OPINION OF THE COURT
Memorandum.
The order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed.
On October 16, 1991, Anthony Romano, an undercover police officer with three years experience in the Queens Tactical Narcotics Task Force (TNT), observed defendant exchange what appeared to be drugs (later determined to be cocaine) for money with two other individuals. Romano thereupon radioed his fellow officer, Evelyn Cardenales, who was also assigned to the Queens TNT and was working with Romano that day investigating illegal drug trafficking, as they had on many occasions in the past. Romano radioed that he had made a "positive observation” and gave a detailed description of the clothing and physical characteristics of the participants (including defendant) as well as their location. After receiving the radio call, Cardenales, who had been waiting in an unmarked car nearby acting as Romano’s backup, proceeded to the specified location and arrested defendant and the other participants. The sole issue before us is whether the People sustained their burden of proving probable cause for defendant’s arrest.
Under what has come to be known as the fellow officer’s rule, a "police officer is entitled to act on the strength of a radio bulletin * * * from a fellow officer * * * and to assume its reliability”
(People v Lypka,
Defendant nevertheless contends that the content of Romano’s statement that he had made a "positive observation” failed to adequately communicate the nature of the conduct he had just observed. Cardenales testified at the suppression hearing, however, that the phrase "positive observation” was commonly used among police officers to indicate an exchange of drugs for money and that she understood it to mean that Romano had personally witnessed such an exchange at the time. In
People v Maldonado
(
Defendant’s attempt to distinguish the present case from
Maldonado
on the ground that it involves a police officer’s mere
observation
of a drug transaction and not the purchase of narcotics by the undercover officer followed by an arrest or "buy and bust”
(see, Maldonado,
Chief Judge Kaye and Judges Simons, Titone, Bellacosa, Smith, Levine and Ciparick concur.
Order affirmed in a memorandum.
