Appeal by the People from an order of the County Court, Orange County (Charde, J.), dated October 20, 1987, which, without a hearing, granted the defendant’s motion to suppress physical evidence. The notice of appeal from the oral decision of the same court dated December 16, 1986, is deemed a premature notice of appeal from the order dated October 20, 1987.
Ordered that the order is affirmed.
On April 24, 1986, pursuant to a search warrant, the police searched an apartment alleged to be the defendant’s residence and seized, inter alia, over five ounces of cocaine. The defendant was charged with criminal possession of a controlled substance in the first degree. The basis for the search warrant was a combination of information provided by a confidential informant of "no known reliability” and the independent observations and knowledge of the police. The defendant moved to suppress the evidence on the ground that the warrant was not supported by probable cause because the informant was unreliable or, in the alternative, for a hearing on this issue. The court granted a hearing and directed that, with respect to all testimony concerning the confidential informant, the procedures set forth in People v Darden (
The court’s granting of the motion to suppress on the stated ground was improper. The prosecutor’s refusal to disclose the identity of an informant was not a permissible basis for suppressing evidence because the refusal did not affect the legality of the search and seizure (see, CPL 710.20 [1]).
However, we affirm the suppression of the evidence for different reasons. The facts stated in the affidavit in support of
In this case, the "basis for knowledge” prong of the test was established by the statements of the informant that the basis for the information was the direct purchase of drugs from the defendant at his home (see, People v Reiehbach,
Although "no one factor is the sine qua non of reliability” (People v Rodriguez,
The statement by the informant that he had, on some unspecified past occasions, purchased cocaine from the defendant was not likely to be used against him (see, People v Griminger,
Furthermore, few details were independently corroborated by the police, and those that were corroborated were of limited significance. Most significantly, the police did not corroborate that drugs were being sold from the defendant’s apartment. They merely established that cocaine was obtainable from the same apartment building in which the defendant
Finally, the defendant’s criminal record for drug-related offenses, which was included in the affidavit in support of the search warrant, did not constitute corroboration sufficient to establish the reliability of the informant, who had not provided information in those prior cases (see, People v Johnson, supra, at 405; People v Griminger, supra, at 82; cf., People v Alaimo,
