OPINION OF THE COURT
Sрecial Agent Bradley Cheeks was part of a team of agents of the United States Department of Justice Drug Enforcement Administration (hereinafter the DEA) working at LaGuardia Airpоrt. He was monitoring flights between New York and Washington, D.C., with the specific mission of interdicting the heavy flow of illegal drugs between the two cities. Cheeks was stationed near the ticket cоunters and magnetometer machines, while other agents were stationed upstairs, closer to the boarding gates. The defendant was brought to the attention of Cheeks by an airport security advisor, who noted that the defendant had, on prior occasions, waited until his flight was about to depart before he purchased a ticket with cash and rushed through thе magnetometer machine.
Cheeks observed the defendant approach the magnetometer in a hurried fashion, throw his bag on the conveyor belt of the X-ray machine and rush through the magnetometer, ignoring the request of the security guard to slow down. The defendant then grabbed his bag and ran up the stairs toward the departure gates. Cheeks radioed а description of the defendant’s clothing to his fellow agents and told them that he was someone they might want to "look at”. Cheeks then pursued the defendant up the stairs.
Speciаl Agent Michael Gildea, who was stationed upstairs near the departure gates, received the transmission and approached the defendant, badge in hand. In responsе to several general questions, the defendant, a student from Washington, D.C., stated that he had been in New York with a soccer team and that he had stayed with his girlfriend. However, he was unablе to state the location of either his girlfriend’s apartment or of the soccer field where he had played. At this point,
The defendant argues that because Gildea’s request to search his bag led him to reasonably believe that he was suspected of wrongdoing and that he was the focus of a criminal investigation, Gildea’s questions had to be justified under the "common-law right to inquire”, which requires a "founded suspicion that criminality is afoot” (People v De Bour,
The touchstone of the Fourth Amendment right against unreasonable searches and seizures is reasonableness (see, People v Cantor,
A number of cases from the Federal courts and other State courts, as well as a leading treatise, have applied the fellow officer rule, whiсh allows, in essence, the imputation of knowledge from one officer to another, to cover any number of officers working together on a joint assignment despite the lаck of an express communication of information or direction to take action (see, e.g., United States v Perkins, 994 F2d 1184, 1189 [6th Cir 1993] [collective knowledge of those "directly involved in the investigation”], cert denied — US —,
Accordingly, the judgment should be affirmed.
Copertino, Joy and Hart, JJ., concur.
Ordered that the judgment is affirmed.
