Frederick Rupert Chandler, defendant below, appeals from a judgment of conviction of armed robbery (Pen. Code, § 211) entered upon a jury verdict.
Insisting that his arrest and an ensuing search were without probable cause he contends error: (1) on the admission in evidence of a knife found in the search, (2) in the use of a tape recording of a conversation between defendant and an accomplice while alone in a police car after their arrest, and (3) in allowing the testimony of a juvenile accomplice who had shortly after the arrest incriminated himself and his companions. Each of these, he says, is “the fruit of the poisоnous tree,” the illegal arrest.
Discussing the question of reasonable cause for arrest, our Supreme Court in
People
v. Ingle,
We proceed to a discussion of the evidence introduced at the trial relating to the issue of probable cause for defendant’s arrеst.
On the early morning of July 14, 1966, a team of two police officers received successive reports of service station robberies. Each was reported as perpetrated by a single individual who was armed with a knife. The getaway car of the second robbery was described as a “ light colored station wagon.' ’ At 4:45 a.m., while in a coffee shop on Winchester Road with their radio “wallcie talkie,” the officers receivеd a report that another service station robbery had just occurred at Central and Hamilton Avenues. The perpetrator was described as a male Caucasion and the vehicle as a light colored sedan which was last seen proceeding north on Central Avenue. The officers ran to their vehicle where they almost immediately received a message that the robbery car was now described as *353 a “light colored compact station wagon) possibly a Dоdge Dart.” Winchester Road is approximately three blocks west of Central Avenue. These streets run north and south and parallel to each other. At the time of the latest report the officers were three or four blocks from Hamilton Avenue and about six or seven blocks from the robbery location. They knew that proceeding north on Central Avenue the getaway car could not turn east because of a freeway. It wоuld necessarily have to continue straight ahead or turn west on a cross street toward Winchester Road. The first and second cross streets north of Hamilton Avenue were respectively David Avenue and Payne Avenuе. To intercept the robbery car the officers drove south on Winchester Road and then chose to turn east on Payne Avenue toward Central Avenue. As they turned they saw headlights of an approaching automоbile. They stopped and as the other car drove by they observed that it was a “light colored compact station wagon” occupied by three men. The officers stopped the ear and arrested the occupants, one of whom was the defendant here. At the scene the ear was searched, disclosing a knife.
Defendant relies upon the frequently cited case of
People
v.
Mickelson,
People
v.
Schader,
Defendant emphasizes that the robberies were reported as perpetrated by one person while the “light colored compact station wagon” contained three men. We consider this of no significance. It is common knowledge that frequently, perhaps more often than not, where an automobile is used as а robbery getaway car, one or more persons remain in the vehicle. It might be noted that in
People
v.
Schader, supra,
We cоnclude that the officers had probable cause for the arrest of the occupants of defendant’s ear, and for its incidental search. The evidence here—an armed robbery a few blocks away in the early morning hours, with defendant’s car answering the reported description being seen by the police minutes, possibly seconds, later, traveling away from the robbery on one of the nearest available exits from Central Avenue—would, we believe, lead a man of ordinary care and prudence to believe and conscientiously entertain an honest and strong suspicion that the car’s occupants had been involved in the robbery. The arrest being valid, and the search of the automobile being reasonably incidental thereto (see
People
v.
Webb,
It is further urged that the juvenile’s earlier statement to the police (which was not in evidence) was tainted by virtue of the rule of
Miranda
v.
Arizona,
Defendant asserts another ground of error in the taking and use in еvidence of the incriminating voice recording. He states that it was violative of Penal Code section 653j 1 relating to the recording of a confidential communication. It appears that defendant and his accomplice were under arrest, handcuffed and seated in the back of a police car at the time the recording was taken. They had been advised of the charges against them. Furthermore, defendant testified that at the time of the conversation with his accomplice he knew it was being recorded. Section 653j provided that the prohibition of recorded conversations should not be “construed as prohibiting law enforcement officers from doing that which they are otherwise authorized by law to do,” and that it was not applicable to circumstances in which the parties to the recorded “communication may reasоnably expect that the communication may be overheard or recorded.” It thus is apparent that there was no violation of section 653j.
Defendant also claims a violation of his constitutional right of privacy in the recording of the conversation in question. It is now settled law that an inmate of a jail or prison may not successfully complain of such a recording even if its taking was not known to him at the time. In
People
v.
Miller,
Finally defendant urges that the testimony of the juvenile accomplice was error for reasons not related to the arrest or the Miranda rule. It is contended that the minor had been promised leniency and immunity, and that “psychological coercion” attended his testimony. Since such matters would affect only the weight of the minor’s testimony and not its admissibility, no error appears.
The judgment is affirmed.
Molinari, P. J., and Sims, 3., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied July 17,1968.
Notes
Repealed 1967 and reenacted in substance as Penal Code sections 632-634.
