Defendant appeals his conviction, by the court without a jury, on three counts of the willful, forceful assault, resistance and interference with narcotics agents in performance of their official duties. 1 We affirm.
Before trial, Simon moved to quash the indictment on the ground, inter alia, that his arrest was “illegal, unlawful and unwarranted.” The district court decided that the arrest was based on probable cause and that it was therefore unnecessary to decide whether the agents had time to obtain a warrant.
The testimony in the light most favorable to the government is: On March 27, 1967, narcotics agents, without a warrant for his arrest, went to Simon’s home in Chicago, at night, to arrest him. They observed him through a window, rang the front door bell, and when he came to the door announced to him they were agents. When Simon admitted his identity, the agents told him he was under arrest. He told the agents he was not “going anywhere” with them and struck agent Hughes. The agents followed him into his house and a struggle ensued during which Simon struck and kicked Hughes and agent Haight before they put handcuffs on him. Another struggle followed, with Simon kicking Hughes and Haight and biting agent Rendina. Finally, Simon again kicked an agent before they put him into the agents’ car. Agent Haight signed a probable cause arrest complaint the next morning. Rule 5(a), Fed.R.Crim.P. The indictment followed.
The validity of the arrest before us is not determined by Illinois law since 26 U.S.C. § 7607 is determinative.
Cf.
United States v. Di Re,
Agent Haight’s affidavit states that in the evening of March 27, 1967, he received a telephone call from Lieutenant Detective Davenport of the Madison, Wisconsin, police department; that Davenport reported, substantially, that he and Detective McFarland had on March 14 seized three pounds of marijuana in *476 the apartment of one Friedman; that Friedman was not arrested and had on March 15, in the presence of his attorney, told the police that Simon had been his source of supply for three years; that on March 21, on information given Detective Kelly by Friedman in the presence of his attorney, Kelly and Friedman picked up a package at the post office addressed to Malcolm Jackson, Friedman's alias, which contained marijuana; that on March 21 Friedman told McFarland the package was sent pursuant to a previous call from Simon in California after Friedman agreed to use the alias and to pay $175.00 for the marijuana; and that on March 27 Friedman told Detective McFarland that Simon had called him from Chicago to check on the arrival of the package and that Simon said he knew something was wrong in Madison and was going to Europe immediately.
Haight’s affidavit went on to state that McFarland had given him a description of Simon, his and his father’s address and telephone number — all of which had been furnished by Friedman; that Simon was subject of a Madison marijuana investigation in May and July of 1966; that Haight’s check of Narcotics Bureau files disclosed Simon’s arrest for possession of marijuana in April, 1966; that Haight found Simon’s father’s name, address and telephone number coincided with the information given by McFarland ; and that the person who answered the door at the address, the night of arrest, filled the description Haight had been given and admitted that he was Donald Simon.
We hold that the warrantless arrest was valid because we think the agents could have “reasonably” believed that Simon had committed a narcotics offense and might escape arrest if time was taken to obtain a warrant the next day. The facts and information known to the agents, or learned “from others” before the arrest were “such as to warrant a man of prudence and caution” in believing that Simon had committed the narcotics offense for which he was ar-
rested. Carroll v. United States,
We brush aside as frivolous any suggestion that Lieutenant Detective McFarland may not exist as far as Haight knew. What Kelly and McFarland learned from Friedman was from a reliable source. The freedom and cooperation of Friedman, the post office pickup of the marijuana, and the presence of Friedman’s lawyer at the various conferences indicate the reliability of the source. This court in sustaining a search warrant noted that in its “functioning” the FBI must reasonably be assured the need of agents in one locality relying upon information given by agents in another. United States v. McCormick,
The case of John Bad Elk v. United States,
As an additional ground for sustaining Simon’s conviction, the government argues that even if the arrest was unlawful, Simon had no right to resist the arrest as he did. We think this argument has merit, and that the consequences of accepting defendant’s argument to the contrary would lead to great mischief with respect to encouraging resistance to, and to endangering, arresting officers. We recognize that law enforcement officers are frequently called on to make arrests without warrants and should not be held, so far as their personal security is concerned, to a nicety of distinctions between probable cause and lack of probable cause in differing situations of warrantless arrests. It is for this reason we believe that the force of
John Bad Elk
has been diminished. See United States v. Heliczer,
The agents testified at the trial that they informed Simon that they were narcotics agents, and we conclude that the evidence taken most favorably for the government supports Simon’s conviction.
Affirmed.
Notes
. 18 U.S.C. § 111.
