Appellants Manuel Vasquez and Luis Ibarguan appeal from judgments of conviction entered on guilty pleas in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York by Chief Judge Jack B. Weinstein, for conspiracy to distribute and possess with intent to distribute cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846 (1976). In addition, appellant Ibarguan was convicted, on a plea of guilty, of possession with intent to distribute cocaine in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) (1976). On appeal, appellants assert that Judge Weinstein erred by refusing to grant, in their entirety, motions to suppress evidence and, therefore, that the convictions should be reversed. The judgments of conviction are hereby affirmed.
I.-The Facts
Acting on information disclosed in a related narcotics investigation, Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) detectives conducted surveillance of an apartment building at 14-01 55th Street, Brooklyn, New York, believed to be the residence of a large cocaine purchaser named Ocampo. Another investigation had revealed that Ocampo resided in apartment A-l, although he had not yet been identified there. On one occasion of surveillance, the agents observed a woman who lived in the same apartment leave the building several times and look up and down the street as if she were expecting someone. Soon thereafter, the appellants approached the building in a car that the agents recognized as belonging to another individual identified in the records of a related narcotics investigation. 1 Appellant Vasquez left the car and entered the apartment building. A few minutes later, Vasquez returned and the appellants drove about ten blocks to another apartment building. After leaving the vehicle, Vasquez signaled Ibarguan to drive away. At which point, Ibarguan began circling the block and several times engaged in peculiar conduct, apparently suspecting that he was being watched or followed. During this period, DEA Detective Raymond Vallely attempted to conduct a surveillance of the appellants on foot. He observed Vasquez leave the building, note the presence of Vallely and then return into the building. Shortly thereafter, Vasquez re-emerged carrying an umbrella and a yellow and white plastic shopping bag. Ibarguan immediately drove to the curb, picked him up and drove away followed directly by the detectives’ car. When both cars stopped at an intersection, Ibarguan signaled and positioned his car for a right turn, but as the light changed he glanced in the rear view mirror and abruptly turned left. Sensing that the appellants were aware of being followed and rather than risk losing sight of them in traffic, the agents pulled along the driver’s side of the appellants’ car at the next light. The agents displayed a badge and pulled the appellants over to the curb. As Vallely left the car, he saw Vasquez bend down and reach under the passenger seat. By the time Vallely got to the pas *43 senger side of the car, Vasquez had placed the shopping bag, which had been on his lap, partially under the car. Thereupon, Vallely directed Vasquez and Ibarguan to leave the car, frisked them and picked up the shopping bag. He was able to see, in plain view, a large amount of money at the top of the bag. When Vallely asked who owned the bag, Ibarguan smiled and said something to the effect that it must belong to Detective Vallely since he found it in the street. Vallely then searched through the bag and found, concealed under the cash, several plastic bags containing approximately three pounds of cocaine. Appellants were then placed under arrest and taken to the 66th Police Precinct. Later they were transferred to DEA headquarters for processing.
II.-The Law
(A) Appellants claim that the agents had no grounds either to make an investigatory stop or to make the subsequent arrest. These contentions have no merit. “An officer need have only a reasonable suspicion that criminal activity is afoot before subjecting a person to an investigatory stop.”
United States v. Gomez,
Furthermore, when Vasquez bent down and reached under his seat, the detectives were justified in making a protective frisk under
Adams
v.
Williams,
Appellants’ reliance on
United States v. Rico,
For these same reasons, we agree with the District Court that the search of the shopping bag was justifiable and proper. Even if the appellants had not abandoned the bag, see
United States v. Arboleda,
(B) The appellants’ second major claim is that statements obtained from them at DEA headquarters after their arrest should have been suppressed because they were “tainted” by earlier statements made at the 66th precinct which the District Court suppressed because of the absence of adequate
Miranda
warnings. The test is whether assuming the earlier statements were inadmissible, the latter statements are rendered inadmissible because of any taint carried over from the previous unconstitutional interrogation.
E. g., United States v. Knight,
(C) Finally, the appellants urge that the search warrant issued for appellant Vasquez’s apartment
4
was not supported by probable cause because certain information contained in the affidavit was part of
*45
the suppressed incriminating statements. Specifically, Paragraph 2 of the affidavit, which refers solely to the identity and residency of appellant Vasquez, was based on statements made before the appellants received their constitutional rights. We agree with Judge Weinstein, however, that this information “was of no significance” in the magistrate’s decision to issue a warrant because of the existence of other sufficiently detailed and corroborated evidence that the appellants were involved in drug trafficking. The determinations made by a neutral magistrate and district judge that probable cause existed to issue a search warrant are accorded great deference and “any doubts should be resolved in favor of upholding the warrant.”
United States v. Jackstadt,
The judgments of conviction are therefore affirmed. 5
Notes
. Records seized during a search several months prior to the incidents involved here, disclosed the names of several customers of an extensive cocaine distribution organization in Queens and Brooklyn, New York. In addition to Ocampo, DEA agents discovered the name “Corea” and his residence at 104^0 Queens Blvd., Apt. 19D, Forest Hills, New York. It was determined that a 1976, four-door blue Mercury Monarch was parked in the building’s parking facility leased to Apartment 19D.
. In the airport cases involving investigatory stops of persons suspected of drug trafficking, the chief factors arousing reasonable suspicion or probable cause include whether the suspects are travelling between a “source city” and a “recipient city” and whether the suspects match a narcotics courier “profile.” In United States v. Buenaventura-Ariza, supra, for example, the court found that arrival from a source city and generally nervous demeanor did not justify an investigatory stop of the appellants, in the absence of other objective indicia such as *44 previous knowledge that the suspects were linked to drug trafficking.
. The mere fact that conduct is as consistent with innocence as with guilt does not preclude such conduct from providing the basis for a reasonable suspicion of criminal activity.
E. g., United States v. Buenaventura-Ariza, supra,
. Only appellant Vasquez has standing to challenge the issuance and execution of the search warrant for apartment 19D, 104-40 Queens Blvd., Forest Hills, New York. Appellant Ibarguan did not attempt to demonstrate that he owned or had a property interest in the premises or property subject to search.
Rakas v. Illinois,
. The possibility of a sentencing defect under
Bifulco v. United States,
447 U.S. -,
