Berton Comissiong appeals from a judgment of the District Court for the Southern District of New York convicting him, after a bench trial, of two violations of the familiar statute, 21 IJ.S.C. §§ 173 and 174, which forbids receiving, concealing, and facilitating the transportation and concealment of heroin. Comissiong does not deny his guilt; the sole issues аre whether the narcotics agents had probable cause for the arrest leading to two searches which disclosed the heroin, and, in that context, whether the court was justified in refusing to require disclosure of the name of the Government’s informant at the pretrial suppression hearing.
Although the testimony of the nаrcotics agents contained some discrepancies, due in large part to confusion whether a particular building on Prospect Avenue in the Bronx was at 162nd Street or 167th Street, the court was warranted in finding the facts to be as follows: 1 Agent Byrne’s interest in Comissiong was stimulated by an informer who had previously given “reliablе information” concerning persons involved in the narcotics trade. One item of information had led to the arrest of someone wanted by the FBI for a murder charge. On other occasions, the number of which was not given or sought, he had given information that “checked out.” Byrne could not recall receiving any infоrmation from the informer that did not cheek out.
The informer told agent Byrne, about a fortnight before the arrest, that Comissiong, who was known to him only as “Lefty,” had been convicted for a federal narcotics violation about six years ago, and owned a 1967 Oldsmobile the license number of which the informer passed on tо the agent. He added that Comissiong’s method of operation would be to arrive by himself at 1359 Lyman Place in the Bronx, take orders for narcotics, depart in the company of a female, drive down to a building on Prospect Avenue, leave the female in the car, enter the building, procure narcotics, return to the car, and turn over the narcotics to the female who, he believed, would not be searched. Byrne found that the number supplied by the informer was of a car registered in Comissiong’s name. Proceeding from that, he ascertained that Comissiong indeed had a six-year old federal narcotics convictiоn and a state arrest for narcotics as well. On January 3, 1968, the informer told Byrne that Comissiong would be doing business that night in his accustomed way.
Byrne and several other agents took up surveillance. Comissiong performed the scenario through departure from 1107 Prospect Avenue. There was then a minor variation due to his entering a small restaurant to purchase a package of cigarettes. The agents arrested him on his return to the Oldsmobile. A search on the spot disclosed in his right hip pocket a cellophane package containing 64 grams of heroin. A further search at Federal Detention Headquarters revealed a small cellophane package in his right shoe containing .125 grams of heroin.
Although agent Byrne began by testifying that when Comissiong returned to the automobile, “he didn’t appear to be carrying anything,” and that the agent did not see the defendant commit a crime, Byrne later said that as he was approaching the car, he saw Comissiong “put a cellophane-type package into his right back pocket.” While he did not *836 know exactly what this was, it didn’t look like a pack of cigarettes. Although Judge Bonsai in his oral opinion denying suppression did not resolve this issue of what the agents had seen, there was further evidence on the subject at trial. Byrne again testified that as Comissiong was entering the car, the agent “observed a cellophane package being placed into his back pocket.” Also agent Pallatroni, who was observing from across the street with special binoculars and participated in the arrеst, 2 saw Comissiong place in his right hip pocket a package “contained in some kind of foil; it was rather big, maybe about six inches high and three inches wide, and rather thick,” a description which evidently tallied with the envelope found in the search. While agent Pallatroni couldn’t be sure what was in the package, hе was certain it was not a pack of cigarettes because it was too big and “a person wouldn’t put cigarettes in his back pocket.” Judge Croake found that Comissiong had indeed been observed placing a cellophane packet in his right rear pocket.
Although the Government has not argued the point, recitation of the facts raises the question whether the case falls within United States v. Moon,
Postponing the question of the disclosure, we think it plain that the informer’s story sufficed to fill whatever lacuna the agents’ obsеrvation had left. The testimony with respect to the informer’s previous reliability is on a par with the character reference held sufficient in Draper v. United States,
The starting point fоr discussion is Roviaro v. United States,
Most of the federal cases involving thi= limitation on the scope of the informer’s privilege have arisen where the legality of a search without a warrant is in issue and the communiсations of an informer are claimed to establish probable cause. In these cases the Government has been required to disclose the identity of the informant unless there was sufficient evidence apart from his confidential communication.11
Four cases were cited in footnote 11. Only one was a Suрreme Court decision, Scher v. United States,
In McCray v. Illinois,
What Roviaro thus makes clear is that this Court was unwilling to impose any absolute rule requiring disclosure of an informer’s identity even in formulating evidentiary rules for federal criminal trials. Much less has the Court even approached the formulation of a federal evidentiary rule of compulsory disclosure where the issue is the preliminary one of probable cause, and guilt or innocence is not at stake. * * *
In sum, the Court in the exercise of its power to formulate evidentiary rules for federal criminal cases has consistently declined to hold that an infоrmer’s identity need always be disclosed in a federal criminal trial, let alone in a preliminary hearing to determine probable cause for an arrest or search. 5
The recent decisions in this circuit begin with United States v. Robinson,
After
McCray,
the subject was further considered in a thoughtful and comprehensive opinion by Chief Judge Lumbard writing for a bench including Judges Waterman and Smith, United States v. Tucker,
Once the applicable rulings of this court are known, decision here is easy. Both Byrne and Pallatroni saw the occurrence of something which, although it did not alone amount to probable cause, came very near it. Beyond that, agent Byrne, aided only by the license number supplied by the informer, had ascertained Comissiong’s name and, working from that, had verified thе information concerning a prior narcotics conviction. It seems most unlikely that all this plus the scenario were fabricated. See United States ex rel. Coffey v. Fay,
supra,
Affirmed.
Notes
. The suppression hearing was before Judge Bonsai, the trial before Judge Croake; our account draws on both sources.
. Since Pallatroni took part in the arrest, we need not determine whether observations made by a nonpartieipating agent, which have not been communicated to the agent making the arrest, can be considered on the issue of probable cause. See People v. Horowitz,
. When request for disclosure was first mаde, the judge said he would not require it “[a]t this point.” When the request was renewed at the close of the hearing, he simply reiterated his previous ruling.
. Although the Li Fat Tong opinion made some point of the fact that the New York agent who made the arrest had obtained his information from a Chicago agent, the latter had gotten his informаtion from an unidentified informer.
. The Court completed the job by saying in a footnote, also number 11,
. The Government had no problem about disclosure in Draper since the informer had died a few days after the arrest.
. Mention should also be made of United States ex rel. Coffey v. Fay,
. It also made the valuable suggestion,
