This is an appeal from a criminal conviction in which the defendant contests the admission of evidence discovered as the result of an investigatory stop by police officers. We affirm.
On the afternoon of Seрtember 29, 1977, Officers Hubbard and Lee, detectives assigned to the drug task force of the Washington, D. C. Metropolitan Police Department, were patrolling the vicinity of the Thirteen Hundred block of T Street, N.W., in the District of Columbia in an unmarked vehicle. This was the principal location of street narcotics activity in the city. At about 2:30 p. m., Lee noticed a red Chevrolet Monte Carlo with Pennsylvania license plates occupied by the defendаnt, Frank Ashbell Tate, and a female passenger, Doris P. Tillman, parked alongside 1343 T Street. One or more men standing on the sidewalk by the car were talking with Tate and Miss Tillman. Detective Lee believed one of the men on the sidеwalk to be Milton Glover, to Lee known to be a narcotics dealer. 1 Also taking part in the conversation was Thomas Joseph Smith, another narcotics dealer known to Lee, as well as other narcotics viоlators.
As Lee noticed the man he thought to be Milton Glover looking up, Tate slowly drove the Monte Carlo on T Street toward the intersection of Thirteenth and T Streets. At that point, T Street is a narrow, two-lane, one-way thоroughfare through a residential area. People milling about the sidewalk and street had their customary effect of impeding traffic. Tate halted in front of 1315 T Street, and a brief conversation ensued with another man. Tatе then drove to the intersection of Thirteenth and T Streets, where he stopped for a red light.
*941 The detectives pulled the unmarked but readily identifiable police cruiser alongside Tate’s car stopped at the rеd light. Tate and his companion appeared to be hiding their faces from the gaze of the officers. Displaying his badge, Lee identified himself as a police officer and ordered defendant to pull around the сorner and stop after the change of the light, which Tate did. At this tíme, Lee was looking for one Michael Taylor, a fugitive from a Philadelphia, Pennsylvania narcotics conspiracy charge. Either Lee or Hubbard, by radio, requested a check on the Monte Carlo’s license number. The officers parked immediately behind Tate. Hubbard got out of the car and walked up to the Monte Carlo. He requested a driver’s license and registration from Tate. Tate displayed his District of Columbia license but could not produce any registration for the Monte Carlo. Detective Lee alighted from the police cruiser and requested Hubbard to return to the car tо await a response to their call requesting a license number check. Within one or two minutes after the detectives had radioed requesting a vehicle license check, they received a response reporting that the Monte Carlo was listed as stolen. The detectives then placed Tate and his female companion under arrest for unauthorized use of the vehicle.
Attendant to the arrest, Detective Lee sеized certain items of evidence in plain view in the Monte Carlo. These items included checks in different names, computer printouts, and items of personal identification, also in various names. A search of Tate’s рerson uncovered an altered driver’s permit, other identification, and a check. Some or all of these items were admitted in evidence at the defendant’s trial.
On November 15,1978, a jury found Tate guilty on eight counts of transрorting forged securities in interstate commerce, one count of interstate transportation of a stolen motor vehicle, and one count of using and transporting property in interstate commerce obtаined with a stolen credit card.
Prior to trial, a motion to suppress the items taken from Tate’s person and the Monte Carlo was denied. The principal emphasis in this appeal is the validity under the Fourth Amendment of the invеstigatory stop by Detectives Hubbard and Lee, as a result of which the arrest and subsequent seizure of the documents occurred.
The order by Detectives Hubbard and Lee to defendant to turn the corner and pull his automobile over to the curb so that the detectives could check his driver’s license and registration was a seizure within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment. See
Delaware v. Prouse,
In
Terry v. Ohio,
We think that the objective circumstances observed by and known to Detective Lee render his suspicion that the dеfendant was Michael Taylor, the narcotics conspiracy fugitive from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, “articulable and reasonable.”
2
Prouse,
Viewed in isolation, it may be argued that neither the conversаtion of the occupants of the Monte Carlo with men believed or known to be drug peddlers and narcotics violators nor the defendant’s presence in an area infested with illegal narcotics activity would justify the investigatory stop. See
Brown v. Texas,
Having perceived these suspicious circumstances, the detectives were not obliged to “shrug their shoulders” and watch the defendant drive away because they may have lacked probable cause to arrest him. See
Adams v. Williams,
There can be no question that the detectives had probable cause to arrest the defendant when the response to their request for a license check repоrted that the Monte Carlo was listed as stolen. There was no need for a warrant since the detectives arrested the defendant for a felony in a public place.
United States v. Watson,
We have examined the defendant’s other contentions and find them to be without merit.
The judgment of the district court is accordingly
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Lee insisted throughout the case that one of the men on the sidewalk whom he saw talking to Tate was Milton Glover, a known narcotics dealer. There is some doubt about this, however, for the government at one point stipulated that Glover was in jail at that time. Nevertheless, there is no doubt that Lee believed one of the men was Glover. More importantly, it is uncontradicted that one other man оn the sidewalk recognized by Lee was Thomas Joseph Smith, who was known to Lee to be a narcotics dealer. As well, it is uncontradicted that other narcotics violators were also present when Tate was talking to the man thought to be Glover and the man known to be Smith.
. An investigatory stop by the detectives might also have been justified under Lee’s belief that Tate and his companion were picking up or dropping off narcotics. We have no need to, however, and do not, examine that question in detail since we believe it obvious that the detectives had a right to stop the car in searching for the fugitive. We thus express no opinion on the question of whether or not the stop was justified because of suspicion of violations of the narcotics laws.
