Appellees were charged in a two count indictment with second-degree burglary (D.C.Code 1973, § 22-1801(b)) and grand larceny (D.C.Code 1973, § 22-2201). The trial court granted a pretrial motion to suppress evidence, and the United States appeals pursuant to D.C.Code 1973, § 23-104(a)(1).
At approximately six a. m. on December 20, 1976, Officer Jack Vincent discovered that a panel in the rear door of an Amvets Store near 14th Street and Brentwood Road, N.E. had been removed. The officer reported a burglary; he did not know if anything had been taken, however, because he was relieved thereafter by officers on the day shift. Around 11:20 that evening Officer Vincent and his partner were driving a marked police car on their way to the Amvets location to check the store for security when they observed the appellees walking on 14th Street at Brentwood carrying what appeared to be a television set.
The officers stopped appellees and found that Mr. Pannell was carrying the television set, and that Mr. Dean had a paper bag containing a radio-clock and desk lamp combination and a portable radio. Appellees stated that they had found the property at the rear of the Amvets Store either in or near a trash dumpster. Officer Vincent knew that there was no trash dumpster at that location. After asking several other questions the officers recorded appellees’ names, took possession of the property, and told appellees how they could secure release of it if they could prove rightful ownership. At some point during the questioning, although it is not clear whether it was before or after the property had been seized, ap-pellees told the officers that the property had been stolen earlier that day by a man named “Hucks” (a known burglar), and that Hucks had planned to come back later and pick it up. In any event, appellees were not arrested and went on their way. Subsequent investigation revealed that the seized property had been taken not from the Am-vets Store, but in another burglary which occurred sometime after 9:00 that same evening. The trial court concluded that the government had failed to establish that the officers had probable cause to seize the property. We agree and affirm.
The government contends that the seizure of the property was valid because the officers had probable cause to believe that it had been stolen. This argument cquM
*1080
have validity only if the officers had probable cause to believe that appellees had committed the crimes of stealing or receiving stolen
property
— i. a, if the officers had probable cause to arrest. The cases relied upon by the government involve seizures incident to arrest.
See, e. g., Cooper v. United States,
D.C.App.,
In rejecting the government’s contention the trial court relied upon
Daugherty v. United States,
D.C.App.,
Although the Supreme Court has upheld the power of police officers to effect a warrantless seizure of evidence in “plain view,” it has also cautioned that the object must be of an incriminating nature.
Coolidge
v.
New Hampshire,
The government seeks support from the statement made by appellees that the property they were carrying had been stolen by a Mr. Hucks. Appellees counter that the statement must have been made after the seizure of the property, for if they had proffered such an explanation before the seizure, the police would have concluded that they had probable cause to arrest ap-pellees for receiving stolen property. In evaluating the evidence all inferences therefrom must be drawn in the light most favorable to the party prevailing below.
Matthews v. United States,
D.C.App.,
The police officers here had no warrant to arrest; no violation of the law was committed in their presence, they made no arrest, and they admitted with commendable candor they did not have probable cause to do so. Appellees were unknown to them, and there was no testimony that they had any information linking appellees or anyone fitting appellees’ description with criminal activity. Although Officer Vincent knew that a burglary had taken place in the area, it had occurred more than eighteen hours before and he was not aware of what, if anything, had been taken. The knowledge that a burglary has occurred in a particular area is hardly a basis for seizing property carried by citizens. Under these facts, we cannot say that the trial court erred in finding the seizure to be in violation of the Fourth Amendment.
*
To hold otherwise
*1081
would be to authorize seizures incident to a “Terry” stop.
See Terry
v.
Ohio,
The court’s ruling granting appellee’s motion to suppress is accordingly
Affirmed.
Notes
As to the question of whether the officer’s action could be categorized as a civil seizure of “found property” (an issue addressed by the parties in their supplemental memoranda), *1081 there appears to be no statutory or case law directly on point. This jurisdiction’s only reference to the seizure of property in the civil context is found in D.C.Code 1973, § 4-152, which provides that:
All property, or money alleged or supposed to have been feloniously obtained, or which shall be lost or abandoned, and which shall be thereafter taken into the custody of any member of the police force, or the police or criminal court of the district, or which shall come into such custody, shall be, by such member, or by order of the court, given into the custody of the property clerk and kept by him.
In construing the provision, this court has upheld the action of a police officer in picking up a billfold lying in the front window of a store, finding incriminating property therein, and seeking to identify the owner.
Roseborough
v.
United States,
D.C.Mun.App.,
