OPINION
¶ 1 After a jury trial, appellant Daniel Diaz was convicted of one count of possession of a dangerous drug for sale (methamphetamine. weighing more than nine grams) and sentenced to an aggravated term of twenty-five years’ imprisonment. On appeal, he argues the trial court erred in not suppressing statements he made after what he contends was an illegal arrest and in sentencing him pursuant to A.R.S. § 13-604 rather than A.R.S. § 13-712. 1 For the reasons stated below, we affirm his conviction but remand to the trial court for resentencing.
Factual and Procedural Background
¶ 2 We view the faсts in the light most favorable to sustaining the trial court’s ruling, considering only the evidence presented at the suppression hearing.
State v. Teagle,
Discussion
Probable Cause for Arrest
¶ 3 Diaz contends he was arrested without probable cause and the trial court erred by not suppressing statements he made to law enforcement officers following his arrest. Statements made as a direct result of an illegal arrest must be suppressed.
See State v. Winegar,
¶4 Diaz contends the tip that he would be traveling from Tucson, accompаnied by a woman who would be carrying drugs for him; the drug dog’s alert on the vehicle, and N.’s admission that she was carrying methamphetamine, were insufficient to establish probable cause for his arrest. But that was not the only evidence presented and, as the state points out, the tip the officers received was substantially more specific than Diaz suggests in his argument. The tipster specifically described two possible cars and travel from Tucson to Sierra Vista on that specific evening. Diaz was, in fact, in a ear matching the tipster’s desсription, en route to Sierra Vista, in the time-frame provided. Furthermore, the tipster indicated that Diaz’s companion would have the drugs concealed in her vagina, which was corroborated when N. admitted that to police before Diaz’s arrest.
See Illinois v. Gates,
¶ 5 In addition to the tip, the officers were aware of Diaz’s reputation for being involved in methamphetamine transactions in the community and, during the stop, they collected more evidence that further corroborated the tip that Diaz was transporting drugs. While the car was stopped, Diaz behaved neiwously, dropping and picking up papers and repeatedly сhecking the car’s side and rearview mirrors.
See State v. Sumter,
II6 Although conceding “there was certainly probable cause” to arrest N. because of her admission, Diaz contends that did not create probable cause to arrest him. But this argument ignores his nervous behavior, the drug dog’s alert on his seat, and the informant’s tip that Diaz would be transporting drugs in a certain car along a certain route during a specified time and in a defined manner. Morеover, given the officers’ information that Diaz and N. were acting in concert, Diaz could have been arrested on an accomplice theory.
See State v. Cordero,
174
*191
Ariz. 556, 559-60,
Sentencing
¶ 7 Diaz next contends the trial court erred by sentencing him as a repetitive offender pursuant to § 13-604(D), rather than under § 13-712, which is the sentencing statute specifically for methamphetamine offenses. We review questions of statutory construction de novo.
State v. Gonzales,
¶ 8 Although, as the state points out, we will avoid “hyperteehnieal constructions [of a statute] that frustrate legislative intent,”
State v. Cornish,
¶ 9 As Diaz correctly notes, § 13-3407(E) provides that a person convicted of violating § 13-3407(A)(2) “shall be sentenced pursuant to § 13-712.” He thus maintаins the plain language of this statute dictates he should be subject to what, in this case, is a more lenient sentencing scheme. The state responds that applying § 13-712 would create an absurd result, requiring the trial court to impose a lesser sentence for a repeat offender simply because his crime involved methamphetamine. Citing
Goddard v. Superior Court,
¶ 10 In
Goddard,
Division One of this court rejected as “contrary to common sense” a reading of statutory sеntencing language that would make a person who was twice convicted of possessing a controlled substance for personal use ineligible for mandatory probation, while requiring mandatory probation for persons with two or more prior convictiоns for possession for sale, a more serious crime.
¶ 11 Although we agree with the state that the cited eases demonstrate how reluctant courts are to impose lesser sentences for more serious crimes based on statutory inconsistencies,
Goddard
and
Laughter
cannot control because of the significant differences between the statutes involved in those eases and the ones before us. In
Goddard,
the relevant legislation did not conclusively state whether mandatory probation was possible or impossible for a repeat offender who possessed a controlled substance for sale,
¶ 12 Likewise in
Laughter,
this court reconciled two subsections of § 13-604 that had left trial courts without guidance when sentencing for repetitive, nondangеrous offenders for their first dangerous offenses. In determining that a trial court could legally impose the greater statutory penalty for a repeat offender with nondangerous prior convictions rather than the lesser sentence provided for a first-time dangerous-nature offense, we noted there was “nothing in conflict” about these statutes because there was “nothing in the statute [that implied the defendant] could not be sentenced as a [non-dangerous] repeat offender.”
¶ 13 Here, as noted above, the languаge of § 13-3407 expressly instructs the trial court to impose a sentence pursuant to § 13-712. The latter section, however, has some of the same problems as the statutes at issue in Goddard and Laughter in that § 13-712 appeal’s not to anticipate the possibility of a repetitive offendеr, particularly one who has committed crimes other than methamphetamine offenses. Although § 13-712 provides a greater possible sentence for a person convicted of a second violation of § 13-3407, see § 13-712(B), it does not provide for a recidivist who has committed three or more methamphetamine offenses. Under § 13-712, a third violation could yield no more than a twenty-year sentence and then only if the trial court aggravated the sentence to the fullest extent permitted. In contrast, § 13-604(D) provides a statutory maximum sentenсe of twenty-eight years for an offender with two or more prior felony convictions. And, if all methamphetamine sentences are subject to § 13-712, courts must disregard any historical prior felony convictions that are not methamphetamine-related and treat those convicted under § 13-3407 as first-time offenders, regardless of their felonious pasts.
¶ 14 Such a result is clearly at odds with the overall sentencing scheme, which typically punishes recidivism,
see, e.g.,
§ 13-604 (providing longer sentences for repeat offenders), and singles out methamphetaminе use for additional penalties,
see State v. Hasson, 211
Ariz. 559, ¶ 6,
Disposition
¶ 15 For the foregoing reasons, we affirm Diaz’s conviction but remand this case to the trial court for resentencing consistent with this decision.
Notes
. Section 13-604(D) has since been repealed and recodified as A.R.S. § 13-703(C) and (J). See 2008 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 301, §§ 15, 28. Section 13-712 has since been repealed and rеplaced by A.R.S. § 13-709.03, which provides additional guidelines for mitigating and enhance ing sentences for successive violations-of A.R.S. § 13-3407. See 2008 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 301, §§ 34, 36. We refer to former §§ 13-604(D) and 13-712 because they were the provisions in effect when Diaz committed his offense.
. Section 13-3407 was amended effective December 31, 2008. The amendments made no substantive changes relevant to Diaz’s conviction but reflect the replacement of the applicable sentencing provision, § 13-712, with § 13-709.03. See 2008 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 301, § 72. We refer in' this decision to the provision in effect when Diaz committed his offense.
