1. The right to arrest a suspected person without a warrant is broader in felony than in misdemeanor cases.
Thompson v. State,
*164
2. Flight is always a circumstance which may be shown and which a jury may take into account in determining the guilt or innocence of the accused.
Kettles v. State,
3. City police officers discovered during the night of August 28, 1965, that a place of business had been broken into in New-nan, Ga. The owner, who was called to the store, arrived . about 3 a.m. and found missing a pistol, rifle, watches, 11 pairs of pants, and a sack of pennies. Meanwhile, two county policemen, ignorant of these facts, were cruising the highway about 7 miles south of Newnan and came upon the defendant walking along the road in the opposite direction with a seaman’s sack slung over his shoulder. They went on about 200 yards, then turned the car around with the intention of speaking to the man, but as they pulled up beside him the defendant attempted to> flee across a field. As the officers prepared to give chase he stopped. The policemen had knowledge of several recent burglaries in the area, although not of the one here under consideration. They seized and opened the defendant’s bag'and, on ascertaining its contents, arrested and returned him to Newnan, where he was charged with the offense of burglary. Upon the trial the stolen goods were sought to be introduced in evidence and objection was made on the ground that the arrest and search were without probable cause.
(a) This case was tried in the same court and before the same trial judge as
Raif v. State,
We have also noted the case of U. S. v. Mitchell, 179 FSupp. 636, in which under similar circumstances the arrest and search were held illegal as without probable cause. The distinction between the cases is that in the Mitchell case the defendant had already been arrested at the time of his flight. Here the flight preceded any arrest or interrogation and took place at the moment the defendant realized that he was an object of scrutiny by the officers.
4. The owner positively identified as his the property taken from his store on the same night it was found in the possession of the defendant, comprised of two pocket watches, a bag containing approximately 1,000 pennies, 11 pairs of pants, an obsolete side loader rifle, a pistol, and a lady’s necklace. The identification was complete although the witness did not know the brand names or serial numbers of the objects.
Jordan v.
State,
Judgment affirmed.
