OPINION
The offense is possession of heroin'; the punishment, 20 years.
Appellant’s first ground of error is that the trial court, in the presence of the jury, heard evidence which was hearsay on the issue of probable cause contrary to our holding in Ramos v. State, Tex.Cr.App.,
His next three grounds of error relate to the court’s refusal to permit appellant to go behind the search warrant, and test the reliability and credibility of the informer. This is, as the writer views it, the most serious question in the case.
Appellant sought to elicit from the officer who executed the affidavit for the search warrant the dates on which his unnamed “reliable informant” had previously given him information about other narcotics transactions. His contention is that the affidavit was false and a fraud upon the court, and he alleges if he had been permitted to ask the officer — affiant for such information he would have been able to prove the alleged fraud. The only basis for his contention is that the affidavit in the case at bar is similar to the affidavits which this Court approved in Acosta v. State, Tex.Cr.App.,
While the date on which the information gave the officer his last information prior to the occasion in question might not have disclosed the name of his informant, the second question, or the third, which inevitably would have followed, would certainly have made the identity of the informant known. The court was confronted with the problem of when to halt the interrogation and allow the State to assert the testimonial privilege. Since no claim was then nor is now made that the identity of this informant should have been made known under the rule announced by the Supreme Court of the United States in Roviaro v. United States,
It should be noted here that in McCray v. State of Illinois,
Instead of proving that the officers have committed perjury, the similarity of the affidavits as noted above may naturally follow from the fact that the officers have tailored their investigative procedures to comply with the holding of this Court in Acosta, supra.
*833 This record fails to support appellant’s assertion that the judge abdicated his judicial function to the execution branch of the government when the officer-affiant failed to give any further information about his informant because he had been instructed by the prosecutor not to do so. The record reveals that the Court asked for and presumably received briefs from both parties before ruling on the request that the officer-affiant be required to give further information.
The warrant was not defective as to appellant because it failed to name him as a resident of the described premises. As in Moreno v. State,
Appellant’s next three grounds of error complain of the admission of evidence seized in the execution of the search warrant. In view of what we said above, sustaining the trial court’s finding of the search warrant’s validity, the evidence seized under such warrant was admissible.
His eighth ground of error is that the court erred in declining to suppress the oral confession of appellant, who was not warned as required by Miranda v. State of Arizona,
Finding no reversible error, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
