Opinion
In an information filed by the District Attorney of Los Angeles County defendant was charged in count I with possession of marijuana, a violation of section 11530 of the Health and Safety Code, and in counts II, III and IV with possession of restricted dangerous drugs, pentobarbital, *509 seconal and amobarbital, respectively, violations of section 11910 of the Health and Safety Code.
A motion pursuant to section 1538.5 of the Penal Code was denied. In a nonjury trial defendant was found guilty as charged in count IV of the information, possession of amobarbital, and not guilty of counts I, II and III. This appeal is taken from the judgment (order granting probation), defendant contending that the evidence on which he was convicted was the product of an illegal search and seizure.
Statement of Facts
At about 4 o’clock in the afternoon on March 16, 1969, Los Angeles Police Officer David T. McGill, who with Sergeant Wissman was in a marked police vehicle westbound on 48th Street, observed a late model Corvette eastbound on 48th Street going approximately 60 miles per hour in a 35 mile per hour zone. Defendant was the driver. He had a passenger, codefendant Evans (not involved in this appeal). The officers were in plain clothes. Officer McGill tried to note the license number of defendant’s car, as his assignment that particular day was to check in that area for grand theft auto. Officer McGill at that time did not have any special reason to believe that defendant’s car in particular was stolen. He was checking all cars in the area. Officer McGill made a U-turn to pursue the Corvette in order to check its license number.
Officer McGill observed defendant enter the intersection of 48th Street and Arlington against a red traffic light, make an abrupt stop in the intersection, look, along with Evans, in Officer McGill’s direction, then accelerate the Corvette rapidly through the rest of the intersection, still against the red light, and proceed westbound on 48th Street. Officer McGill also went westbound on 48th Street.
At some point during the chase, Officer McGill was able to discern the license number, and “broadcast” it. However he did not hear a response, if one was issued, as to whether it was a stolen car because of the noise and his rate of speed. Apparently, for the same reason, he did not check the sheets within the vehicle to determine if the car was stolen.
In the area of 4th Avenue, Officer McGill turned on his red light and sounded his horn. The Corvette turned left and went through the red light at 4th Avenue and 48th Street and proceeded southbound on 4th Avenue. On that street the Corvette accelerated to in excess of 80 miles per hour and passed one vehicle on the left and three vehicles on the right. The Corvette went through a boulevard stop at 52d Street and through a red *510 light at 54th Street. It turned left and proceeded eastbound on 54th Street. At this point Officer McGill, in pursuit, had his siren going and the red light on. The Corvette accelerated to in excess of 100 miles per hour eastbound on 54th Street. It went through a red light at 54th Street and Van Ness, passed cars both left and right and crossed over a double center line. At Ruthelen, the Corvette turned right to go southbound and then turned completely around in the intersection and stalled on the southeast curb.
The officers pulled up into the intersection and got out of their vehicle. The defendant got the Corvette going again and started to pull off the curb to go in a westerly direction back on 54th Street. Officer McGill stood in front of the car and drew his gun. Both defendant and the passenger were asked to get out of the vehicle on the passenger side. They did so and were placed under arrest for suspicion of grand theft auto and reckless driving. No more than five or six minutes elapsed between the time Officer McGill first saw the vehicle until the point he stopped it.
Officer McGill began a cursory search of the persons for weapons. At that time at least a half a dozen police units, informed of the pursuit over the radio, arrived to assist. Among the first to arrive was Los Angeles City Police Officer Charles Ernest Patriarca. He completed the cursory search of defendant for weapons by running his hands over his shirt and chest area. Officer Patriarca felt a hard object in defendant’s upper right shirt pocket approximately two inches long and an inch in diameter. He “felt it to be a pill container of some sort” and did “not necessarily” have reason to believe that it was a dangerous weapon. Officer Patriarca removed the object. It was a container holding a red and blue plastic capsule. Patriarca then handcuffed defendant and gave him to another police unit. The capsule contained a white powder which later proved to be the amobarbital upon which appellant was found guilty.
Discussion
The People contend that probable cause existed to arrest appellant for auto theft (Pen. Code, § 487, subd. 3) providing the basis for a search for the fruits, instrumentalities, and evidences of the crime (such as, in this instance, tools, keys and registration slip and such evidences of motivation as narcotics, showing a drug habit to support).
(Chimel
v.
California,
Clearly, there was probable cause for the arrest for reckless driving; defendant does not contend otherwise. It was recently held in
Morel
v.
Superior Court,
The judgment is affirmed.
Kaus, P. J., and Aiso, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied January 26, 1971.
Notes
Probable cause to arrest exists when facts known to the officers at the time would lead a man of ordinary prudence to conscientiously entertain an honest and strong suspicion that the person is guilty of a crime.
(People
v.
Curtis,
