Appellant, by proper motion, has brought to this court’s attention the fact that crucial pages of the statement of facts were missing due to some error in transporting the record from the district court. Accordingly, we withdraw our original disposition of this case and substitute the following opinion.
Richard L. Shimel (appellant) appeals two orders of revocation of probation and a conviction for possession of methamphetamine with intent to deliver. Appellant had been convicted of unauthorized use of a motor vehicle and possession of tetrahydro-cannabinol in Cause Nos. 306,040 and 303,-852, to which offenses he pleaded guilty and for which he received two concurrent sentences of 10 years probation. Subsequently, appellant was arrested and charged in Cause No. 332,828. At hearings held May 22 & 26, 1981, the trial court overruled appellant’s three identical motions to suppress and consolidated the causes. The hearing was recessed to May 27th when appellant entered a guilty plea in Cause No. 332,828. The trial court revoked his probation in Cause No. 303,852 and 306,040, assessed a punishment in each cause at ten years confinement, sentences to run concurrently, and granted appellant permission to appeal pursuant to Tex.Code Crim.Pro.Ann. art. 44.02 (Vernon 1979). On November 12, 1981, in response to appellant’s motion, we ordered the three above cause numbers consolidated for appellate review. Appellant states in his brief that the plea bargaining arrangement provided that the evidence heard at the hearing on the motions to suppress would be brought forward on appeal pursuant to Tex.Code Crim.Pro.Ann. art. 44.02 (Vernon 1979) thus avoiding any waiver of those contentions. See, Galitz v. State,
In asserting two grounds of error, appellant challenges the trial court’s overruling his motions to suppress because the arrest and search leading to his conviction in Cause No. 332,828 violated the fourth amendment. The issues presented in this case have been resolved in Wong Sun v. United States,
After about 30 minutes, appellant entered the elevator to go to the baggage area below. Stewart and Lucas, using the escalator, inadvertently came face to face with appellant, who, according to their testimony, recognized them, at which point Stewart arrested appellant ostensibly for “investigation of narcotics,” handcuffed and searched him. Although the officers testified they were also looking for a weapon because appellant “was known to carry weapons,” Stewart’s search exceeded the limits prescribed for a “pat down” or “frisk” in Terry v. Ohio,
Appellant’s first ground of error asserts the trial court erred in overruling his motions to suppress because his arrest was illegal and violative of the fourth amendment. The same standards promulgated in Aguilar and Spinelli for issuance of a search warrant based upon an informant’s tip apply here where a warrantless arrest ensued from similar information.
Ever mindful that this court’s ineluctable duty demands assiduous defense of the rights embodied in the Constitution, we do not find the facts corroborated prior to the officers’ intercepting appellant sufficient under Draper to create probable cause for his arrest. Because the arrest was illegal, the evidence derived from that arrest would absorb the taint of that illegality and, therefore, be properly subject to suppression. Dunaway v. New York,
Reversed.
