On March 17, 1980 an Acting Justice of the New York Supreme Court (state judge) issued a warrant to search a vehicle which had been stopped by the New York State Police as it travelled south on the New York State Thru way. Armed with the warrant, the police recovered from the automobile four handguns, two rifles, and оne shotgun. The driver, appellee Anthony Zueco, was subsequently charged with seven counts of unlawful possession and transportation of firearms in violation of 18 U.S.C. App. § 1202(a)(1) (1976). In the United States District Court for the Western District of New York, Zueco moved to suppress the evidence seized from the automobilе on the grounds that the affidavits supporting the warrant were constitutionally insufficient to support a finding of probable cause. The district court in its opinion reported at
The state judge reviewed several affidavits supporting the application for a search warrant. The affidavit of Detective Darrell Eddings of the Niagara Falls Pоlice Department reported that at about 9:10 a.m., March 17, 1980, he received a telephone call from an unidentified informant who claimed that he had seen a man place several pistols into the wheel well of a station wagon parked at 401 56th Street. The informant said that the station wаgon was towing a black truck and black wooden camper, and that he suspected the man would be gone within the hour. The informant claimed knowledge that the man was responsible for bombings and threats in the area and that he possessed three sub-machine guns.
Detective Jack Cardinal of the Niagаra Falls Police Department reported in his affidavit that he received a telephone call at about 9:30 a.m. on March 17 from an unidentified man 1 who said that he had seen someone trying to sell two handguns. The informant added that a man and a woman were leaving town in a green station wagon sporting Maine license plates with a black truck in tow.
*46 The state judge also considered an affidavit from Senior Investigator P.J. Petrie of the New York State Police. On the morning of March 17, Investigator Petrie received a telephone call from Detective Cardinal who related his conversation with the anonymous informant. Detective Cardinal suspected that the green station wagon might be headed for the New York State Thruway. Investigator Petrie alerted Trooper James Farrell, also of the New York State Police, and a collector at a nearby Thruway toll to be on the lookout fоr a green station wagon. About ten minutes later, the toll collector spotted the vehicle and notified Investigator Petrie, who in turn notified Trooper Farrell. The vehicle was stopped by Trooper Farrell a short distance beyond the toll booth. The station wagon was occupied by a man and a woman.
When he arrived at the scene, Investigator Petrie recognized the driver of the station wagon as Zueco, a “ ‘person of questionable character with numerous arrests,’ ”
The aforementioned facts are not disputed and the parties agree for the most part on the аpplicable law. The district court concluded that under the controlling authority of the Supreme Court’s decisions in
Aguilar v. Texas,
I
A search warrant is properly issued upon a determination of probable cause by a neutral and detached magistrate,
see Steagald v. United States,
Recognizing that an informant’s tip рresents special problems of reliability and trustworthiness, the Supreme Court in
Aguilar v. Texas,
The two-prong
Aguilar
test was refined in
Spinelli v. United States,
II
The government argues that anonymous eyewitness reports are
inherently
credible and, therefore, not subject to the rigors of the
Aguilar-Spinelli
test. Several courts have attributed the
Aguilar-Spinelli
test to concern with the “particular problem of professional informers” who may well have
*48
strong incentives to lie.
United States v. Burke,
The affidavits presented to the state judge were devoid of any information from which it could be inferred that the informants were without motive to lie. The anonymous informants were identified only аs anonymous informants. In these circumstances, the district court properly turned, as this Court has so often in the past, to Aguilar-Spinelli. Although there are decisions in which certain types of informants were deemed inherently reliable, 4 the affidavits in those cases described the relationship of the informant to the suspect. We cannot know from the affidavits in this case whether the informants were without a motive to lie. Accordingly, the decision of the district court must stand or fall on its application of the Aguilar-Spinelli test.
Ill
The affidavits of both Eddings and Cardinal recited that the informants had personally witnessed the conduct they described, cоnduct the district court properly characterized as “out of the ordinary.”
*49
The defect specified by the district court was that Eddings’ and Cardinal’s affidavits failed “to recite any underlying indicia of the informants’ credibility.”
The affidavits presented to the state judge, when examined in a “eommonsense and realistic fashion,”
United States v. Ventresca,
1. soon after one informant said the station wagon and truck were leaving town, the vehicle was spotted on the Thruway;
2. the station wagon was driven by a male accompanied by a female;
3. the station wagon was green and sported Maine license plates;
4. the station wagon had a black truck in tow; and
5. when questioned, thе driver said he was leaving the state.
See
Gov’t App. at 10. Standing alone, extensive corroboration of innocent detail can suffice to establish the informant’s credibility.
United States
v.
Goff,
It is true that the corroboration necessary to substantiate the credibility of an informant “is not a constant factor.”
We can appreciate the district court’s concern over the “underlying reliability of anonymous phone callers.”
Accordingly, we reverse, vacate the suppression order and remand to the district court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Notes
. It is unknown whether the anonymous phone calls received by Detective Eddings and Detective Cardinal were placed by the same person or by different people. The district court stated that the answer to this question would not have affected its decision.
. A fourth affidavit was presented to the state judge from Trooper Farrell but the district court questioned the significance of this affidavit because the information in it was only cumulative of the information in the other affidavits.
. The affidavits in this case provided a stronger foundation for probable cause than the affidavits considered in
Illinois v. Gates,
.
See, e.g.,
the cases cited by thé district court,
