RULING ON MOTION TO SUPPRESS THE EVIDENCE
The Facts
In mid-afternoon on March 2, 1967, John Turley, a detective of the West Hartford Police Department, while on patrol in an unmarked cruiser, received a radio request from headquarters to call in by telephone. When he complied, he was told of a telephoned complaint just received from the manager of the West Hartford Branch of the Constitution National Bank that his bank was going to be robbed. Turley, accompanied by a fellow officer, promptly drove to the bank, entered by way of the rear door and spoke to the branch manager, Joseph Surrano. This was at 3:35 p. m. Surrano told Turley that a few minutes earlier he had observed a man enter the bank and confer with Miss Yvette Gagne, a teller. When the man left the bank, Miss Gagne informed Surrano that this individual had told her that he wanted her assistance in carrying out his plan, which called for him to drive up to her drive-in window and hand her a bag and a note into which she was to place money. Surrano also indicated that Miss Gagne was hysterical as a result of the encounter; accordingly, Turley did not attempt to interview her at this time. But before the detective could even talk to Miss Gagne, Surrano interrupted his remarks to point out the defendant, who was now standing across the street from the bank, as the man who had spoken with Miss Gagne. Detective Turley observed the defendant walk back and forth on the sidewalk in front of the bank and saw him peer at the bank from behind a parked car.
Turley and his fellow officer left the bank and placed the defendant under arrest and immediately warned him of his constitutional rights. He then quickly frisked the defendant for weapons and found none. He placed the defendant in a police car in the custody of his partner and returned to the bank to speak with Miss Gagne.
At this time, Miss Gagne, informed Turley that the defendant had entered the bank at about 3:25 p. m. and informed her of his intentions to rob the bank. The defendant further told Miss Gagne that if she refused to cooperate, he would jump over the counter and take it; and that if he didn’t get the money in this bank, he would rob another bank.
After this discussion with Miss Gagne, Detective Turley brought the defendant to police headquarters and booked him on a charge of breach of the peace. Before the defendant was put in a cell, he was asked to empty his pockets. When he did so, the note and the homemade cloth bag which he now seeks to suppress as illegally seized came to light. It is obvious that the note demanding money, and the bag into which it was to be put, were means by which a robbery was to be committed.
Discussion
The admissibility of the evidence thus obtained depends of course, upon the legality of the search, and this in turn depends upon whether the arrest, made without a warrant, was legal.
On the foregoing facts, I conclude that the search which led to the discovery of the evidence sought to be suppressed was incidental to a lawful arrest.
Connecticut police officers have statutory authority to arrest a person apprehended in the act of committing a felony “on the speedy information of others * * *.” Conn.Gen.Stats. § 6-49 (1966 Rev.). See Sims v. Smith,
II.
Quite apart from the speed of its receipt, the information was adequate under federal standards to warrant a prudent man in believing that a crime had been committed. See Beck v. Ohio,
That the officers chose not to risk the defendant’s escape by maintaining surveillance until Miss Gagne could be interviewed did not deny to them the benefit of her own affirmance of Mr. Surrano’s report of her information. The additional corroboration of what was already sufficient probable cause from Miss Gagne of the earlier report to her employer was received by the officer shortly after he first arrested the defendant and while the defendant was still held in custody. Although it was received after the defendant had technically been arrested, it does not have to be excluded from consideration in passing upon the validity of the search which came later. Everything that occurred from the time the officers arrived at the bank until they left with their prisoner was one episode with respect to the arrest and detention of the defendant. There is no basis in technicalities or in reason to segment it into separate events. Cf. Brinegar v. United States, supra,
That the detective booked the defendant — or even arrested him — for the lesser offense of breach of the peace would not invalidate the search because it revealed an additional and different offense. Abel v. United States,
IY.
Once custody was lawfully obtained over the body of the accused, a search of his person was permissible. United States v. Jackson,
This is not a case where the evidence uncovered by the search is sought to be used to justify it. The search was incidental to a valid arrest.
The motion to suppress is denied.
Notes
. From dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice Frankfurter. (The Justices were not in disagreement on this point.)
