Aрpeal from a judgment of the County Court of Sullivan County (Ledina, J.), rendered November 30, 1998, upon a verdict convicting defendant of the crime оf criminal possession of a controlled substance in the second degree.
Defendant came to the attention of the authоrities during a narcotics investigation conducted by the State-wide Organized Crime Task Force (hereinafter OCTF) in the summer of 1997. OCTF was aided in its investigatiоn by an individual (hereinafter the informant) who agreed to cooperate after his participation in drug trafficking was discovered by аn undercover OCTF investigator. The informant disclosed that defendant was his supplier and agreed to undertake a drug buy under OCTF surveillance. On August 11, 1997, in the presence of the investigator, the informant telephoned a person he knew as “Ruben,” later determined to be defendant, from а local motel and allegedly arranged to purchase cocaine. According to the informant, defendant agreed to deliver the cocaine within half an hour. About 30 minutes later, another member of the OCTF surveillance team observed a vehicle in the parking lot of the informant’s motel and, immediately thereafter, saw defendant driving away from the motel in a vehicle registered in his
On August 26, 1997, the informant аdvised the OCTF investigator who arranged the previous drug buy that defendant had visited him unexpectedly. During their encounter, defendant allegedly stated that he was moving to Arizona and was, thus, willing to supply 4V2 ounces of cocaine for $1,800. The following day, the informant telephoned defendаnt in the presence of the investigator in order to schedule delivery of the cocaine. The investigator recorded the exchange and listened to the informant’s side of the conversation. As delivery was set for 30 minutes later, OCTF agents undertook surveillance of the motel and defendant’s home and maintained radio contact concerning the planned transaction.
The record reveals thаt the surveillance team saw defendant leave his residence within half an hour after the telephone call and they followed him аs he drove in the direction of the motel. OCTF officers stopped defendant’s vehicle before arrival at the motel and placed defendant under arrest. The initial pat-down search of defendant’s person revealed no contraband, but another investigator who arrived at the scene undertook a more thorough search and discovered cocaine hidden in defendant’s groin area.
During pretrial proceedings, defendant moved to suppress the discovery of cocaine by asserting that the authorities lackеd probable cause for his arrest and that the search of his person was unlawful. After a suppression hearing, at which two OCTF investigators described the aforementioned events, the court concluded that the arrest was supported by probable cause and ruled thаt the cocaine was admissible as it was discovered during a lawful search incident to an arrest.
We affirm County Court’s suppression ruling. “Probable cause for a warrantless arrest may be based on hearsay information, but only upon a showing that both the basis of knowledge and verаcity components of the Aguilar /Spinelli test have been met” (People v Di Falco,
We also reject defendant’s contention that County Court erred in admitting the tape recording of the August 27, 1997 telephone сonversation. The informant was unavailable to testify at trial, having died three weeks earlier. Accordingly, the People moved in limine for а ruling on the admissibility of the tape. Defendant argued, in opposition to the application, that without the informant the People сould not establish that he was the individual with whom the informant spoke during the conversation at issue.
“Admissibility of tape-recorded conversatiоn requires proof of the accuracy or authenticity of the tape by ‘clear and convincing evidence’ establishing ‘that the offered evidence is genuine and that there has been no tampering with it’ ” (People v Ely,
Here, the foundation for admission of the tape was made through the testimony of two OCTF investigators. In addition to dеscribing the events surrounding the creation of the tape and identifying the voice of the informant, one of the investigators testified that immediately after the conversation concluded, he removed the tape from the recording device and maintained it in policе custody thereafter. He additionally stated that he had listened to the tape soon after it was recorded and again the day bеfore trial and attested that it had not been altered. The second investigator identified the other voice on the recording as that of defendant, indicating that he was familiar with defendant’s voice based on a lengthy conversation he had with defendant on the day of thе arrest. Thus, in addition to the testimony of the operator who recorded the conversation,
The remaining contentions of defendant have been reviewed and are found to be either unpreserved, such as his CPL 710.30 notice argument, or without merit.
Crew III, J. P., Spain, Carpinello and Mugglin, JJ., concur. Ordered that the judgment is affirmed.
