52 N.Y.2d 483 | NY | 1981
Lead Opinion
OPINION OF THE COURT
The question before us is whether, in the circumstances of this case, the courts below could properly conclude that a police informant was sufficiently reliable and was possessed of a sufficient basis of knowledge to justify the warrantless arrest of defendant based upon that informant’s tip.
This case arises out of a police investigation focused upon the Brown Social Club at 233 Eldridge Street in Manhattan, a gathering place thought by police to be a source of illegal narcotics. Detective William Burbage, a New York City police officer assigned to the United States Department of Justice to aid in narcotics investigations in the city, was charged with the duty of observing the club from the window of an apartment across the street. On October 31,1977, Burbage observed the defendant Jose Rodriguez at the Brown Social Club between 2:00 and 3:00 p.m. talking to various people within and without the club. He was identified at that time by a motor vehicle registration check of his automobile which was parked in front of the club.
Later that day, Burbage was notified that an individual named Louis Garcia, who was in police custody on an unrelated charge, had information which he was willing to relate upon condition that his co-operation be noted with appropriate authorities. Burbage immediately went to meet Garcia at Beekman Downtown Hospital where the latter was receiving medical treatment while in custody. During a lengthy interview, Garcia gave what Burbage would
With respect to defendant Rodriguez, Garcia related the following information: that Rodriguez was the manager of the Brown Social Club; that he supplied the club with heroin for sale to customers; that he owned a 1965 Buick and that the first three numbers on its license were 964; that the Buick was multicolored on the right side because of body damage; that Rodriguez went daily between 8:00 and 9:00 A.M. to an apartment on Second Street between First and Second Avenues to obtain heroin from a white male named “Jerry”, which Rodriguez would then deliver to the club; and that the heroin would be wrapped in multicolored packets which would in turn be wrapped in newspaper. Garcia also gave the police a description of Rodriguez which accurately described the man observed by the police earlier in the day.
On the strength of this information, a police surveillance team was set up the next morning to observe the area of Second Street between First and Second Avenues described by Garcia. At approximately 8:30 A.M., police observed defendant’s car, a 1965 Buick, license number 964 GMY, with damage and coloration as described by Garcia, parked upon the described portion of Second Street with one unidentified female occupant. Police also observed defendant enter and later exit from 73 Second Street, a four-story apartment building. The police did not see what apartment defendant visited in 73 Second Street and did not know what if anything occurred upon his visit there. When defendant emerged into the street, he re-entered his car and began to drive away. He was stopped by the police shortly thereafter at Houston Street and Second Avenue. He was immediately arrested and searched.
As a result of the search, police found a newspaper-
Defendant was charged with several crimes based upon his possession of illegal drugs. He moved to suppress the physical evidence obtained from him at the time of his arrest. This motion was denied after a hearing on November 20, 1978. Following the denial of his suppression motion, defendant failed to appear at his next scheduled court appearance. His bail was declared forfeited and a warrant was issued for his arrest. He was later arrested and pleaded guilty to one count of criminal possession of a controlled substance in the third degree (Penal Law, § 220.16) in satisfaction of the entire indictment and was sentenced to a term of imprisonment of from three to nine years. On appeal, the Appellate Division affirmed defendant’s conviction, without opinion, one Justice dissenting.
In this court, defendant asserts, as he did below, that the warrantless seizure of his person and. the concomitant seizure of the illegal drugs he carried were unlawful because the police did not have probable cause to believe he had committed any crime. He argues that the information provided by the informant Garcia did not provide probable cause because Garcia had not been shown to be a reliable informant and because the People failed to demonstrate that the information conveyed was based upon Garcia’s personal knowledge or observation of defendant. He concludes that his conviction must be reversed and an order of suppression granted.
This case presents a question by now familiar to this court, to wit: whether and under what circumstances an informant’s tip may be relied upon by police officers to justify a warrantless arrest and search of a citizen. The standard to be applied in such cases is also familiar. Before the liberty of one of our citizens may be placed in jeopardy on the hearsay relation of another, it must be shown that the informant has some “basis of knowledge” from which
We address ourselves first to the question whether the informant in this case can be considered to be “reliable” and conclude that he can be. To be considered “reliable”, an informant need not be a disinterested public-spirited citizen. The courts have long recognized that many police informants are not pillars of the community and many co-operate with the police only to curry favor with the authorities at a time when their own right to continued liberty is in peril. Indeed, the criminal record of an informant or the current predicament in which he finds himself within the criminal justice system does not necessarily render him unreliable. Neither, however, can we blithely accept as true the accusations of an informant unless some good reason for doing so has been established. Otherwise the liberty of each of us is at too great a risk. Thus, before the police can act upon the informant’s tale, they must be prepared to demonstrate that they had good reason to believe that this particular informant was telling the truth.
There is, of course, no one acid test of reliability. Over the years several factors have been considered by the courts to be adequate indicia of reliability. For example, an informant will be considered reliable if he has come forward with accurate information in the past. (Aguilar v Texas, 378 US 108, swpra.) He may also be considered reliable if he makes a statement under oath (People v Wheatman, 29 NY2d 337, 345) or where details of his story have been confirmed by police observation (People v Elwell, 50 NY2d 231, 237). It must be emphasized that the above-mentioned factors are merely illustrative and that no one factor is the sina qua non of reliability. In most cases, a combination of factors, considered together, lead the court to conclude that an informant is worthy of belief. So it is in this case.
Here, although Garcia had never before given information to police, there are other indicia of reliability in the record before us from which the courts below could properly
Defendant makes much of the fact that Garcia was in custody at the time of his statement, noting that he may have been willing to offer any statement, even a false one, to better his own position. However, as we have noted, Garcia’s predicament is not necessarily an indicator of his unreliability. In fact, it may well have been a strong motivation for Garcia to tell the truth. In custody on serious charges, Garcia made his statement to assist his captors in uncovering the crime of another. He knew that the police would act upon it. He must also have known that sending the police on a fruitless errand would avail him of little, for this sport, too, could as easily become part of his record. Hence, he had every reason to tell all and tell it truthfully.
In short, the record contains ample evidence from which the courts below could have concluded that Garcia was a reliable informant. We see no reason, on the record before us, to disturb the holdings of the courts below on this issue.
Having determined that Garcia was a reliable informant, we must now examine the question whether the People have sufficiently demonstrated that he had personal knowledge of facts upon which he could properly base his accusation of defendant. In other words, we must determine if the remaining component — the so-called “basis of knowledge” test — of the two-prong Aguilar standard has been satisfied.
In many cases, the basis of knowledge of an informant is established by his own testimony. If an informant carefully describes the underlying circumstances in which he obtained his information and his description of such circumstances clearly indicates that he speaks with personal knowledge of the event which he relates, the “basis of knowledge” requirement is satisfied. A much more difficult problem is presented where the informant does not specifically set forth the factual basis upon which his story rests.
One way of establishing an informant’s basis of knowledge in the absence of a clear statement by the informant of the source of his information has been through subsequent police verification of the details of the tip itself prior to making an arrest. Where the tip is extremely detailed, and the police verify by their own observation that the actions of the subject of the tip comport exactly with the prediction of the informant, it has been held in the
This court has only recently discussed this method of establishing an informant’s “basis of knowledge” in People v Elwell (50 NY2d 231, supra). In the Elwell case, we examined the scope of the Federal rule as articulated in Draper and its progeny and noted that the cases which applied the rule in this State were not easily reconciliable. After a thorough review of the case law and the applicable constitutional provisions, a majority of this court decided that whatever the rule may be under the Federal Constitution (US Const, 4th Arndt), the parallel provision of our State Constitution (NY Const, art I, § 12) required a holding that a warrantless search or arrest “will be sustained only when the police observe conduct suggestive of, or directly involving, the criminal activity about which an informant who did not indicate the basis for his knowledge has given information to the police” (50 NY2d, at p 241.) Thus, in Elwell we held that where an informant gives none of the underlying facts concerning his acquisition of the incriminating information conveyed and no other evidence exists from which a court could properly infer a “basis of knowledge”, police observation of innocent activity will not suffice to validate the arrest.
Defendant, relying upon our decision in Elwell, notes that in the case before us, the only activity monitored by the police prior to his arrest was defendant’s approach to and exit from 73 Second Street and his use of a damaged 1965 Buick and argues that observation of such innocent activity cannot serve to verify the information in the tip. While defendant is correct in his conclusion that in light of the Elwell case such police verification is an insufficient base upon which to predicate a finding that Garcia spoke with personal knowledge of the facts which he related, this conclusion does not end our inquiry for there exists another independent base upon which such a finding could properly be made.
Even though the courts below could not properly infer a
In this case, Garcia related the following information with respect to defendant Rodriguez: that Rodriguez was the manager of the Brown Social Club; that he supplied the club with heroin for sale to customers; that he owned a 1965 Buick and that the first three numbers on its license were 964; that the Buick was multicolored on the right side because of body damage; that Rodriguez went daily between 8:00 and 9:00 a.m. to an apartment on Second Street between First and Second Avenues to obtain heroin from a white male named “Jerry”, which Rodriguez would then deliver to the club; and that the heroin would be wrapped in multicolored packets which would in turn be wrapped in newspaper. The very existence of such detail in the tip could establish Garcia’s “basis of knowledge” and supports the inference that Garcia spoke with personal knowledge of the facts. Thus, on the basis of this detailed statement, the court below could properly conclude that Garcia had demonstrated to police an adequate “basis of knowledge”.
It must be remembered that the raison d’etre of all of the judicial tests which have been enunciated by the courts with respect to informants’ tips is to ensure that no arrest or search will be made without probable cause. We must not become so involved in the intricacies of judicial rule-making that we lose sight of this ultimate aim. Thus, the real ques
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). Respectfully I dissent for in my view the facts of the instant case do not establish the basis for knowledge required by either the Federal constitutional test declared in Spinelli v United States (393 US 410) or the State constitutional test enunciated by us in People v Elwell (50 NY2d 231).
The Spinelli informant stated that Spinelli was operating a handbook using two specified telephone numbers, but did not give the source of his knowledge. The FBI had followed Spinelli for five days and observed him enter the apartment in a building in which were installed two telephones bearing the particular numbers. Moreover, the warrant application stated that Spinelli was known to the FBI and local enforcement agents as a bookmaker and associate of bookmakers. The Supreme Court held there was no sufficient basis for a finding of probable cause stating (at p 416): “We are not told how the FBI’s source received his information — it is not alleged that the informant personally observed Spinelli at work or that he had ever placed a bet with him. Moreover, if the informant came by the information indirectly, he did not explain why his sources were reliable. Cf. Jaben v.
Here the informant gave detail which aside from the colored wrappings and use of newspaper could readily have been obtained from rumor or general reputation. That others at the social club were known drug dealers no more strengthens the informant’s basis of knowledge than did the fact that Spinelli was known to be, and to associate with, bookmakers strengthen the informant’s basis of knowledge in Spinelli’s case. In Spinelli the telephone numbers were confirmed before the warrant was sought; here warrantless arrest was made without confirmation of the colored wrappings or use of newspaper or of anything more than that, like Spinelli, Rodriguez was seen on one day to visit a particular apartment.
The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, the motion to suppress should be granted and the indictment should be dismissed.
Chief Judge Cooke and Judges Gabrielli, Jones and Wachtler concur with Judge Jasen ; Judge Meyer dissents and votes to reverse in a separate opinion in which Judge Fuchsberg concurs.
Order affirmed.