonwealth v. Kibler,
294 Pa.Superior Ct. 30,
Furthermore, our position is supported by
Commonwealth v. Almeida,
. The Commonwealth argues that we should quash appellant's appeal as untimely. We disagree. Appellant was granted the right to request an appeal nunc pro tunc on September 8, 1980, and filed a petition on January 29, 1981. Although appellant filed after the expiration of the thirty day limit, see 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 5571(a) and Pa.R.A.P. 903(a), this Court allowed the appeal nunc pro tunc on April 22, 1981, per order requiring the parties to argue in their briefs the issue of the timeliness of the petition to appeal. Both parties have done so. Appellant has explained in his Reply Brief that the five month delay in filing was due solely to “counsel’s inadvertence.” After the September 8 order, appellant’s counsel moved his office and the file, including the completed petition, was misfiled. Appellant’s file was not discovered until five months later and, upon discovery, the petition was immediately filed. Because this Court did allow the appeal nunc pro tunc and the parties have briefed the issues, we need not quash the appeal as untimely where appellant was not at fault in causing the delay.
