Appellants were convicted of the offense of transporting obscene material interstate (from Portland, Oregon, to Tacoma, Washington) in violation of 18 U.S.C.A. § 1465. On the appeal they contend only that the trial court erred in admitting the obscene material in that it had been illegally seized in violation of the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution.
Following is in summary the train of events leading up to the arrest and seizure. Appellant Weise was known to the agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation as a dealer in pornographic material and of having a record of convictions as such. On March 15, 1956, he was under agency surveillance at Los Angeles. On that date he and appellant French left Los Angeles in the former’s car, which was observed to be heavily loaded. FBI agents followed them to San Francisco where Weise told an agency informer that he had pornographic material for sale. While in San Francisco appellants were observed making calls at novelty shops which were known to deal in obscene material. At each call packages were removed from the car and delivered to the shop or store. Agents in Oakland and Sacramento observed similar activities of appellants in those cities.
Appellants then drove to Portland, where they were again placed under sur *868 veillance by the FBI and were observed as before taking packages into stores known to deal in obscenity. On the night of March 17 appellants left Portland and traveled to Tacoma, being constantly under surveillance. Meanwhile Agent Hei(ner in Seattle, who had been kept advised of the activities through normal agency channels, filed a complaint charging violation of the relevant statute, the charge being lodged with United States Commissioner Bums in Seattle, who issued a warrant of arrest thereon. Simultaneously Agent Ralston in Tacoma was briefed on the above facts in a 45-minute phone conversation with the Seattle agent. Ralston undertook surveillance of appellants’ car as it passed through Olympia and followed it to Tacoma. He personally observed that the car in question was heavily loaded and contained cardboard boxes piled on the back seat. In Tacoma appellants were stopped and placed under arrest. The boxes were seized incident to the arrest and were found to contain some 60,000 photographs and various other pornographic material.
The seizures were made without a search warrant. However, as indicated above, they were incident to the arrest of appellants, and if the arrests were lawful, the seizures were lawful. Marron v. United States,
The cases cited for this proposition are United States v. Tureaud, D.C.1884,
In Brinegar v. United States,
See further the holding of the Third Circuit in the analogous case of United States v. Bianco,
Affirmed.
