Opinion
This appeal by defendant Rios, followed his jury waiver, a finding of his guilt of violating Penal Code section 12025 and an order granting him probation.
The only issue presented at the trial was the validity of a- poliсe search which disclosed his possession of a revolver in an automobile. The facts are not in substantial dispute.
Two officers were patrolling their beat in a high-crime area in a mаrked police car. Their vehicle made a routine right turn at an intersection, and as it did so, the vehicle’s headlights flashed across an automobile which was legally parked at a curb. In the light, the officers observed the other car’s two occupants “duck down” out of sight. The interseсtion was sufficiently lighted to enable one in the vicinity to see the police car’s officiаl markings. From the two men’s conduct the officers entertained a suspicion that a robbery or burglаry might be impending. When the officers centered their spotlight on the other vehicle, the two men in it rеturned to a normal sitting position. The police car was then stopped and the officеrs walked to the other car for the purpose of questioning its occupants and examining their identification.
The automobile was occupied by defendant Rios and another. As the officers approached, Rios got out from his side of the car without being asked, and upon requеst of one of the officers his driver’s license was produced. Questioning by the officer led to Riоs’ statements that he was waiting to go to the nearby “Tropicana Lounge,” and that he preferred to park where he was instead of a nearby shopping center parking lot. Rios was gеnerally cooperative, and the officer did not recall whether he was subjected to a pat search.
*1011 Meanwhile the other officer walked to the front passenger side of the car where the second man had been sitting. As he did so, he directed his lighted flashlight toward the vehiсle’s interior, for the purpose of a protective search for weapons; the flаshlight did not protrude into the car. On the unoccupied driver’s side of the front seat he noticed “thе butt of what appeared to be a handgun protruding from under the front left seat of the vehicle”; he could “see the butt of the gun and a portion of the hammer.” The weapon was seized and the car’s two occupants were arrested. Rios, having previously been three times convicted of felonies, was later charged with the Penal Code section 12025 violation.
Rios first contends that the police were not justified in detaining him and his companion. We find the contention to be invalid.
The applicable rule was recently stated in
People
v.
Flores,
People
v.
Flores’
rule of rational “good faith
suspicion”
(italics added) of criminal activity justifying police detention, must reasonably be deemed to modify or interpret the earlier stated rule of
Irwin
v.
Superior Court,
We opine that the circumstances apparent to the police officers of the case before us were obviously sufficient to cause a “good faith suspicion” of criminal activity, as was found by the suрerior court. The questioned detention was proper.
*1012 Rios’ remaining contention is that the revolver was discovered through an unreasonable search.
This contention is also without merit. The appearance of contraband, such as the gun here in question, in plain view inside of a vehicle, is not a search in the constitutional sense, and the object may properly bе seized.
(People
v.
Superior Court (Kiefer),
The order granting probation is affirmed.
Molinari, P. J„ and Lazarus, J., * concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied November 6, 1975.
Notes
Retired judge of the superior court sitting under assignment by the Chairman of the Judicial Council.
