Opinion for the Court filed by Senior Circuit Judge WILLIAMS.
Based on a tip from a longtime informant, District of Columbia police searched Michael Riley and discovered that he possessed a large amount of crack cocaine. Riley was charged with one count of possession with intent to distribute five or more grams of cocaine base, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 841(b)(l)(B)(iii). His motion to suppress the evidence having been denied, he entered a conditional guilty plea, reserving the right to appeal the denial of the motion to suppress. That appeal is now before us. We affirm.
* * *
We state the pertinent facts as found by the district court, which control unless “clearly erroneous.” On June 5, 2002 Detective Kirk Delpo of the Metropolitan Police Department received a tip from a confidential informant that one Michael Riley was in the area of an apartment in the 1700 block of West Virginia Avenue with a large amount of crack stored in his sock. The informant described Riley’s appearance. The informant believed Riley was heading towards his vehicle, a van or limo.
Delpo and fellow officers went to the location and saw a person matching the description, but with a red scooter or moped rather than a van or limo. Because of the discrepancy they staked out a van *1267 instead. The informant then phoned again, asking if the police had seen the person, and adding that he was with a red scooter or moped. Delpo and his associates then saw a person matching the earlier description and sitting on a parked moped.
The police approached the person and learned that his name was in fact Michael Riley. They surrounded him and ordered him to dismount from the moped. Delpo testified that he was standing two inches away from Riley and that Riley could not move without touching him. Tr. 09/23/02 at 62. Another detective was approximately a foot away, and a third officer was standing directly behind Riley.
Id.
at 61-62. Delpo and the officer behind Riley were close enough that Riley couldn’t have moved without actually making contact with one or the other.
Id.
at 60, 62. While there is some obscurity in the record as to exactly what followed, it seems clear that by this point a reasonable person in Riley’s shoes would have believed he was not free to leave, so that for Fourth Amendment purposes a seizure of some kind had occurred.
United States v. Mendenhall,
Thereafter Delpo bent down in front of Riley and at some point saw a bulge in his sock. He searched the sock and recovered what later proved to be crack cocaine. Delpo said that Riley was wearing long shorts which left the ankle exposed, and the district court accepted this testimony. Tr. 10/03/02 II at 25. Riley points to contradictory evidence, which he claims shows that Delpo discovered the bulge itself only by searching Riley, and that therefore the district court’s acceptance of Delpo’s account was clearly erroneous. Because we think it clear that some sort of seizure occurred before these events, whatever their exact sequence, we need not resolve the issue. In any event, after the police extracted the contents of the sock, they formally placed Riley under arrest.
The seizure that occurred before the exploration of Riley’s sock might be classified either as an investigative stop under
Terry v. Ohio,
Given the timing of the stop, the only source of probable cause is the confidential informant’s tip and the police’s later confirmation of innocent and more or less contemporaneous details such as Riley’s appearance and name. There is no precise formula for the probability required for probable cause. “Somewhere between ‘less than evidence which would justify ... conviction’ and ‘more than bare suspicion,’ probable cause is satisfied.... The precise point is indeterminate.”
United States v. Prandy-Binett,
The informant in this case was particularly reliable. First, his track record was long and error-free. The district court accepted Detective Delpo’s testimony that the informant had provided reliable information over 60 times since the start of their relationship in 1995 or even earlier, Tr. 10/03/02 II at 15, and that he (Detective Delpo) knew of no occasion on which the informant had provided false information,
id.;
see also Tr. 09/23/02 at 7. Thus the informant was the very opposite of an anonymous caller of the sort involved in
Gates.
And Delpo had regularly paid the informant for his information. Tr. 09/23/02 at 7-8. In the past we have seen the fact of an informant’s being known to the police as supplying “accountability” because the known tipster necessarily risked possible criminal prosecution for giving the police false information. See
United States v. Thompson,
Although police observed behavior confirming information supplied by the informant before stopping Riley (information suggesting that the informant had Riley under real-time observation), none of Riley’s behavior appears to have been illicit, and none of the information required advanced knowledge on the part of the informant. The latter would shore up his tip, as accurate prediction would tend to show special access to the plans and activities of the suspect. We have held that a tipster’s strong incentives to be truthful, alone, provided “ample” “reasonable suspicion” for a
Terry
stop,
United States v. Clark,
On the other hand, none of the above cases held that the additional factor was
necessary;
they said only that in combination with the reliable tip it was
sufficient.
Thus our holding here is consistent with, though not compelled by, our precedent. In addition, in an unpublished opinion we found probable cause in a reliable informant’s tip, with corroboration limited to contemporaneous innocent details.
United States v. Jones,
Given that the police had probable cause to arrest Riley, the search was valid as one incident to arrest. It is of no import that the search came before the actual arrest. In
Rawlings v. Kentucky,
The judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
