At the time of his apprehension and conviction of heroin possession (Health & Saf. Code, § 11500), defendant was a paroled state prisoner. On appeal from the judgment of conviction he contends that the heroin in his automobile was uncovered as the result of an unreasonable search and seizure by his parole officer, hence inadmissible in proof of guilt.
Defendant Hernandez was paroled from state prison in November 1962. Edward Boulton, a state parole agent, was his parole officer. In April 1963 a narcotics agent received information from an unidentified informer that Hernandez might have narcotics on his person or in his automobile. This information was passed on to Parole Officer Boulton. Hernandez was employed at a restaurant and his shift terminated at midnight. Boulton and four narcotics agents stationed themselves in the restaurant parking lot shortly before midnight. When he finished work, Hernandez left the restaurant and approached his parked automobile. He was about to enter the car when the officers appeared. Boulton told him that he was going to search the car. Boulton did so and found 53 grams of heroin in the rear compartment. Later at headquarters Hernandez was found to have two bindles of heroin and $620 in cash on his person. The officers had no search warrant.
At defendant’s trial Parole Officer Boulton testified that he had arranged the meeting for the specific purpose of searching defendant’s car and for no other purpose. Defense counsel objected to evidentiary use of the heroin as the product of an illegal search and seizure and demanded disclosure of the police informer’s identity. The objection was overruled. It was stipulated that the prosecution would decline to reveal the informer’s name by invoking Code of Civil Procedure section 1881, subdivision 5. 1
We approach the matter against the following decisional backdrop : In 1955
People
v.
Cahan,
The
Denne
case upheld evidentiary use of narcotics uncovered by a parole officer who had gone to the defendant’s apartment to take him into custody and had searched the apartment in his absence. Similarly, in
People
v.
Robarge,
These four decisions antedated
Priestly
v.
Superior Court,
The concept of probable cause unfolded in Priestly v. Superior Court included an element which was not clearly revealed at the time of Denne and its companion decisions. The new element was the anonymous informer. 3 If, as a result of the Priestly decision, disclosure of the informer’s identity is an inescapable ingredient of “probable cause,” then the doctrine of People v. Denne falls considerably short of justifying admission of the heroin in the case at bench. Not only did defendant’s connection with narcotics have its source in an unnamed informant; it was stipulated that the informant would remain cloaked in anonymity. Aside from Hernandez’s status as a prior narcotics offender, the anonymous communication was the only component of probable cause for the search.
We arrive at a point where some kind of
detente
between the
Priestly
rule and the
Denne
group of decisions seems necessary.
Priestly
is simply a manifestation of a general exclusionary doctrine, barring evidentiary use of evidence produced by an unconstitutional search and seizure. Where the officer has no warrant, his search meets Fourth Amendment standards of reasonableness if it is incidental to an arrest made upon probable cause.
(Ker
v.
California,
These standard concepts of arrest and probable cause for arrest have little relevance as between correctional authorities and paroled prisoners. The parolee, although physically outside the walls, is still a prisoner; his apprehension, although outwardly resembling arrest, is simply a return to physical custody.
(People
v.
Denne, supra,
At this point we confront authorities theorizing that parole is an act of grace, acceptance of which entails the voluntary surrender or curtailment of constitutional rights. (See Note 65 Harv.L.Rev. 309 at p. 310, fns. 11, 12.) The rationale is not particularly appealing. It makes constitutional rights dependent upon a kind of “contract” in which one side has all the bargaining power. A better doctrine is that the state may not attach unconstitutional conditions to the grant of state privileges.
(Danskin
v.
San Diego Unified Sch. Dist.,
*149
Inmates of state prisons do not have the usual array of federal and state constitutional rights guaranteed to non-incarcerated citizens.
(Price
v.
Johnston,
Conceivably, the close scrutiny available to the parole authorities should be restricted to the sphere of parole administration. The heroin in Hernandez’ possession led to results other than parole revocation, serving as foundation for a fresh criminal prosecution and conviction. We would assume that criminal prosecution of a parolee should be accompanied by the procedural safeguards and guaranties attending criminal prosecutions generally. (Cf.
People
v.
Goss, supra,
Defendant draws an analogy to eases upholding constitutional rights of persons on probation. (See
Martin
v.
United States,
.We conclude that the requirement of reasonable or probable cause does not apply to search of a paroled prisoner
*151
when conducted hy his parole supervisors. Thus the
Priestly
rule, requiring identification of the informer whose communication supplies probable cause, has no application to such a search; nor does it bar prosecution use of evidence produced by that search. In reaching this conclusion, we recognize that disclosure of an informer's identity may be required when relevant and helpful to the defense.
(Roviaro
v.
United States,
Judgment affirmed.
Pierce, P. J., and Moor, J. pro tern., * concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied October 7, 1964. Mosk, J., did not participate therein. Peters, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
Code of Civil Procedure, section 1881, subdivision 5, provides: "5. A public officer cannot be examined as to communications made to him in official confidence, when the public interest would suffer by the disclosure. ’ ’
We recognize but do not accept a dictum in
People
v.
Goss,
People
v.
Robarge, supra,
Assigned by Chairman of Judicial Council.
