This is an appeal from convictions for robbery, assault, and assault with a deadly weapon.
Twenty-five minutes after the robbery had been committed Appellant, who fit a description broadcast by police radio, was seen by Officers Crist and Grove standing next to a car which was stopped in an alley approximately 40-50 yards from where the complainants had last seen their assailants; the hood of the car was raised and Appellant and another were charging 1 the battery. The interior light was on and doors of the car were open. The officers approached on foot and asked the two what they were doing, to which they replied that they were trying to start the car. Upon request Appellant promptly produced registration for the vehicle and his driver’s license.
As the officers walked around to the side of Appellant’s car, Officer Crist saw a green alligator wallet; such a wallet had been reported as taken from one of the complainants. Officer Grove also spotted the wallet while standing outside the car. When the wallet was taken from the car police then observed a pipe-type spark-plug wrench similar to the weapon described as used during the robbery; the Officers then placed Appellant and his companion in a police-wagon.
Appellant contends that the wallet and the wrench were obtained through an illegal search and seizure. He points to discrepancies between testi
*373
mony offered by the two police officers and urges that the testimony relied on by the District Court on the issue of probable cause was so “inherently incredible” as to be unworthy of belief. We have often noted, however, that the fact of inconsistencies among witnesses does not require that the testimony be rejected by a trier or triers of fact, but is simply a factor to be considered. Moreover, the undisputed facts concerning events which preceded the discovery of the challenged evidence furnished ample justification for a continuing police investigation. Conditioned by their observations of Appellant and information concerning the crime reported to them, and guided by the whole of their experience, we think it was entirely reasonable for the police to pursue inquiry as they did.
See
Davis v. United States,
Appellant’s claim that there was no probable cause to support the seizure of the incriminating evidence is without merit. The Fourth Amendment protects that which an individual seeks to “preserve as private.”
E. g.,
Katz v. United States,
Appellant’s argument relating to the legality of the arrest is likewise without merit. The announcement of arrest occurred after the police had found the wallet and wrench; surely at this point the police had sufficient basis to believe that the crime which had just been reported had probably been committed by Appellant and his companion. Appellant contends, however, that although unannounced, the arrest must be said to- have occurred as soon as the police first approached the car.
3
See
Henry v. United States,
In assessing the propriety of the procedures used here we abide by the Supreme Court’s teaching that the soundest “course is to * * * make the scope of the particular intrusion in light of all the exigencies of the case, a central element in the analysis of reasonableness.” Terry v. Ohio,
Having balanced Appellant’s interpretation of the events with what we find in the record, including information then known to the officers, we conclude that the evidence abundantly supports the finding that the police acted reasonably. Indeed, as this Court noted only very recently, “(w)e need not blindfold the police, nor ask them to abandon their experience when they encounter situations which call for the effective intervention they initiated here.” Davis v. United States, supra, at p. 460 of 406 F.2d.
Other claims of error asserted do not merit extended consideration. The judgment of the District Court is, therefore,
Affirmed.
J. SKELLY WRIGHT, Circuit Judge, concurs in the result only.
Notes
. Two batteries were involved, and it is possible that Appellant and his companion were changing rather than charging the battery.
.
See
Dorsey v. United States, 125 U.S. App.D.C. 355, 357-358,
. Appellee seems to concede for purposes of certain parts of its argument that the arrest may be said to have occurred when the police approached the car.
. “Detention of a witness for the purpose of asking questions is not necessarily an arrest. * * * ” Fuller v. United States,
