Opinion
Appellant was charged with robbery, “use” of a firearm and it was alleged that he had suffered three prior felony convictions. He pled not guilty, denied the priors and his section 1538.5 motion was denied. Appellant was found guilty of attempted robbery in the second degree. The allegation concerning use of a firearm was found not to be true. Appellant appeals from the judgment of conviction.
About 3:45 a.m., near Hollywood Boulevard, Martin Smith flagged down two policemen to tell them he had been robbed by a man with a gun one-half hour before. He described the robber as a male Negro with black hair, brown eyes, between 25 and 30 years of age, about 5 feet 8 inches in height, and wearing a three-quarter length brown leather jacket. The robbery had taken place on the street close to the Roxy Motel. The police went to the motel and saw a man who might be the suspect, but Mr. Smith confirmed that this was not the man who robbed him.
The man told the police that he knew about the robbery, that it was committed about 45 minutes earlier. He said the robber was a man named Tony, that Tony lived in room 48 of the Roxy Motel, and Tony had committed another robbery with a gun earlier that evening. The man said Tony knew the police were there, and Tony might attempt to use the gun on the police. The man told Officer Hall, “You’d better watch out because Tony is crazy.” Smith told Officer Hall that during the robbery he heard a person call, “Tony,” and in his opinion the person was yelling to the robber. In Officer Hall’s opinion the victim’s statement and the man’s statements corroborated each other because the statements agreed as to the time of robbery, the place of the robbery, and the use of the gun.
Officer Hall and his partner went to room 48, heard some voices within, kicked in the door and arrested appellant. Appellant was taken to the police vehicle where Smith saw appellant and stated, “That is the man who robbed me.”
*566 In describing the robbery Smith said he parked across from the Roxy Motel and got out of his car. He had planned to buy a book. Appellant pointed a gun at his neck and Smith tried to memorize appellant’s face. Smith pretended to be deaf and dumb, and then when people started walking on the street, Smith walked along with them. Smith walked into the motel, knocked on the door of a room and explained his situation to some occupants. When he looked down the hall he saw appellant. The occupants let Smith stay in their room and he could not call the police because the motel switchboard was closed. He hid there a half hour and then went out and found the police.
Prior to the arrest the police told the man who told them about Tony to stay with Smith by the police vehicle. The police then made the arrest and when they brought appellant to the vehicle the man already was gone. Smith said the other man “walked up the street towards Hollywood.” Then Smith spontaneously exited the vehicle and identified appellant.
During the booking process at the police station Officer Hall told appellant he was going to take appellant’s money and place it in evidence. Appellant then said, “I didn’t get any money from that guy who was deaf and dumb.” No one had previously told appellant that during the course of the crime the victim pretended to be deaf and dumb.
Appellant testified that he overheard Smith tell the police that the robber did not get any money because he played deaf and dumb. Appellant claimed that the leather jacket found in his room by the police belonged to his roommate.
I
Appellant argues that there is no probable cause for arrest where the informant’s reliability is not established. In the case at bar the police first learned the details of the crime and the description of the robber from the victim of the crime, Smith, and not from the anonymous informant. Victims of a criminal act, absent some circumstances that would cast doubt upon their information, should be considered reliable. Probable cause will not be provided by conclusionary information or anonymous informants, but neither a previous demonstration of reliability nor subsequent corroboration is ordinarily necessary when witnesses to or victims of criminal activities report their observations in
*567
detail to the authorities.
(People
v.
Ramey
(1976)
However, the police also had corroborative information from an anonymous informant. When the police went to the area of the crime, the Roxy Motel, the police then interrogated a man who said Tony in room 48 had committed another crime with a gun earlier that evening. The information given by the victim, Mr. Smith, when combined with the information given by the informant, provided ample probable cause for appellant’s arrest.
In
People
v.
Balassy
(1973)
II
Appellant argues that the officers violated Penal Code section 844 in their entry for arrest. Appellant argues that merely because the police had been informed that he had a gun without more was insufficient grounds for dispensing with the demand requirements of Penal Code section 844.
(People
v.
Bennetto
(1974)
Ill
Appellant argues that the state’s failure to give appellant the informant’s name and address violates due process. The police and the district attorney are required to make a reasonable effort in good faith to locate the informer.
(Eleazar
v.
Superior Court
(1970)
IV
Appellant’s final contention is that admission into evidence of his statement that he did not rob the man because the man was deaf and dumb violated his rights under
Miranda
v.
Arizona
(1969)
Further, the evidence shows that, appellant volunteered his statement during the booking process and that the statement was not a product of a process of interrogation designed to elicit incriminating evidence. Where a statement was volunteered and gratuitously interject
*569
ed during a conversation between two police officers while a defendant was being booked under circumstances which could not be construed as an attempt to elicit information from the defendant, the statement was admissible although there was no
Miranda
warning.
(People
v.
Siegenthaler
(1972)
The judgment is affirmed.
Files, P. J., and Dunn, J., concurred.
