OPINION
Larkin appeals from his conviction for violating 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1), 846 (possession of marijuana with intent to distribute). The question on appeal is the validity of the vehicle search that revealed the marijuana. Resolution of the question turns on the issue: Does an informant’s tip that meets neither of the tests of Spinelli v. United States (1969)
Agent LeMon received a radio dispatch that a 1972 black on blue GMC “blazer-type” vehicle, with an identified license plate number, would be proceeding from El Centro toward Los Angeles carrying heroin and marijuana. The information given LeMon had been supplied by a drug enforcement officer who in turn had received the tip from an informant whose reliability was not proved and the dependability of whose information was not established. Later the same morning LeMon saw a vehicle answering the description. He followed it about 20 miles until the vehicle turned onto a different highway. In response to LeMon’s call for assistance, border patrol agents Domitrovich and Reyna caught up with LeMon’s patrol car and Larkin’s vehicle. The border patrol cars blocked the highway. LeMon stood by with a shotgun while agents Domitrovich and Reyna approached Larkin with drawn guns and ordered him to get out. After Larkin was in custody, Domitrovich stuck his head into the vehicle and smelled marijuana. A thorough search revealed a large load of marijuana in the automobile.
The search cannot be sustained unless the agents had probable cause to search the car or to arrest Larkin before they stopped the car.
1
(Carroll v. United States (1925)
*15
The question thus becomes whether the tip was sufficiently corroborated so that it can “fairly be said that the tip [as corroborated] . . •. is as trustworthy as a tip which would pass [both] tests without independent corroboration.” (Spinelli v. United States,
supra,
The key factor in the tip was that the vehicle was carrying contraband. A statement that a vehicle of a described make with an identified license number will be proceeding toward Los Angeles from El Centro at a certain time is information that could be readily obtained by any bystander observing the vehicle on the road from El Centro to Los Angeles or, as in
Spinelli,
that “could easily have been obtained from an offhand remark heard at a neighborhood bar.” (
United States v. Archuleta (9th Cir. 1971)
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. The Government tentatively suggests that if the tip created a “founded suspicion” justifying investigative detention (see Wilson v. Porter (9th Cir. 1966)
. Informants have a known propensity to fabricate allegations of criminal involvement and to bolster the charges by adding innocent details. (E. g., Rebell, “The Undisclosed Informant and the Fourth Amendment: A Search for Meaningful Standards,” 81 Yale L.J. 703, 712-14.)
