The district court found appellant guilty of possessing less than twenty-eight grams of heroin and assessed punishment at imprisonment for twenty years. Texas Controlled Substances Act, Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 481.115 (West 1992). In two points of error, appellant urges that the herоin was unlawfully seized and that the court erred by admitting it in evidence after overruling his motion to suppress.
On the afternoon in question, Austin police officer Troy Gay was on patrol in the 1700 block of East First Street when he saw a male pedestrian flag down a passing vehicle. As the officer watched, a passenger in this vehicle gave the man cash in exchange for an object the man took from his mouth. Believing he had witnessed an unlawful sale of narcotics, the officer arrested both parties. Officers Jimmy Cardenas and Ronald Lara responded to Gay’s call for assistance.
At the hearing on appellant’s motion to suppress, Cardenas testified that, after his arrest, the man on the street told the officers he knew “where we can get a lot more heroin than what we’re speaking of now.” The man then described “a house where he knew some other people were, at that specific moment, in possession of some heroin.” Cardenas continued:
He told us, as we had been speaking to him, that Mr. Joe Guzman was in possession of heroin at the time, and he had walked right by us. We weren’t concerned with him at the time. He wasn’t involved in the actual stop, you know, so he wasn’t questioned during this. We looked for him, and of course, he had already walked away.
So as we continued to speak to him [the informer], myself and Officer Lara, we called for two senior sergeant narcotics officers to come to the scene because at this specific time we were talking about a housе which supposedly had heroin, and we were going to try [to] figure out, you know, what our next step was going to be.
Q. (By Ms. Crosby) [prosecutor] And what happened then?
A. Well, what happened next is the two other officers — senior sergeants, arrived. While we were talking to them about the information we had, I think Lara was still with the Cl which was giving us the information, and he had described Joe Guzman at the time as being an older gentleman, small Hispanic male, wearing a brown leather jacket.
While I was still conversing with the other senior sergeant, about this time Officer Lara said, “There he is. Thеre he is.”
Apparently the informant had said, “There goes Joe. That’s the guy I was talking to you about earlier.” So apparently Mr. Guzman and another gentleman were walking by us again, and we started walking towards them, you know, in a hurriedly manner.
Q. And what did he do?
*128 A. I told him to stop. I said, “Hey, stop.” He kind of turned and looked at us and started walking a little faster! 1 So we ran up to him, and as I ran up to him, I could see him swallowing, you know, like you swallow — you could see his throat swallowing something.
Q. What did you do when you observed that?
A. When I saw that, I immediately figured he was swallowing the heroin which the othеr gentleman told us about. He told us that he had balloons in his mouth.
Q. And after you saw the swallowing motion and you formed your opinion as to what he was doing, what did you do next?
A. Well, I immediately went for his throat, and I grabbed him around his throat, and I told him, you know, “Spit it out. Spit it out.” He keрt trying — I could feel him trying to swallow again, so I squeezed a little harder, and I started to take him down, you know, face first towards the ground, telling him, “Spit it out. Spit it out.” He finally spit out three small balloons.
Appellant was transported to a hospital where his stomach was pumped and one more balloon was recovered. The balloons were later found to contain heroin.
Appellant contends the heroin should have been suppressed because it was seized pursuant to and as a result of an unlawful warrant-less arrest. Tex.Code Crim.Proc.Ann. art. 38.23 (West Supp.1993). The State responds that the arrest was authorized by article 14.01 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, which permits a police officer to arrest an offender without warrant when the offense is committed in the officer’s presence. Tex. Code Crim.Proe.Ann. art. 14.01 (West 1977). 2
An officer may arrest a person pursuant to article 14.01 only if there is probable cause with respect to that person.
Stull v. State,
The officers testified that they had never seen the informеr before the afternoon in question, and there is no evidence that he had previously given the police reliable information.
3
The State cites cases holding that the police may act immediately upon information furnished by a witness to a crime without first investigating the reliability and credibility of that witness.
Frazier v. State,
An officer may rely on information received from an informer if that information is reasonably corroborated by other matters within the officer’s knowledge or by the officer’s subsequent investigation.
Illinois v. Gates,
As further corroborative evidence, the State cites the officers’ testimony that the area in which the incident occurred was known for drug dealing. The officers did not testify, however, that this was an area frequented only or mostly by drug dealers and users. A person found in a high-crime area does not for that reason have a lesser right than others to be free from detention or arrest.
Conner v. State,
Finally, thе State argues that the informer’s tip was corroborated by the officers’ observations at the scene. The informer told the officers that Joe Guzman, a Hispanic man wearing a brown coat, was selling heroin on East First Street. Moments later, apрellant, who apparently matched this description, walked past the patrol ear. In an analogous case, however, this Court held that the corroboration of facts apparent to any passer-by adds little to an informer’s credibility. Id. at 262.
The State also relies on the testimony that appellant swallowed after seeing the officers. Swallowing, of course, is a normal body function and is not usually a sign that a person is engaged in criminal activity. To conclude that appellant’s swallowing corroborated the informer’s tip and gave the officers probable cause to arrest him requires the application of circular reasoning: the swallowing was a suspicious act in light of the tip, and the tip was reliable because оf the suspicious swallowing.
The State cites three opinions in support of its contention that appellant was lawfully arrested:
Hernandez v. State,
In
Hernandez,
the only issue presented was whether officers having probаble cause to believe that the defendant had contraband in his mouth acted lawfully when they wrestled the defendant to the ground and choked him until he spit out four balloons. The court held that the officers’ actions were proper.
In
Gonzales,
the court held that the police officers’ observation of the defendant’s attempt to conceal balloons in his mouth, together with their knowledge that balloоns are used to carry heroin in the manner observed, was sufficient to authorize the defendant’s immediate arrest and the contemporaneous seizure of the balloons.
*130
In
Sanders,
a police officer who had made many narcotics arrests saw the defendant, a pedestrian, engage in a transaction with a passing motorist. Based on his experience, the officer believed he had witnessed a crack cocaine sale. As the officer approached the defendant, he saw him place the contents of a matchbox into his mouth. The officer knew that drug dealers commonly keep cоntraband in matchboxes. The court held that the officer had probable cause to arrest the defendant without a warrant, and acted properly in placing his arm around the defendant’s throat to prevent the destruction of the evidence.
In
Conner,
this Court dealt with facts similar to those now before us. Police officers received information from an informer of unknown credibility that the defendant was selling contraband at a particular location. The officers went to that location and confirmed the defendant’s presence, but did not sеe him commit any act suggestive of criminality. The officers did know that the defendant had been previously arrested for possession of cocaine and that the neighborhood in question was a high-crime area. When the officers approached the defendant, he turned and walked away. This Court held that these facts, and the reasonable inferences from these facts, did not give the officers an adequate basis for detaining the defendant.
An investigating officer’s hunch, suspicion, or good faith рerception is not alone sufficient to constitute probable cause for an arrest.
Stull,
The judgment of conviсtion is reversed and the cause is remanded to the district court.
Notes
. In his testimony at trial, Cardenas stated that at this point in the confrontation, he asked appellant what he had in his mouth. Cardenas also testified at trial that it is common for heroin dealers tо carry the drug in their mouths packaged in small balloons, and to swallow the balloons when approached by the police.
. The State concedes, as it did below, that appellant was arrested when the officer seized him by the throat.
See
Tex.Code Crim.Proc.Ann. art. 15.22 (West 1977);
Burkes v. State,
.The informer is truly anonymous. His name does not appear in any report and the officers could not remember it. None of the officers had seen him since the afternoon in question. Efforts by the police to locate the informer were unsuccessful, and his identity and whereabouts were unknown at the time of appellant’s trial.
