Appellant was convicted of possession of a dangerous drug in violation of D.C.Code § 33-702(a)(4) (1973), in a stipulated trial after the trial court denied her pretrial motion to suppress evidence. Appellant argues that the trial court erred in denying her suppression motion because she maintains the police lacked probable cause to search her after they arrested her upon an informant’s tip.
The informant called a police detective with a description of a woman who he advised the detective had been selling narcotics inside a liquor store at Twelfth and U Street, N.W. About five minutes after receiving the phone call, three officers arrived at the liquor store and saw appellant, who matched the description the informant had given of the drug seller, leaving the store. She was detained, searched, and two tablets of illegal drugs were discovered in her gloves.
Appellant moved pretrial to suppress the physical evidence because she
*686
argued, based on
Aguilar v. Texas,
The Court’s concern in
Gates
was that the two-prong analysis had become overly technical and unduly rigid, with each prong serving as an entirely separate and independent requirement. Yet, the “probable cause standard is a ‘practical nontechnical conception.’ ”
Illinois v. Gates, supra,
[t]he task of the issuing magistrate is simply to make a practical, commonsense decision whether given all the circumstances set forth in the affidavit before him, including the “veracity” and “basis of knowledge” of persons supplying hearsay information, there is a fair probability that contraband or evidence of a crime will be found in a particular place. And the duty of a reviewing court is simply to insure that the magistrate had a “substantial basis for ... concluding]” that probable cause existed. Id. at 2332 (citation omitted).
We read
Gates
to affirm the significant value of corroboration by details contained in an informant’s tip. Moreover, the Court noted that “innocent behavior frequently will provide the basis for a showing of probable cause; to require otherwise would be to
sub silentio
impose a drastically more rigorous definition of probable cause than the security of our citizens demand.”
Id.
*687 In examining the facts in the present case, we note that the police officers testified at the suppression hearing as follows: the informant had given information on at least nine occasions, and on each of these occasions the information led to arrests and the recovery of narcotics; the detective who received the tip in this case was personally involved in four of the nine cases with this informant; the detective knew that other officers in his unit considered the informant to be reliable; and, the detectives, minutes after receiving the tip, observed appellant and she matched the description given by the informant of a black female, wearing a blue coat, blue pants and weighing approximately 140 to 150 pounds, thus corroborating the innocent details of the tip.
In addition, there was testimony in the record that the informant revealed in his tip to the detective the basis of his knowledge: that he had seen the subject selling narcotics.
Given these facts of record we are per- • suaded there was support for the trial court to conclude the existence of probable cause. Accordingly, the trial court properly denied the motion to suppress and admitted the evidence against appellant. Therefore, her judgment must be and is
Affirmed.
Notes
.The instant case involved a warrantless search rather than a search warrant. However, the same analysis to determine probable cause would be applicable here as it applies to the issuance of a search warrant.
Whiteley v. Warden,
.
United States v. Johnson,
. In
United States v. Davis,
