This appeal from the judgment of conviction of possession of narcotics, raises the issue of whether the *714 trial judge erred in refusing to suppress as evidence the cocaine which the accused was charged with possessing.
The testimony at the suppression hearing was to the following effect. At about 3 a.m. on September 4, 1971, two City of Atlanta police patrolmen observed an automobile illegally parked (blocking one lane of traffic) at a location in the city at which there had been numerous burglaries and reports of drug traffic recently. In response to questioning by the policemen as to why they were there, the two occupants of the car said that they didn’t know where the owner of the car was, and they moved the car when requested to do so. The policemen drove around in that general vicinity and, when they returned in 5-10 minutes with their car lights off, they observed the other car, about 100 feet from its original location, again illegally parked (within 10 feet of an intersection). The policemen observed the accused standing on the sidewalk about 75 feet from the other car and as they approached, he began to run toward the other car, carrying a "small bag” in his hands. As he neared the other- car, the policemen turned on their bright headlights and, from only 10-15 feet away, they saw him drop the "bag” alongside the right rear portion of his car before he crouched over, preparatory to attempting to get into the car. The policemen yelled to him to stop before he got into the car, had both of the occupants of the car get out and place their hands on the car, and ásked the accused what he had dropped. When he denied having dropped anything, the policemen picked up the item dropped (a cigarette box containing glassine packets of a white, powdery substance subsequently identified as cocaine). At this time the accused was placed under arrest and was subsequently charged with possession of narcotics. Held:
There is nothing unlawful in the government’s appropriation of abandoned property, which does not constitute a search or seizure in the legal sense. Abel v. United States,
The appellant contends that the acts of the policemen, based solely on suspicion, coerced him into discarding the contraband. “The flight of one seeing a police officer who he has reason to think may be about to accuse him of a specific offense, even though the officer has no authority to make an arrest, and even though the suspect does not know whether or not he intends to attempt to arrest him, may be shown as indication of a sense of guilt.
Grant v. State,
The trial court did not err in refusing to suppress the evidence or in entering the judgment on the verdict, which was supported by the evidence.
Judgment affirmed.
