The evidence which we must accept in passing on the issue of probable cause for arrest presented here shows that in the early morning hours two men ran when a police scout car came on the scene, that immediate subsequent search of the area disclosed the robbery of a liquor store, and that within one half hour after their initial encounter, the police recognized one of the men, appellant here, getting into a car in a parking lot behind the looted store and arrested him. While agreeing with appellant that flight produces probative evidence of a low order, 1 we think that this evidence in its totality is sufficient to establish probable cause for arrest.
The issue as to the admissibility of the evidence found in the trunk of the car is more difficult. The Government seeks to justify the search of the trunk as an incident to appellant’s arrest. Appellant argues that the search without warrant was illegal since the trunk was locked, the car keys were turned over to the police, and hence there was no danger that, after being arrested, he “could have used any weapons in the car or could have destroyed any evidence of a crime Preston v. United States,
Preston
did hold that a warrantless car search subsequent to an arrest was illegal, but there the search was not an incident to the arrest. It occurred at the police station to which both the parties arrested and the car had been brought. Thus the search “was too remote in time or place to have been made as incidental
*753
to the arrest * * Preston v. United States,
supra,
We recognize, of course, the logic in appellant’s argument. After his arrest there was no danger from unseen weapons or of evidence disappearing from the locked trunk of the car. The
status quo
with respect to the trunk could have been maintained until a search warrant was issued, particularly since the ear itself was impounded by the police.
Cf.
Johnson v. United States,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Wong Sun v. United States,
