Louis CRAWLEY, Jr.
v.
STATE.
Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama.
*1149 Virginia A. Vinson, Birmingham, for appellant.
Charles A. Graddick, Atty. Gen., and Helen P. Nelson, Asst. Atty. Gen., for appellee.
Alabama Supreme Court 82-1091.
BOWEN, Presiding Judge.
The defendant was indicted and convicted for the unlawful possession of pentazocine. Sentence was twenty years' imprisonment as an habitual offender.
On appeal the defendant argues that there was no probable cause for the initial stop.
Birmingham Police Lieutenant Charles H. Akins testified that on April 8, 1982, while he was driving toward the police station, Reverend Hamilton, the pastor of a church, "ran up and hollered ... and he pointed out a pickup truck that had stolen a battery out of a parking lot of the church." Hamilton was running from the parking lot. Lieutenant Akins stopped the truck in which three people were riding. The driver got out and approached the officer. Lieutenant Akins searched him for weapons. As the officer turned towards the passenger side of the vehicle to look for the battery, the defendant got out of the truck. The lieutenant searched the defendant for weapons and found a hard object in his pocket which "could have been a knife." The object was a medicine bottle which Lieutenant Akins opened, observing tablets which he recognized as "T's" and "Blues". The defendant was then placed under arrest. The tablets contained the controlled substance pentazocine, commonly referred to as talwin.
The defendant contends that the arrest was without probable cause because the two-pronged test of Aguilar v. Texas,
The courts have drawn a distinction between the "criminal" or "underworld" informant and the average citizen who by happenstance finds himself in the position of a victim of or a witness to criminal conduct and thereafter relates to the police what he knows as a matter of civic duty. W. LaFave, 1 Search and Seizure, Section 3.4 (1978). The veracity of the "citizen-informant" is easily established, for "the police should be permitted to assume that they are dealing with a credible person in the absence of special circumstances suggesting that such might not be case." 1 Search at 592 and vol. 3 at 82. Establishing the citizen-informant's basis of knowledge presents no major problem. "Eyewitnesses by definition are not passing along idle rumor, for they either have been the victims of the crime or have otherwise seen some portion of it." United States v. Bell,
However, to stop a person for questioning or investigatory detention does not require probable cause. Terry v. Ohio,
"A policeman who lacks the precise level of information necessary for probable cause to arrest is not required simply to shrug his shoulders and allow a crime to occur or a criminal to escape, and a brief stop of a suspicious individual, in order to determine his identity or to maintain the status quo momentarily while obtaining more information, may be most reasonable in the light of the facts known to the officer at the time."
6A C.J.S. Arrest, Section 38 (1975).
"This `reasonable cause' for a stop and frisk need not be based only on the officer's personal observation." Butler v. State,
The investigatory stopping in this case was justified by specific and articulable facts which, taken together with the rational inferences from those facts, reasonably warranted the intrusion. The officer was stopped by a known individual (as compared to an anonymous informant) who approached him and stated that a specific crime had just been committed by individuals in a particular truck which he pointed out to the officer. The officer's conduct was neither arbitrary nor harassing and the need for immediate action was imperative. Consequently, the initial detention was justified. See also United States v. Sierra-Hernandez,
Terry authorized a limited protective search for concealed weapons (a frisk) "(w)hen an officer is justified in believing that the individual whose suspicious behavior he is investigating at close range is armed and presently dangerous to the officer or to others."
The officer's frisk for self-protection was justified. He had a legitimate basis for stopping the vehicle and being in immediate proximity to its occupants. Terry,
Officer Akins stopped the truck on the suspicion that a theft of an automobile battery had been committed. The comments of People v. Myles,
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
All Judges concur.
*1151 ON REHEARING
BOWEN, Presiding Judge.
In Illinois v. Gates, ___ U.S. ___,
OPINION EXTENDED; APPLICATION FOR REHEARING OVERRULED.
All Judges concur.
