The affidavit submitted to the judicial officer as the basis for issuing the search warrant in the case of defendant Johnston reads as follows: "On August 26, 1969, an informer told officers that subject had in his room and automobile above described a large quantity of narcotic and dangerous drugs not obtained on prescription. Upon checking, officers determined that this informer was in a position to have seen these narcotic drugs as described by him. Officers also determined that this subject was in the office of Dr. Reese Eberhardt on Houston Avenue on August 25, 1969, and requested narcotic drugs of Dr. Eberhardt, but was refused. Officers also checked and determined that this subject does have a lodging at Room No. 219 at said Howard Johnson’s Motor Lodge.
"Officers learned that Johnston was accompanied to Dr. Eberhardt’s office by Mike Russell who was staying in Room 217 of the Howard Johnson’s Motor Lodge, and that Mike Russell used the same name, age and address as that of subject.
"It was from the informer that officers learned of the visit to Dr. Eberhardt’s office.”
The affidavit in defendant Russell’s case is identical, with the exceptions that his room number is specified as No. 217 and the penultimate paragraph reads as follows: "Officers also learned that while subject was in Dr. Eberhardt’s office he used the name of John Johnston and the same age and address as John Johnston who was at the time staying in Room 219 of the said Howard Johnson’s Motor Lodge and who accompanied him to Dr. Eberhardt’s office.”
*389
(a) Appellants object that the above affidavits contain no data as to informer reliability. ". . . [Wjhere the officer relies upon an informant he must give sufficient information of the underlying circumstances from which he concluded that the informant was reliable. [Cits.] In his affidavit should appear a recital of what the informant actually said, and why the officer thought that the information was credible
(Peters v. State,
As to the contention that the affidavits contain no underlying facts as to how the informant obtained his information, the only reasonable inference from the statements, that the informant had stated that the defendants had the illicit drugs and that it had been determined that he had been in a position to have seen them, is that he had personally observed the things about which
*390
he told the police officers. Such an inference as to informant reliability can be made when the magistrate is confronted with such detail (Spinelli v. United States,
It is also contended that the affidavits lack data as to the time when the informant obtained his information. "A 'prime element in the concept of probable cause is the time of the occurrence of the facts relied upon.’
Fowler v. State,
*391
On page 419, the Spinelli case stated as follows: "In holding as we have done, we do not retreat from the established propositions that only the probability, and not a prima facie showing, of criminal activity is the standard of probable cause, Beck v. Ohio,
The facts as stated in the affidavits, taken as true, constitute a sufficient showing of probable cause. See
Campbell v. State,
(b) We must now decide the question of whether or not the sworn evidence before the judicial officer, considered in its totality, justified the issuance of the search warrant. Campbell v. State, supra, p. 886.
The affiant testified, at page 8 of the transcript of evidence, that he gave the following sworn oral testimony to the judicial officer: That the informant told the affiant that he had personally observed the narcotics; that the officers had checked different places and with different people to verify the truth of the informant’s statements; that the officers determined from the motel register that the defendants had checked into the motel some three days prior to the search; that the informant knew the automobiles and the correct numbers of the rooms the defendants had rented; that the officers had personally conversed with Dr. Eberhardt and learned from him that the defendants were examined by Dr. Eberhardt, who was suspicious because of faked symptoms on the part of one of them, their request for strong pain killing drugs, and because both of them gave the same name; that affiant had given the informant’s name to the judicial officer; and that the informant had in fact described the narcotics. The fact that the informant told the affiant that the drugs were either in the cars or in the rooms, does not show that the information was not timely or *392 reliable, since the drugs could have been, and apparently were, so easily and quickly transferred from one location to the other. The above was a sufficient showing of probable cause to justify the issuance of search warrants.
Appellants attack the constitutionality of
Code Ann.
§79A-903 (b, 3) (Ga. L. 1967, pp. 296, 344; Ga. L. 1970, pp. 470, 471), which forms the basis of Count 2 of both indictments and which provides as follows: "(b) The term 'depressant or stimulant drug’ means: ... 3. Any drug which contains any quantity of a substance designated by
present
regulations promulgated under the
Federal Act
as having potential for abuse because of its depressant or stimulant effect on the central nervous system or its hallucinogenic effect.” (Emphasis supplied.) It is contended that this statute, construed in pari materia with
Code Ann.
§ 79A-102 (g) (Ga. L. 1967, pp. 296, 299), which defines "Federal Act” so as to include all amendments to and all regulations promulgated by the Commissioner of the Federal Food and Drug Administration under the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act of the United States of America, is an invalid delegation of legislative power to Congress in that it undertakes to make future Federal legislation a part of the law of this State upon that subject. See
Featherstone v. Norman,
*393 Furthermore, the amendment to the Federal Act which expressly included the drug LSD as a "depressant or stimulant drug,” was enacted in 1966, hence was a part of the Federal Act at the time of its adoption by the Georgia General Assembly in 1967.
The enumerated error on the overruling of the motion for a new trial is not argued, hence is deemed abandoned.
The court did not err in its judgment for any reason urged.
Judgment affirmed.
