OPINION
¶ 1 The State appeals from the trial court’s grant of a motion to suppress drugs found during an inventory search pursuant to the arrest of Troy Edward Keener (“Defendant”). For reasons that follow, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.
BACKGROUND
¶ 2 The parties stipulate to the following facts: While Officer Munzinger had a suspected drug house under surveillance, he saw a car pull up. He also observed Defendant get out and enter the house. When Defendant returned, Munzinger saw him sit on the passenger’s side, and the person who had been his passenger drove away from the scene. Munzinger relayed his observations to two other officers, who spotted the car speeding and pulled it over.
¶ 3 The driver identified herself as the car’s owner. Defendant also provided identification, and a computer check revealed that his driver’s license had been suspended. The officers arrested him for driving on a suspended license, 1 and when they searched the car, found a rock of cocaine on a tool bag. Defendant admitted that the tool bag was his, and the officers then arrested him for possession of narcotic drugs, a class 4 felony.
¶ 4 Defendant moved to suppress the cocaine on the ground that Arizona Revised Statutes (“A.R.S.”) subsection 13-3883(B) (2001), which allows an officer to stop and detain a person to investigate a traffic violation, did not apply because the violation had not occurred in the arresting officers’ presence. Thus, according to Defendant, no probable cause supported the arrest and the cocaine must be suppressed.
¶ 5 The State responded that probable cause to arrest may be based on the collective knowledge of the officers. It cited
State v. Sanchez,
¶ 6 At a hearing on the motion, the parties stipulated to the facts of the arrest and search. The trial court found that Munzinger’s observation of Defendant as the driver of a car that stopped at a suspected drug house “did not alone provide probable cause” to *31 arrest him for the offense of driving on a suspended license. The court also found that subsections 13-3883(A)(2) and -3883(B) require that a misdemeanor be committed in the arresting officer’s presence and that these provisions “contradict” subsection 13-3883(A)(4), which allows a warrantless arrest on probable cause for a misdemeanor even if the offense is not committed in the officer’s presence. The court concluded, however, that because subsection 13-3883(B) specifically addresses traffic offenses, it overrides the more general statute on misdemeanors so that a traffic misdemeanor must be committed in the arresting officer’s presence.
¶ 7 The trial court further noted that cases permitting the collective knowledge of police officers to constitute probable cause all involved felony offenses and did not apply when the offense for which the police arrested Defendant was a misdemeanor. Thus, the court found Defendant’s arrest illegal and granted his motion to suppress. The State timely appealed.
DISCUSSION
¶ 8 Interpretation of statutes is a question of law that we review de novo.
State v. Getz,
¶ 9 Subsection 13-3883(A) (2001) governs arrests by a police officer without a warrant. The statute permits an officer to make a warrantless arrest if he has probable cause to believe:
1. A felony has been committed and probable cause to believe the person to be arrested has committed the felony.
2. A misdemeanor has been committed in his presence and probable cause to believe the person to be arrested has committed the offense.
4. A misdemeanor or a petty offense has been committed and probable cause to believe the person to be arrested has committed the offense. A person arrested under this paragraph is eligible for release under § 13-3903. 2
Subsection B of the statute authorizes a police officer to “stop and detain a person ... to investigate an actual or suspected violation of any traffic law committed in the officer’s presence and [to] serve a copy of the traffic complaint for any alleged civil or criminal traffic violation.”
¶ 10 Although the trial court found that subsections 13-3883(A)(2) and -3883(B) contradict or conflict with subsection 13-3883(A)(4), in construing statutes, we attempt to harmonize and to read consistently statutes on the same subject matter.
Tripati v. State,
¶ 11 This court applied subsection 13-3883(A)(4) in the context of a warrantless arrest in
State ex reí McDougall v. Superior Court,
¶ 12 We reversed the trial court’s ruling that the arrest was unlawful, noting that although “[f]ormerly, an officer could not effectuate an arrest for a misdemeanor without personally observing its occurrenee[,]
3
[t]hat rule has now been changed by a statute allowing arrests for misdemeanors based on probable cause. A.R.S. § 13-3883(A)(4) (1989).”
Id.
at 186,
¶ 13 Here, as in
McDougall,
subsection 13-3883(A)(4) authorized the officers to arrest Defendant for driving on a suspended license, even though they did not witness the driving, if they had probable cause to believe that the offense had occurred and that Defendant had committed it. To the extent there is any conflict between subsection 13-3883(A)(2) and -3883(A)(4), the latter, as the more recent statute, must prevail.
Id.; Pima County v. Heinfeld,
¶ 14 The trial court noted that all of the cases cited for the maxim that a court can consider the collective knowledge of all of the officers participating in an investigation in determining whether probable cause supports an arrest involved felonies; none of the cases concerned a misdemeanor traffic offense. Nevertheless, our courts have long recognized that collective knowledge of law enforcement officers may be considered to establish probable cause.
See State v. Lawson,
¶ 15 Nothing in the case law suggests that probable cause has a different meaning when the offense prompting the arrest is a misdemeanor. To make a warrant-less arrest, a police officer must have probable cause to believe both that a crime has been committed and that the person to be arrested committed the crime. Probable cause derives from “reasonably trustworthy information and circumstances [that] would lead a person of reasonable caution to believe that a suspect has committed an offense.”
State v. Hoskins,
¶ 16 In
Williams,
for example, an officer in one state stopped and arrested the defendant after hearing a bulletin that described him, his clothing, and his vehicle.
¶ 17 Accordingly, we reverse the trial court’s ruling granting the motion to suppress and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
NOTE: The Honorable ANDREW W. GOULD, a judge of the Yuma County Superior Court, was authorized to participate in the disposition of this matter by the Chief Justice of the Arizona Supreme Court pursuant to Ariz. Const. art. VI, § 3.
. This is a misdemeanor offense in violation of Ariz.Rev.Stat. § 28-3473(A) (Supp.2002).
. The language “is eligible for release under § 13-3903” is permissive and does not require release. This language merely reaffirms prior case law providing officers with discretion to arrest or release a suspect the arresting officer believes has committed a misdemeanor offense.
See State ex rel. Baumert v. Superior Court,
.
See, e.g., State v. Nixon,
