Defendant was convicted by a jury of conspiracy to sell marijuana (MCLA 750.157a; MSA 28.354[1]; MCLA 335.152; MSA 18.1122), unlawful possession of marijuana (MCLA 335.153; MSA 18.1123), and unlawful control of marijuana (MCLA 335.153; MSA 18.1123). He was originally sentenced to 20 to 25 years in prison for conspiracy, and concurrent sentences of 8 to 10 years in prison were imposed on the other counts. Prior to submission to this panel, defendant’s convictions for possession and control of marijuana were vacated by the trial judge pursuant to his interpretation of
People v Sinclair,
On appeal defendant challenges the legality of his arrest without a warrant. Prior to his arrest, defendant approached Michael Conley and asked *423 his assistance in a venture involving transportation of marijuana from Kansas and Missouri to Michigan. Conley contacted police and revealed the plan. Conley then rented a car, and drove defendant and others out of Michigan in search of marijuana fields. They were successful. Before the group returned with seven burlap bags of harvested marijuana, Conley twice called police in Michigan informing them of progress of the venture. Conley told police the color, year, make and model of his rented car, its license number as well as approximately when and on what route they would traverse Van Burén County.
Police were waiting for them, stopped the car, arrested the occupants for possession of marijuana, and found approximately 127 pounds of freshly harvested marijuana in the car.
Defendant contends the police had sufficient advance warning of his arrival to allow them to obtain arrest warrants prior to the actual arrest. The law, however, provides a police officer may arrest a person without a warrant when he has probable cause to believe a felony has been committed and probable cause to believe such person has committed it. MCLA 764.15; MSA 28.874;
People v Sansoni,
This case presents more than an arrest based on an anonymous tip. See
People v Guertins,
No issue of the search following the arrest is raised on appeal; we decline to discuss it.
Since defendant now stands convicted of only conspiracy to sell marijuana, we consider his challenge to the validity of prior statutes prohibiting possession and control of marijuana and prescribing punishment for offenders not at issue. Defendant’s challenge that the several counts of the information were misjoined is also without merit since all charges arose out of the same transaction and were so connected in their separate facts that much of the same testimony supported the differing charges.
People v Bird,
The evidence supporting the conspiracy charge was sufficient to warrant the finding of guilt. The *425 jury could reasonably find from the evidence at trial that defendant intended to sell at least some of the 127 pounds of marijuana and would pay his confederates with the proceeds. The jury could infer the existence of the agreement necessary to the charge from the prior preparation and planning engaged in by the parties and disregard the denials of defendant’s alleged coconspirators. While it may have been designed that only defendant would sell the marijuana, the prior combination and agreement to receive proceeds by those involved was reasonably established and certainly points to the existence of the charged conspiracy.
While it is clear the trial judge considered defendant’s juvenile record in imposing the 20-year minimum sentence, that sentence has since been vacated. Defendant has received a substantially reduced penalty, and at resentencing it did not appear that the trial court relied on defendant’s juvenile record but instead noted his marked progress toward rehabilitation as justification for the reduction. In this posture, no interpretation of
People v McFarlin,
Affirmed.
