Dеfendant was indicted by a grand jury of the crimes of robbery, murder of the first degree, and attempted robbery. He waived a jury, and the court, after finding him guilty on all three charges, sentenced defendant to life imprisonment on the murder conviction under count one. Sentence on the robbery count was suspended as the crime was committed as part of the same offense charged in count one. Sentence on the third count for the сrime of attempted robbery was ordered to run concurrent with the murder sentence.
Defendant presents two points on his appeal, first, that a loaded gun taken from him at the time he was apprehended was obtained as the result of an illegal search and seizure and, second, the trial judge, sitting without a jury, erred in conducting a voir dire hearing and determining the inadmissibility of defendant’s alleged confession.
Taking up, first, the search and seizure question, defendant contends the loaded gun taken from him during a “pat down” by an officer who stopped him for questioning, was illegally seized and erroneously received in evidence.
In an opinion filed this day,
People
v.
Britton, ante,
p. 711 [
In light of the foregoing principles, to state the facts of our case is to refute defendant’s cоntention that the “frisk” was improper.
Defendant and Lyle Shugars, also known as Jerry King, murdered Milton Sternberg, a pawnbroker, during the course of a robbery at the victim’s place of business on November 5, 1966. Several guns were taken from a case in the store.
On November 11, 1966, Joe Aurelio was the victim of an armed robbery attempt. Fred Garbarino, an eyewitness, called the police and when they arrived defendant was at the scene under circumstances from which it appeared that he was a witness but not a participant. Both defendant and Garbarino gave Sergeant Benton descriptions of a suspect, which matched the appearance of Shugars.
The following day Sergeant Burt, who was investigating the attempted robbery, received information from other officers that a person who fitted Shugar’s description could be located at a certain hоuse. He and Sergeant Dohm went to the address given them, arriving about 6 p.m. The officers observed defendant and Shugars leave the house and walk down the sidewalk. They followed the two men a distance, then Dohm droppеd back to cover Burt, who stopped the men, *721 saying, “Police officer, may I talk to you a minute,”' as he illuminated his badge with a flashlight. Sergeant Dohm then joined Burt in questioning the two men.
They identified themselves verbally, Shugars stating his name wаs Jerry King. Defendant produced documents that purported to disclose his identity. Shugars said he had no means of identification with him and asked why he had been stopped. He was told that his appearance matchеd the description of an armed robbery suspect. Burt asked if he had a gun and Shugars replied, “Yes,” pointing to his waistband. Sergeant Burt said, “Don’t touch it, I’ll get it,” and reaching under Shugar’s shirt, pulled out a long-barreled revolver. Burt turned to defеndant and asked if he had a gun; receiving no reply, he proceeded to pat down defendant. Burt testified, “The first place I placed my hand on the outside of his coat, I felt a hard object.” The hard object turnеd out to be a .22 long-barreled rifle automatic, which Burt removed from defendant’s waistband. It is this gun that is alleged to be the product of an illegal search.
The foregoing facts place the “pat down” of defendant wеll within the permissible guidelines enunciated in Terry. The officers were investigating a felony that had been committed the day before; they knew the man who attempted the robbery was armed; they had information that Shugars, who matched the description of the robber, was at the address where they located him; defendant was with the suspect, Shugars, from whom the officers removed a loaded gun. In these circumstances it was entirely reasonable fоr Sergeant Burt to ask defendant if he had a gun and, upon receiving no reply, to run his hands over defendant’s outer clothing in a search for weapons. The search was reasonably limited to the goal that justified its inception—the protection of the officer while questioning defendant.
The second point concerns the conduct of a
voir dire
examination to determine the admissibility of a defendant’s confession or admission in a nonjury trial. Defendant reminds us that
Jackson
v.
Denno,
Defendant contends these same considerations require the rationale of
Jackson
v.
Denno, supra,
be extended to eases tried to the court without a jury. It must be conceded that judges are subject to human frailties, but, unlike a juror, a judge is presumed able by training and experience to hear
voir dire
testimony concerning the admissibility of a confession or admission and not be affected in his judgment by either the knowledge that an inadmissible statement was made by the defendant, or by what he hears during the
voir dire.
As a practical matter, it is next to impossible for a judge to try a case and not know when a defendant has made a statement that has been ruled inadmissible, since such a proceeding before another judge would be reflected by the file. Unlike the
Aranda
situation
(People
v.
Aranda,
This is not to say that, where a motion is properly made before trial, a pretrial hearing before another judge is not preferable to a determination by the trial judge; we simply hold that where the point is raised for the first time during trial, or on appeal, reversible error per se does not arise from thе fact the trial judge heard the voir dire examination and himself determined the admissibility of a statement.
In this case, the trial judge carefully confined the
voir dire
examination to the circumstances under which the statement was given and concluded the statement was inadmissible. He neither read nor heard the statement, so he had no way of knowing whether defendant made a full confession, simply an admission, an inculpatory statement, or a statement designed to be exculpatory but which might become incriminating in
*723
the light of other evidence. The situation is analogous to that before the court in
People
v.
Shepardson,
Defendant, in his pro. per. brief, argues that the mere fact a
Miranda
violation occurred requires a reversal, that is, the fact there was a
Miranda
violation by law enforcement officials per se requires a reversal, whether the statement was received in evidence or not. Apparently he has misread the line of eases beginning with
People
v.
Dorado,
The record reflects that defendant’s statement taken in violation of
Miranda
played no part in his conviction. The excluded statement has not been shown to be the sourcе of other evidence admitted in the trial
(Wong Sun
v.
United States,
There is an error in sentencing, obviously the result of an oversight. The murder of which defendant was convicted occurred during the robbery; thus both were the result of an indivisible course of cоnduct. The trial judge, recognizing this, suspended sentence on the robbery conviction, but the
*724
suspension order is incomplete. The order is merely that the sentence as to the robbery on count two is suspended “by-reason of the fact that the offense was committed in furtherance of the offense charged in count one.” There is no provision that the suspension shall become permanent upon completion of the sentence on count one, which is necessary to conform to the rule of
People
v.
McFarland,
Judgment as to count two is modified to read as follows:
“It Is Ordered that execution of sentence as to count two is stayed pending determination of any appeal on count one, such stay to become permanent when the sentence on count one is completed. ’ ’
As thus modified, the judgment is affirmed.
Conley, P. J., and Gargano, J., concurred.
