The sole question on this appeal from a conviction, in the District Court for the Eastern District of New York, for *701 possessing two kilograms of narcotics with intent to distribute, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1), is the legality of the acts of law enforcement officers that led to the discovery of the narcotics. These included stopping the appellant, Fairh Riggs, at LaGuardia Airport and asking for identification, a consequent “plain view” of a plastic bag containing white powder in her purse and, finally, a search of her camera ease which disclosed the two kilograms of heroin. Although the incident arose in the context of a purported anti-hijacking investigation, we sustain the acts of the law enforcement officers on the basis that they had sufficient reason for suspecting Miss Riggs of a narcotics violation to authorize what was done.
On the basis of the testimony permissibly credited by the trial judge in his reported opinion denying appellant’s motion to suppress after an extensive hearing, United States v. Riggs,
Both passengers were stopped before boarding the flight and were asked for identification. At first both denied having any, but later appellant produced some identification, perhaps a driver’s license, in the name of “Fairh Riggs.” The supervisor inquired what was in the brown paper bag; Riggs answered it was her lunch. He asked to check the bag, Riggs opened it, and he saw it was filled with “stacks of money.” The supervisor permitted her to board; the male passenger was also allowed to do so, after a frisk. Appellant’s counsel conceded at argument that none of these happenings at Detroit violated appellant’s Fourth Amendment rights.
Rendered suspicious by all of the above, the airline supervisor related the facts to Detective Schmidt of the Michigan State Police, who was headquartered at the airport. Detective Schmidt testified that the large amount of cash Miss Riggs was carrying, and the unusual way in which she was carrying it, led him immediately to suspect that she was engaged in narcotics traffic. A check revealed that while the state police had no record for “P. Griggs”, they did have one for Cynthia Joyce Griggs, also known as Betty Jackson, a young black female who had been arrested in 1966 on a narcotics charge but whose case had been dismissed after the main prosecution witness was murdered. The Detroit Police Department reported that Cynthia Joyce Griggs had been recently arrested with nine other persons on a narcotics charge as a result of a search of her apartment which also turned up three handguns and a shotgun, and that she was currently on bail. The Detroit office of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs confirmed that Cynthia Griggs was known to them as a narcotics dealer.
Believing, not unreasonably, that the “P. Griggs” ticketed on the flight might in fact be Cynthia Joyce Griggs, Detective Schmidt passed on to Detective Stone of the Port of New York Authority Police at LaGuardia Airport all the information that had been collected. Plainclothesmen dispatched to meet the flight from Detroit reported that the woman had left in one taxi and the two men in another. Detective Stone then notified each of the airlines and the United States Marshal’s anti-hijacking detail at LaGuardia of all the above and *702 of the likelihood that the three might be returning after having made a buy of narcotics; he added, apparently only on the strength of the Detroit Police report, that they might be carrying weapons.
About 1:40 P.M. an American Airlines supervisor at LaGuardia telephoned Detective Stone that a woman fitting the description of P. Griggs had purchased with cash a one-way ticket for a 1:55 flight to Detroit and was in the lobby at Gate 9. Stone instructed the supervisor to call the United States marshals while he and his partner proceeded to the Gate.
The supervisor called Deputy Marshal Huttick, who had been informed of the facts earlier related by Detective Stone; he told Huttick that a woman matching Griggs’ description was in the lobby at Gate 9 awaiting a return flight to Detroit, mentioned that on this occasion the ticket had been bought in the name of “Fairh Riggs,” and added that she met the “profile.” Huttick and his partner O’Flaherty immediately went to Gate 9. Riggs had already entered the jetway, but they stopped her before she boarded the plane. They showed their credentials and said they were making a security cheek. O’Flaherty asked to see the plane ticket, found it was indeed in the name of “F. Riggs,” and asked for some verification. Placing on the floor in front of her a leather camera case which had previously been strapped over her shoulders, appellant opened her purse and produced a utility bill bearing the name “Farah Jackson.” O’Flaherty asked for better identification. Appellant again opened her purse, wider this time; both marshals saw on the top a clear plastic bag containing white powder. Riggs fumbled with her purse for a. few seconds and pulled out a letter from the utility company also addressed to “Farah Jackson.” O’Flaherty then flipped open the top of the camera case, saw two plastic bags filled with white powder, and money stuck underneath the bags and on the sides. 1 Miss Riggs, her pocketbook and camera bag were taken to the marshal’s office, where field tests confirmed that the bags contained 1.9 kilograms of 75% pure heroin. Riggs was then formally placed under arrest.
Appellant argues that because the American Airlines “profile” did not quite conform to the Federal Aviation Administration profile discussed in United States v. Lopez,
*703
A number of “specific and articulable facts,” Terry v. Ohio,
supra,
Arguably this alone would have sufficed to justify a demand for identification under Adams v. Williams,
supra,
At this time the Deputy Marshals had probable cause to arrest appellant for a narcotics offense. If they had done so, a search of the camera case would have been justified under the “grabbing-distance” principle of Chimel v. California,
Beyond that, there is another basis for upholding the marshal’s cursory examination of the camera case. The plain view of the plastic bag containing white powder, along with the other circumstances we have noted, justified the marshals in detaining appellant for the short interval needed to subject the powder to chemical analysis.
Terry
held that “When an officer is justified in believing that the individual whose suspicious behavior he is investigating at close range is armed and presently dangerous to the officer or to others,” he
*705
may conduct a limited protective search for concealed weapons,
Affirmed.
Notes
. The camera bag was later found by the marshals to contain $4800 in cash.
. Appellant does not contend that the marshals lacked authority to make an investigatory stop apart from their powers under the anti-hijacking program. There would be no merit in such a contention. 18 U.S.C. § 3053 provides that “United States marshals and their deputies
*703
. . . may make arrests without warrant for any offense against the United States committed in their presence, or for any felony cognizable under the laws of the United States . . . .” Although this statute does not. in terms give marshals authority to make investigatory stops, we think that the power to take reasonable law enforcement steps short of, but which may well lead to an arrest can be fairly implied from the grant of powers of arrest.
Cf.
United States v. Krapf,
It is true that 28 U.S.C. § 570 provides that “A United States marshal and his deputies, in executing the laws of the United States within a State, may exercise the same powers which a sheriff of the State may exercise in executing the laws thereof,” and that the New York stop and frisk law, N.Y.Crim.Proc. Law § 140.50 (McKinney 1971), does not include “sheriffs” within New York City within its grant of authority, see
id.
§ 1.20(33), (34). But § 570 should not be construed as a limitation on the powers otherwise possessed by federal marshals, see United States v. Krapf,
supra,
