OPINION OF THE COURT
On August 3, 1989, police officers Rivera and Fahey were working in plain clothes, cruising the neighborhood of Washington Heights in an unmarked police vehicle, seeking to observe out-of-State vehicles coming into the neighborhood and their occupants buying narcotics. The two officers were part of a coordinated operation of the Manhattan North Narcotics Unit and the Tactical Narcotics Team known as Chariot 2, focusing on drug sales to out-of-State buyers in that area, near the George Washington Bridge, which afforded swift access to and from out-of-State locations. At approximately noon, Rivera observed defendant standing beside a blue Datsun with a North Carolina license plate, double parked in the middle of a residential block, across from 505 West 183rd Street. Rivera also observed defendant to be a white person in this largely Hispanic neighborhood and that defendant was looking up and down the block, acting nervously. Rivera circled the block and parked approximately 100 feet from the Datsun, to make further observations. For the next five minutes, defendant remained standing beside the double-parked Datsun, peering nervously up and down the street. At that point, a second white male, later identified as Jerry Painter, exited the 505 West 183rd Street building,
The hearing court, crediting the officers’ testimony, denied the suppression motion. It found that the observations of a double-parked, out-of-State vehicle on a residential street, watched by a nervous guardian, who was then joined by a quick moving partner carrying a square-shaped object within a plastic bag, while not amounting to probable cause to believe a crime had been committed, did provide the experienced narcotics officers with an articulable reason to approach and inquire of defendant. The officers instead followed the blue Datsun. The unsuccessful attempt to stop the car was found not to be unjustified, as it was not undertaken intrusively, in that, for example, the police officer did not draw his gun, and indeed the police action failed to produce any contact with defendant at all, as the Datsun eluded the attempted stop. The hearing court found that, at this juncture, the police could reasonably conclude that the occupants of the vehicle were aware they were evading police officers, based upon Officer Matheson’s display of his shield. This flight, coupled with the fact that, when the Datsun became caught in traffic, defendant fled carrying the same white plastic bag previously observed having been brought to the car by Painter, gave the police officers as much reasonable suspicion that criminal activity was afoot as one could have short of probable cause. Thus, the police had proper basis to pursue and detain defendant. Moreover, it was found defendant, in the course of the foot chase had sufficient time to make two turns in a deliberate and calculated effort to discard the white plastic bag containing the cocaine.
We agree with the hearing court that Officer Rivera’s observations of defendant and Painter on 183rd Street pro
We need not, however, determine the legality of any intended police stop of defendant’s vehicle or any restraint over defendant at this stage, as none was imposed (see People v Harrison, 57 NY2d 470, 475; People v Leung, 68 NY2d 734, 736). That the actual intrusion upon defendant’s liberty at 179th Street and St. Nicholas Avenue was quite minimal and did not amount to a forcible stop is evident from the fact that the Datsun avoided the unmarked car and continued to proceed westbound. In fact, the Datsun stopped two blocks away without police intervention, when it was immobilized by traffic congestion. Defendant was not directed to remain in the car at that point (see, People v Harrison, supra), but rather immediately took flight with the white plastic bag, the object of initial suspicion.
In these circumstances, the flight of defendant on foot, clutching the white plastic bag, and abandoning the vehicle in
Defendant’s act of jettisoning the white plastic bag containing the kilogram of cocaine beneath the bus at 178th Street and Broadway in the course of this pursuit was a considered and calculated act undertaken to assist his effort to escape and to rid himself of incriminating evidence, independent of the earlier attempt by police to stop the car. Defendant had not only run more than a block in the course of this final chase on foot and made a detour around the bus, but prior thereto had known his car was being followed by police for approximately eight blocks, and left the car unattended when it became immobilized by traffic congestion. In the circumstances of this extended behavioral pattern, even if the attempted, unsuccessful, stop by the police back at 179th Street and St. Nicholas Avenue could be said to have been unjustified, defendant’s act of discarding the bag at 178th Street and Broadway could hardly be characterized as a spontaneous response thereto, but rather was attenuated from the prior event (People v Boodle, 47 NY2d 398, 403-404; People v Leung, supra, 68 NY2d, at 736-737). Therefore, the officers acted lawfully in detaining defendant while proceeding to examine the contents of the abandoned plastic bag (People v Hogya, 80 AD2d 621, appeal dismissed 56 NY2d 602). Upon the discovery of cocaine therein, there was probable cause to arrest defendant.
Accordingly, the judgment of the Supreme Court, New York County (Edward McLaughlin, J., at suppression hearing and plea; Edwin Torres, J., at sentence), rendered January 10, 1990, which convicted defendant of criminal possession of a controlled substance in the second degree and imposed a term of six years to life imprisonment should be affirmed.
Carro, J. P., Ellerin, Ross and Asch, JJ., concur.
Judgment, Supreme Court, New York County, rendered January 10, 1990, affirmed.
