OPINION
Mack Henry Gaines, Appellant, brings this appeal from an order denying his motion to suppress, following which he waived his right to a jury trial and pled guilty to the offense of burglary in accordance with a plea bargain. Punishment was assessed at imprisonment for a term of 25 years.
In this appeal, Appellant cоntends that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress because the evidence failed to show that the officer arresting without a warrant had probable cause to believe that Appellant had committed a felony. Appellant, characterizing the initial stop and detention as аn arrest, argues in three points of error that the arresting officer lacked probable cause for his arrest and therefore the out-of-court identification, his statement and other evidence supporting his conviction were fruits of *507 an illegal search and seizure and should have been inadmissible. We affirm.
Following indictment and prior to the date set for trial, Appellant filed his motion to suppress all evidence obtained as a result of the “illegal and unconstitutional search and seizure” which occurred when the car in which he was a passenger was stopped and he and the driver “were illegally arrested without authority, without probable cause, and without an arrest warrant.” After hearing the testimony from both state and defense witnesses, the court denied the motion.
Appellant, relying on
Amores v. State,
RELEVANT FACTS
On April 29, 1993 at around 7:15 a.m., Michеlle Boudreaux arrived at her office building in Houston. Finding that the door to her office had been broken open, she looked through a window into her office and observed two black men, standing in a brightly lit storage room, stuffing items into a bag. Realizing that her office was being burglarized, she went downstairs to call the police. On her way to call the police, Bou-dreaux encountered James Scott, a person who worked on another floor, and told him that there was a burglary in progress in her office.
While Boudreaux was calling the police, Scott witnessed two black men walk out of the building carrying a canvas bag and drive off in a yellow Honda Civic automobile. In her 911 emergency call, Boudreaux informed the police of her name, the address of the office budding, and that a burglary had occurred, involving two black men. She also relayed the information provided by Scott of what he had observed. As a result оf a police radio call broadcasting the information given by Boudreaux and Scott, Deputy Sheriff Gwosdz, who was driving a patrol car in the northbound lanes of Bammel North Houston Road at approximately 7:30 that same morning, spotted an automobile and occupants matching the description headed southbound on the same road. Gwosdz immediately turned his vehicle around, pursued the Honda and pulled it over. Upon coming to a stop, Ronald Ray Busby 1 the driver of the Honda, immediately stepped out of the vehicle. The passenger slumped down in his seat. Gwosdz told Busby to remain where he was and ordered the passenger, later identified as Appellant herein, out of the Honda. Before approaching the vehicle, Gwosdz was advised in a supplemental broadcast that the suspects would be in possession of a canvas bag containing the stolen items. Neither Busby nor Appellant was able to produce a driver’s license or other identification in response to Gwosdz’ request. Gwosdz proceeded to arrest Busby for driving without a license and Appellant as a suspect in a burglary until he could be identified. Before arresting the two men, Gwosdz drew his gun on them. After handcuffing both men and placing them in separate patrol ears, Gwosdz went to the Honda and observed a canvas bag in plain view on its backseat. Appellant and Busby were transported back to the burglarized building where, after they had been read their rights, Scott identified them as the men he had observed leaving the building with the canvas bag. From her office window, Boudreaux also tentatively identified the two men as the ones she had seen inside her office suite. Shortly thereafter, she made a positive identification from polaroid photos taken by an officer at that time. Later at a substation, Appellant, after again being read his rights, gave a written statement to Detective William Moore of the Sheriffs Department.
MOTION TO SUPPRESS
In a hearing on a motion to suppress, the trial judge is the sole and exclusive trier of fact and judge of credibility of wit
*508
nesses including the weight to be given their testimony.
Romero v. State,
INVESTIGATIVE DETENTION v. ARREST
Facts known by the officer which fall short of probable cause for an arrest mаy still justify a temporary investigation or detention because such investigation or detention is a lesser intrusion on an individual’s privacy than an arrest.
Terry v. Ohio,
*509
A person may be temporarily detained for investigative purposes where circumstances short of prоbable cause at the inception of the detention exist.
Dickey v. State,
Prior to the time he initially stopped and detained Appellant, Gwosdz had received information through the police broadcast that: (1) a burglary had occurred in the vicinity a matter of minutes before the broadcast; (2) the suspects were two black males; (3) the suspects had driven off in a late model yellow Honda Civic automobile; and (4) the suspects were last seen traveling south on Bammel North Houston Road. The record affirmatively shows that Boudreaux identified hеrself to the dispatcher.
See Esco,
It must next be determined whether Gwosdz diligently and reasonably pursued his investigation, using the least intrusive methods available to verify or dispel his suspicions and whether at the point the detention ripened into an arrest of the two men, he had in his possession from the radio transmission and from his investigation sufficient grounds to justify an arrest without a warrant.
In determining whether the police conduct in an investigatory detention is reasonable the totality of the circumstances are reviewed.
Shaffer v. State,
After getting both men out of the Honda, Gwosdz requested Busby to produce his drivеr’s license- and both men to show some identification. Neither were able to do so. It was at this point that Gwosdz drew his pistol 2 and proceeded to arrest and handcuff them, putting Busby in the back of his patrol car and Appellant in the back of another *510 patrol car 3 with the intention of transporting them back to the burglary sсene for identification purposes. After securing the two men in the patrol cars, Gwosdz went over to the Honda, looked through the window and saw a canvas bag that matched the description in the supplemental broadcast.
Once a person or persons have been legally detainеd, an officer can make an arrest for any offense discovered during the investigative detention and may conduct a search incident to such lawful arrest.
Duncantell v. State,
In conclusion, we hold that Gwosdz had knowledge of sufficient articulable facts to justify the initial investigative stop and detention and that as result of those facts and what he learned from his investigation, he had probable causе to arrest both Busby and Appellant. Appellant’s first point of error is overruled. His second and third points, that the subsequent out-of-court identification and his written statement were fruits of an illegal warrantless arrest and therefore inadmissible, are for obvious reasons also overruled.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Notes
. Also known as Curtis Davis.
. Although Appellant arguеs that Deputy Gwosdz first “approached the Honda with his gun drawn," the record indicates only that he drew his gun before arresting the men, a reasonable inference being that he unholstered his gun only after he decided to arrest them.
. At some point after the initial stop, Gwosdz was joined by Deputy Morales in another patrol Car.
