It is my finding that the officers had probable cause to believe that Pasterchik was the man described in the warrant and in the telephone conversation. The informant’s information was reasonably corroborated by other matters within the officers knowledge even though the agents had no basis in experience for confidence in the reliability of the information, Wong Sun v. United States,
I cannot agree with the defendant’s contention that the information on the stolen Thunderbird automobile had no relationship with the crime of unlawful flight. I probably could take judicial notice of the fact that many unlawful flights are connected with the theft and interstate transportation of a stolen automobile. Therefore any information that the officers could get with reference to the vehicle in which the defendant made the flight, would be relevant and material evidence on that charge of crime. This theory is supported by Harris v. United States,
Shortly after the wallet was searched, the officers received a telephone call from Attebury and also talked to the homeowner, Mrs. Dorsey. It was during these conversations that the officers made inquiries with reference to a violation of the Dyer Act. This, of course, was after the final search of the billfold. When the officers returned to the Dorsey residence they had, in my opinion, probable cause to believe that the
Of considerable importance is the telegraphic information the officers had from Detroit and Denver, particularly with reference to the stolen Michigan license plate which matched the number under which the defendant registered at the Portland Motor Motel. The fact that a motor vehicle was carrying a stolen license plate would certainly be probable cause to believe that the vehicle had been stolen.
The officers having probable cause to believe the automobile had been stolen, likewise had probable cause to search the trunk, the keys to which, were made available to them, by Mrs. Dorsey.
Neither United States v. Rees,
