Thе appellant ■ Robert Viggiano was convicted on a single charge of possession of stolen goods in violation of Title 18 U.S.C. § 659 and was sentenced to five years imprisonment. At the trial the Government presented evidence which was the product of a search and seizure authorized by two search warrants issued by a United States Commissiоner. The accused challenged the validity of the warrants on the ground that the supporting affidavits on which the Commissioner relied were insufficient to show probable cause. A motion to suppress was made in advance of trial; the court held a hearing on the motion and denied it. The defendant now appeals from the judgment of conviction because the trial court refused to exclude the evidence seized. We affirm.
The search warrants were based upon the affidavits of F.B.I. Special Agent Paul Stapleton and were issued on October 24, 1968. They authorized the F.B.I. agents to search the grotind floor of a dwelling located on Farragut Road and occupiеd by Allen Viggiano, appellant’s brother, and the garage attached to the premises at 245-02 South Conduit Boulevard, Queens. The agents executed the warrants the following day and seized six cartons of Russ Togs brand wearing apparel at the Farragut Road residence.
The F.B.I. learned of the stolen goods and their whereabouts through one Allеn Magid, a “walk-in,” with whom the F.B.I. had had no experience before he came to the Bureau offices on October 24, 1968. After interviewing Magid, the F.B.I. agents made a quick investigation of their own and Agent Stapleton prepared affidavits summarizing Mag-id’s report and the results of the F.B.I. inquiries. In substance the affidavits 1 gave the Commissioner the information that: in August, 1968 Robеrt Viggiano told Magid that he had just purchased a load of Russ Togs clothing which he wanted to resell for $17,000; that a month later one Vic Orena gave Magid a key to the garage at 245-02 South Conduit Boulevard, Queens, with instructions to show the merchandise to prospective buyers; that Magid entered the garage October 22, 1968 and saw a quantity of boxes, beаring Russ Togs labels, some of which bore out-of-state addresses, and a quantity of ladies’ and children’s wearing apparel, having Russ Togs labels; and that Magid had given *718 Agent Stapleton the key to the South Conduit Boulevard garage. 2
They further stated that in early October, 1968, Robert Viggiano told Magid he had received another Russ Togs load, and Viggiano showed Mаgid a quantity of boxes bearing Russ Togs labels with out-of-state addresses; that on October 7, 1968 Robert Viggiano told Magid that he had moved “the load” to a storage room on the grоund floor of his brother’s home “around the corner,” and that Magid knew that Allen Viggiano, Robert’s brother, lived “around the corner” at 9031 Farragüt Road; that Robert Viggiano informed Magid оn October 20, 1968 that the merchandise was still at the Farragüt Road address and that Magid would be told when the shipment was moved elsewhere, but that Magid had not been so informed before reporting to the F.B.I.
They also disclosed that by its own inquiries, the F.B.I. learned that a truck containing $36,000 worth of Russ Togs apparel consigned to out-of-state purchasers hаd been hijacked in Manhattan on August 20, 1968; that a motor carrier’s depot had been burglarized September 30, 1968 and that a quantity of Russ Togs apparel, labelled for interstate shipment, had been stolen.
Appellant contends the warrants obtained on the basis of these allegations were issued without probable cause. In Spinelli v. United States,
In the present case the question is whether or not there was sufficient in the informant’s report and the information gained by the F.B.I. in its outside inquiry, both as stated in the affidavits, to justify the Commissioner in deciding that the informant was generally trustworthy and that what the informant knew which led to his making the charge was obtained in a reliable way. Spinelli v. United States,
supra,
We conclude that the affidavits were sufficient to justify a finding of probable cause for the issuance of the warrants. The detailed information reported by Magid, most of which was based upon his personal observation together with admissions made directly to him by the appellant, his own admissions as aider and abettor,
3
his possession of the key to the garage, which he turned over to the F.B.I. and the сorroboration of the
*719
outside information picked up by the F.B.I., such as the facts and dates of the hijacking and theft of the garments, the brand name of the items, the addresses to out-of-state consignees, the relative consistency of price (all things considered) between the manufacturer’s invoices and appellant’s purchasing and asking prices, all afford the kind and quality of evidentiary material that support and confirm the Commissioner’s conclusion that the informant was generally trustworthy. See Jonеs v. United States,
In United States v. Bozza,
The affidavits also sufficiently report the “underlying circumstances” which “enable the magistrate independently to judge of the validity of the informant’s conclusiоn * * * ” that the appellant was engaged in criminal activity. The above mentioned items of information are relevant also to this portion of the test standard. Particulаr weight should be given to matters within the informant’s own observation and hearing. In
Spinelli
the Supreme Court gave recognition to personal observation as a reliable basis for аn informant’s report.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. The district court properly considered the allegations of both affidavits as if submitted in a single application. Unitеd States v. Serao,
. F.B.I. agents did not attempt to use this key to the South Conduit Boulevard garage before applying for the search warrants.
. See Spinelli v. United States,
In Gilbert v. United States,
