delivered the opinion of the court:
Albert McFadden was convicted of the crime of unlawful possession of narcotic drugs in a bench trial in the criminal court of Cook County and sentenced to the penitentiary for a term of 2 years to 2 years and 1 day. A constitutional, question gives us jurisdiction.
Defendant’s sole contention is that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress the use of narcotics in evidence. The facts surrounding the search of defendant and the seizure of the narcotics are simple and not disputed.
At 12:20 o’clock P.M. on April 15, 1963, State Narcotic Inspector Mitchell Ware telephoned officer William O’Brien and said that defendant would be getting off a northbound bus at 61 st and Halsted about 2 :oo P.M. and that he would have narcotics in his possession. He also gave O’Brien a physical description of defendant and described the clothes he would be wearing. O’Brien and officer Kodatt then went to 61st and Halsted. Both of the officers testified that information from Ware had always been reliable, but they also knew that his information was based on a tip from an informant. At 2 105 P.M. defendant got off a northbound bus at that intersection, his description fit that given by Ware, the officers asked if he was McFadden, he said yes, and they arrested him. A search of his person produced the narcotics.
The reasonableness of the search depends, of course, on the lawfulness of the arrest which in turn depends on whether the arresting officers had reasonable grounds for believing defendant was committing a crime when they arrested him. The facts in this case are very similar to those in Draper v. United States,
The only real difference in this case is that the arresting officers knew Ware’s information was acquired from an informer. In Draper it does not appear whether Hereford’s information was based on personal knowledge. The basis for Hereford’s information seems, however, to have been immaterial because all of it, except whether Draper had the narcotics, was personally verified by Marsh. Here all of the information furnished by Ware, except possession of narcotics by defendant, was personally verified by the officers before the arrest. Here, as in the Draper case, we believe the proven past reliability of Ware plus the independent verification of all of the present information, except possession of narcotics by defendant, gave the arresting officers probable cause to believe that the final bit of information was also correct.
Defendant has argued that a “tip from an unknown source is not distilled to the strength of ‘probable cause’ by filtering it through a ‘reliable’ police officer.” The probable cause of the arresting officers was not based solely on Ware’s past reliability as defendant argues, however, but was based on his past reliability plus their verification of the present information except for possession of the narcotics by defendant.
He also argues that the case of Aguilar v. Texas,
Defendant contends that the arresting officers in this case are in the position of the magistrate in Aguilar; that Ware is in the position of the Houston police officers and that Ware’s information to the arresting officers must meet the requirements that an affidavit to a magistrate must meet in order to show probable cause. The fallacy of this contention is the assumption that the officers acted solely on the information obtained from Ware. In Aguilar the magistrate issued the warrant based solely on information contained in the affidavit which the court found did not show probable cause. In this case the arresting officers determined there was" probable cause to believe defendant was committing a crime not solely because of information furnished by Ware but because of his information plus their verification of all of that information except the possession of narcotics.
The Draper decision, which was recently cited with approval in Beck v. State of Ohio,
Judgment affirmed.
