— The state seeks writs of certiorari to review orders of the trial court suppressing evidence in two related criminal proceedings which have been consolidated for hearing.
In both cases the defendants were charged with the crime of possession of a controlled substance, in violation of RCW 69.50.401(c). Both defendants were passengers in an automobile which was stopped by officers of the Bremerton police. A search of the vehicle and one of its passengers disclosed a quantity of marijuana.
The trial court granted motions to suppress the evidence gained in the search on the ground that it was obtained as the result of an unlawful search and seizure. We agree.
The facts leading up to the search were undisputed and disclose the following. On March 31, 1973 at approximately 12:30 p.m. an unidentified person, who was not otherwise described, came into the office of the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard Police Department and contacted Officer Dale Bixler. This informer related to Officer Bixler that he had been at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard Commissary a short time before and had observed a male subject with a hat on bend over. As the subject bent over, his hat fell off and a clear plastic bag containing green vegetable material fell out of his hat. The unidentified individual was certain that the green vegetable material was marijuana. The subject was described as wearing a red shirt and a large black hat. The ■unidentified informer further related that the suspect entered a yellow Plymouth bearing California license plate number STB 714 and that the yellow Plymouth was occupied by four individuals. The unidentified informer re.fused to identify himself to Officer Bixler relating that he did not want to “get involved.”
At approximately 12:40 p.m. Officer Bixler telephoned the Bremerton Police Department to relate the information which the informer had given him. About 10 minutes later, *743 Officer Bixler again telephoned the Bremerton Police Department and as he was on the telephone observed and informed the Bremerton police that a yellow Plymouth automobile bearing California license plate number STB 714 was then driving by his office and that there were more than four occupants.
At about 12:54 p.m. the Bremerton police dispatcher notified all field patrol units by radio of the above-stated facts. Within 5 minutes thereafter Officer York discovered the car, but was unable to stop it because he was driving a 3-wheel traffic scooter. However, he radioed for assistance and in response was joined by Officer Anson. Within a few seconds Officer Anson fell in behind the yellow Plymouth, radioed the office of the Bremerton Police Department, and made an inquiry whether there was sufficient cause to stop the vehicle. He received an affirmative reply. At about 1 p.m. Officer Anson stopped the vehicle and, together with Officer York, approached the vehicle.
They noticed five young male occupants — three of whom were wearing large felt hats of various colors. Officer Anson approached the driver’s side of the vehicle and asked the driver for his driver’s license. Officer York approached the passenger side of the vehicle and in so doing observed that the occupant in the middle of the front seat fit the description of the person who supposedly had marijuana under his hat. Officer York then asked the three passengers wearing the hats to remove them. Two of the three complied immediately and nothing out of the ordinary was observed. The third individual (neither of the two defendants), who was wearing a black hat and a red shirt, appeared to engage in stalling tactics so that he would not have to remove his hat. Officer York once again asked this individual to remove his hat and in response thereto he flipped it backwards and a clear plastic bag containing a green vegetable material fell from underneath his hat into his lap. Immediately Officer York reached into the vehicle and took custody of the baggie.
Thereupon all five occupants of the vehicle were asked to *744 exit the vehicle and identify themselves. At this time, the individual from whose hat fell the baggie of green vegetable material was placed under arrest for possession of a controlled substance.
Once the occupants had alighted from the Plymouth, Officer York observed on the left side of the rear floor of the vehicle five clear plastic bags containing a green vegetable material which he said were plainly visible from the outside of the car. The defendant, Joseph H. Griffen, had been occupying this area of the vehicle.
In inspecting the vehicle further, Officer York found a white paper bag on the floorboard in the right front area of the vehicle. This bag contained six clear plastic bags of a green vegetable material and was located in the area of the car in which the defendant, Frederick A. Chatmon, had been seated. It was the opinion and belief of Officer York that all the baggies of vegetable material which he found and took into custody contained marijuana.
Once the officers had found in the vehicle the substances which they believed to be marijuana, all five subjects were arrested and taken into custody.
For the same reasoning as was applied by the Supreme Court in
State v. Whitney,
The state urges two theories for upholding the validity of the search. The first theory is that the police officers had probable cause to stop the vehicle and make the search. The second is that the “stop and frisk” doctrine enunciated in
Terry v. Ohio,
We consider first the state’s contention that probable cause to stop and search existed.
1
Noting at the outset
*745
that if probable cause was present it rested upon the information provided by an unidentified informant, we are accordingly constrained to evaluate the question in light of the standards laid down by the United States Supreme Court in
Aguilar v. Texas,
Where an informant supplies information that a suspect is in possession of contraband, and accompanies this account with a wealth of collateral detail which describes the suspect and his movements, an officer who by his observations corroborates the collateral detail may reasonably infer that the information about the crime itself was gained in a reliable way.
See Draper v. United States,
Of more difficulty in this case is the problem presented by
Aguilar’s
second prong — the necessary demonstration of some indicia of the informant’s reliability. While it is true that the courts draw a distinction between “professional” and “citizen” informers, relaxing somewhat the necessary showing of reliability as to the latter,
State v. Singleton,
Our Supreme Court has stated the rule as follows:
[Ajnonymous information, unsupported by other facts then within the knowledge of the officer or learned by subsequent investigation, is not of itself sufficient to constitute reasonable and probable cause.
State v. Bantam,
*747 In the present case, the police did not learn such facts by subsequent investigation as would, in combination with those supplied by the informant, raise the level of their suppositions to probable cause. As said by the Bantam court:
No faithful and vigilant officer is justified in closing his ears to anonymous information and rejecting it without investigation as being unworthy of his notice. It is the duty of every such officer, in enforcing the law, to listen carefully to all such anonymous information; and, if it is supported by his prior knowledge of the facts or by subsequently learned confirmatory facts which reasonably may, and which do, produce in his mind an honest belief that the law is being violated, then he has reasonable and probable cause to act, and he should act accordingly, notwithstanding the character of the information which first caused him to investigate.
(Italics ours.) State v. Bantam, supra at 601.
Here the facts learned by the officers through their subsequent observations, while confirmatory of the informant’s description of the vehicle and its occupants, were by themselves innocent and could not reasonably raise an inference “that the law was being violated.” Hence, the “additional information” creating probable cause contemplated by the Bantam test was not adduced here.
Nor are we of the opinion that the confirmation of the collateral detail of the tip by the officers can of itself support a determination as to the anonymous informant’s reliability. To hold otherwise would permit a “bootstrapping” of anonymous information to the level of probable cause whenever a wealth of extraneous detail (easily subject to police corroboration) embellishes the report.
See Whiteley v. Warden,
*748
To establish the reliability of a citizen informant, and thus to fulfill the second prong of the
AgvÁlar
test, it is only necessary for the police to interview the informant and ascertain such background facts as would support a reasonable inference that he is “prudent” or credible, and without motive to falsify.
United States v. Harris, supra.
In making this determination, the police may justifiably assume that the ordinary citizen who has seldom or never reported a crime to the police may, in fact, be more reliable than one who supplies information on a regular basis.
United States v. Harris, supra (see also
the dissenting opinion of Harlan, J.,
In making this evaluation, an ascertainment of the citizen’s identity will almost invariably be necessary. However, should the citizen wish to remain anonymous, as here, his reliability could certainly be corroborated by description of him, his purpose for being at the locus of the crime, and the reason for his desire to remain anonymous 4
We find on these facts that insufficient indicia of the informant’s reliability existed to satisfy Aguilar and its successors. Accordingly, we hold there was no probable cause for the search in this case.
We turn now to an examination of the state’s contention that notwithstanding the absence of probable cause the search was justified under the “stop and frisk” rationale of Terry
v. Ohio,
The orders of suppression are affirmed and the applications for writs of certiorari are denied in both cases.
Petrie and Armstrong, JJ., concur.
Notes
The state concedes that the action of the officers in requesting the occupants to remove their hats was a search. Furthermore, the state does'not contend that, under these circumstances, there was a volun
*745
tary waiver constituting a consent to the search.
See State v. Greco,
“Whether the question is one of probable cause for an arrest or search without a warrant, or a magistrate’s consideration of whether a warrant should issue, the analysis is basically the same.
Spinelli v. United States,
In
United States v. Roman,
Where eyewitnesses to crime summon .the police, and the exigencies are such (as in the ease of violent crime and the imminent possibility of escape) that ascertainment of the identity and background of the informants would be unreasonable, the “reliability” requirement might be further relaxed.
Cf. State v. Morsette,
