Appellant was tried before a jury and convicted on September 20, 1977, of kidnapping 1 and robbery. 2 He filed post-verdict motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment, which were denied by the court en banc. He takes this appeal alleging that the trial court erred in failing to suppress items seized as a result of an illegal search and in failing to grant his motion for a mistrial following allegedly prejudicial testimony concerning identification from a photographic array. Since we find that these contentions lack merit, we affirm the judgment of sentence.
*482 The following facts were adduced at trial. On the morning of December 11, 1976, a car with two male occupants pulled into Miller’s Mobil Station and was serviced by James Mulqueen, an attendant. The car was driven away, but returned a few minutes later. The two occupants exited the car and entered the station. At gun point they took $100 from the cash register, and a watch and cash that Mulqueen had in his possession. They then forced Mulqueen into the car and drove off. Eventually, Mulqueen was released near Tamaqua, Pennsylvania.
Appellant’s arrest was accomplished as a result of the following sequence of events that were revealed at the suppression hearing. On December 16, 1976, at about 10:80 a. m., State Trooper Stephen Sepkowski of the Pottsville substation went to the Schuylkill County Prison and received a written statement from one Christine Stephany that implicated her husband and appellant in a burglary and auto theft that had occurred in Schuylkill County. 3 Later, during the same morning, Trooper Sepkowski was contacted by Patrolman Toby Harbst of the South Whitehall Police Department, Lehigh County, and informed that felony warrants for kidnapping and robbery had been issued for appellant’s arrest. Patrolman Harbst expected to arrive at the Pottsville substation by 1:00 p. m. that day and requested help in serving the warrants. At approximately 11:45 a. m. a confidential informant contacted Trooper Sepkowski and stated that appellant planned to sell his automobile at 1:00 p. m. on that day and then leave the area. This informant had, on one prior occasion, supplied the police with information that proved to be true.
At this point, Trooper Sepkowski attempted to contact a magistrate to procure a warrant for appellant’s arrest, but learned that the magistrate was at lunch. The officer was unable to contact him at the restaurant the magistrate sometimes frequented, and he decided to proceed without a *483 warrant. Accompanied by three other officers, Trooper Sepkowski went to appellant’s residence. Before entering, he observed appellant’s car outside the building and noted that the front and rear floors of the vehicle were cleaner than he had observed them on previous occasions. He knocked on the door, and appellant answered and allowed the officers to enter. Trooper Sepkowski read him his rights and informed him that he was being arrested for burglary and auto theft. After explaining this, Trooper Sepkowski noticed a watch hanging from a nail in a nearby wall of the apartment. It fit the description Patrolman Harbst had previously given him of a watch taken during a robbery and kidnapping that he was investigating, in which appellant was mentioned as a suspect. Trooper Sepkowski obtained appellant’s signature on a consent to search form and seized the watch, which he subsequently turned over to Patrolman Harbst. It was later identified as the one taken in the Lehigh County robbery.
Appellant objects that this watch was illegally seized and inadmissible at trial because it was the product of a search following an illegal arrest. He claims that there was insufficient probable cause to support the arrest and, in any event, that a warrantless arrest in his home was not justified. We disagree.
Probable cause to arrest exists if the facts and circumstances within the officer’s knowledge have been gained by reasonably trustworthy means and are sufficient to warrant a man of reasonable caution to believe that the suspect has committed or is committing a crime.
Commonwealth v. Murray,
Trooper Sepkowski was entitled to rely on Patrolman Harbst’s statement that he had procured a warrant for appellant’s arrest and could assume from that statement that Patrolman Harbst had offered the magistrate sufficient information to support an independent judicial assessment of probable cause.
Whiteley v. Warden of Wyoming Penitentiary,
The testimony of Patrolman Harbst at the suppression hearing demonstrates that he had clear probable cause to make an arrest.
4
He had received a statement from an accomplice’s wife, Ms. Stephany, that appellant and her husband had returned home with a sum of money a few hours after the occurrence of the offense. She repeated their remark that they had “pulled a job” near Allentown and had taken the gas station attendant with them in the car. Patrolman Harbst had a substantial basis for crediting this hearsay testimony.
See United States v. Harris,
Of particular importance in determining the credibility of this information is the corroboration of Ms. Stephany’s story by other sources.
United States v. Harris, supra; see Commonwealth v. Falk, supra.
The victim, James Mulqueen, identified appellant from a series of photographs as one of the perpetrators of these offenses, thus confirming his participation. Indeed, identification of the suspect by the victim may, of itself, be sufficient to supply probable cause for arrest.
See Commonwealth v. Hall,
Appellant argues that Trooper Sepkowski was acting on his own initiative and points to the fact that in making the arrest, he only informed appellant of the charges in Schuylkill County and not the robbery and kidnapping. For the validity of an arrest to be upheld, however, it is not necessary that the accused be informed at the time of making the arrest of its cause if he knows that the arresting officials are police officials.
Commonwealth v. Negri,
Although we have determined that the arrest was made upon sufficient probable cause, our inquiry is not ended. Since the arrest was made at appellant’s home without a warrant, the intrusion must be justified by a showing of exigency.
6
Commonwealth v. Wagner,
In the instant case, all of these factors weigh in favor of upholding the intrusion. First, appellant was suspected of robbery and kidnapping, both of which crimes *487 involve the use of force. Second, he was reasonably believed to be armed with a shotgun that had been stolen with the later-recovered revolver in the Schuylkill County burglary that Trooper Sepkowski was investigating and in which Ms. Stephany had implicated appellant. Third, Ms. Stephany’s statement and the victim’s identification supplied clear probable cause to arrest appellant. Fourth, entry was made into appellant’s residence while his car was parked outside, giving the police strong reason to believe that appellant was present. Fifth, the police had a tip that appellant was preparing to leave, and this tip was corroborated by the unusually clean nature of the car. Combined with the previously demonstrated reliability of the informer, this information was sufficient to establish a need to act swiftly. Furthermore, this exigency was not a product of any prior delay by the police between the time of receiving sufficient information to form probable cause and the time of apprehension. The information establishing probable cause had only been received on the day before and the day of the arrest, and the officers acted immediately upon its receipt. Finally, the entry was accomplished without force and during daylight hours, thus minimizing its intrusive nature.
As appellant’s arrest was legal, the officers were lawfully in a position to observe the watch, which hung in plain view from a nail in the wall. Thus, the watch could properly be seized without a search warrant under this well-established exception to the fourth amendment warrant requirement.
Commonwealth v. Tome,
The seizure of the watch is also supported by appellant’s signing of the consent to search form indicating his permission to search. Although the form was signed while he was under arrest, the voluntariness of his consent is not necessarily vitiated. Custody is an important circumstance in determining voluntariness of consent and the Com
*488
monwealth’s burden of proving voluntariness is thereby rendered especially heavy,
Commonwealth v. Woods,
It is critical in assessing the voluntariness of appellant’s consent to note that he had been fully informed of his constitutional rights. He had been read a complete
Miranda
warning just minutes earlier during the arrest procedure, and Trooper Sepkowski had explained the consent to search form and given appellant time to read it before his signature was obtained. In the Third Circuit, the provision of the
Miranda
warning alone, followed by a consent to search, is not only persuasive but controlling on the question of voluntariness.
United States v. Menke,
Moreover, another circumstance to be considered is the expectations of the consenting party. If the consenter believes that the evidence is unlikely to be discovered,, the consent was probably voluntary. Commonwealth v. Dressner, supra. The present facts show that appellant was not informed at this time that he was being arrested for the robbery in Lehigh County, and since the watch was not a particularly unusual one, a wrist-type Timex calendar watch, he could not have expected the officers from Schuylkill County to recognize it. We find, therefore, that appel *489 lant’s consent was rendered voluntarily and that the watch was properly seized pursuant to it.
Appellant’s second contention is that the court erred in not declaring a mistrial upon his objection to the victim’s testimony that he had selected appellant’s picture from an array supplied by the police. Appellant claims that because the Commonwealth offered no explanation for the possession of the photograph by the police, the only logical inference that could be drawn by the jury was that he had a prior criminal record and that he was prejudiced by this inference. This argument lacks merit.
In
Commonwealth v. Allen,
[T]he controlling question is whether or not a juror could reasonably infer from the facts presented that the accused had engaged in prior criminal actiivty. A mere passing reference to photographs from which a reasonable inference of prior criminal activity cannot properly be drawn does not invalidate the proceedings since there has been no prejudice as a result of the reference .... Id.,448 Pa. at 181 ,292 A.2d at 375 (1972).
The present facts illustrate just such a passing reference. The witness merely replied in the affirmative when asked if he had identified appellant from pictures displayed by the police. The reference was brief; the photographs were never displayed, marked, admitted, or otherwise referred to at trial. In cases like this one, in which no explanation for the possession of the photograph by the police is offered, it is highly unlikely that a juror would conclude from the fact of the possession alone that the accused had engaged in prior criminal conduct, and therefore, no reversible error is shown.
Commonwealth v. Carlos,
The judgment of sentence is affirmed.
Notes
. 18 Pa.C.S. § 2901.
. 18 Pa.C.S. § 3701.
. Trooper Sepkowski testified that previously, on December 14, a revolver taken from that burglary had been recovered in the trunk of a vehicle operated by Ms. Stephany.
. Appellant notes that no written affidavit or application for the arrest warrant was offered into evidence and attacks the ability of the motion court to rely on oral testimony about the underlying facts that resulted in issuance of the warrant. In the instant circumstances, we do not find ourselves limited to the four comers of the warrant because the arrest, being one for a felony, was one which could properly be made upon probable cause, without a warrant. Pa.R. Crim.P. 101(3).
. Appellant claims that an officer may.only rely on the information possessed by another officer to supply probable cause when that officer is a superior and orders the arrest. We agree that the case authority in Pennsylvania has arisen in this context, but we do not find that this is a necessary prerequisite. Indeed, in
Whiteley v. Warden of Wyoming Penitentiary,
. We note that the United States Supreme Court recently prohibited police from making warrantless, nonconsensual entries into the homes of suspects for the purpose of effecting routine felony arrests.
Payton v. New York,
