Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge SILBERMAN.
Appellant challenges his conviction on the basis of an allegedly erroneous decision of the district court at a pretrial suppression hearing. He asserts that the police lacked probable cause to arrest him and that therefore the search of his person incident to arrest was illegal. We affirm.
I.
On January 30, 1991, officers of the Metropolitan Police Department executed a search warrant on an apartment in southeast Washington, D.C. When the officers arrived, the door to the apartment was ajar, and as the officers knocked and announced the search it swung open. The officers saw appellant Holder standing in a short entrance hallway that opened onto the living/dining area of the apartment. They held appellant against the wall in the hallway and proceeded into the apartment. On the table in the dining area, approximately five feet away from appellant, the officers saw several ziplock bags containing cocaine base (later determined to be over seven grams), a razor blade, and a plate with crack cocaine on it. Sitting at the table was another individual, Keith Jones, who had a package of cocaine in his hand. No other person was in the apartment.
Jones and appellant Holder were then arrested and searched. The officers found in Holder’s pockets a set of keys and 17 *1328 ziplock bags containing crack cocaine. One of the keys opened the lock on a toolbox found in the apartment. In the toolbox were a loaded .357-magnum pistol and 184 ziplock bags holding more than 18 grams of crack cocaine.
Holder moved to suppress the evidence found on him. He argued that the cocaine and keys were the product of an illegal search because the officers did not have probable cause to arrest him. The district court, relying on
Michigan v. Summers,
II.
Appellant does not challenge his initial, brief detention but does claim that the police lacked probable cause to arrest him.
1
We review
de novo
the district court’s legal conclusion that probable cause supported the arrest, but we examine the court’s findings of fact only for clear error.
See United States v. Garrett,
In
Ybarra,
police executed a valid search warrant on a tavern where the bartender had been suspected of selling heroin. When the police arrived, they announced that they would “pat down” all present as a “cursory search for weapons.”
Id.
at 88,
Appellant relies on the proposition in
Ybarra
that “a person’s mere propinquity to others independently suspected of crimi
*1329
nal activity does not, without more, give rise to probable cause to search that person.”
Id.
at 91,
Appellant, however, overlooks the crucial factors that distinguish Ybarra. First, the search in Ybarra occurred in a public place. Ybarra was simply one patron among many in a bar where the police had reason to believe the bartender had been dealing heroin. There was no indication that Ybarra even knew of the bartender’s activities. 2 Access to a private apartment, on the other hand, is presumably limited, and thus a person’s admission to the apartment normally would raise a stronger inference of connection to the activities conducted within.
More crucially, in this case the drugs were openly on display, and therefore appellant’s proximity to the drugs clearly reflected his knowledge of, and probably his involvement in, narcotics activity. Even if the drugs were not Holder’s and instead belonged only to Jones, the circumstances indicated that Jones trusted Holder and considered him sufficiently complicit to allow him a full view of the drug distribution scene. Unlike the situation in
Ybarra,
where the defendant’s presence in a public tavern was itself ostensibly innocent, Holder’s presence in a private apartment just a few feet from a table full of cocaine can hardly be so described. This is not a case in which the officers’ probable cause depended partly on mere “propinquity to others
independently
suspected of criminal activity.”
Id.
at 91,
The logical inference for the police to draw in this situation was that Holder was either a party to the distribution of drugs or a customer who had just made, or was about to make, a purchase.
3
Of course, it was
possible
that Holder was merely an innocent visitor looking for someone else at the apartment. That he was present, for whatever reason, when the drugs were in plain view, however, makes it more likely than not that he was involved in some way in the criminal activity, and that amply satisfies probable cause.
See United States v. DeLeon,
jH Jjc * J(C * *
*1330 The judgment is therefore affirmed.
So Ordered.
Notes
. Appellant contends, however, that
Michigan v. Summers,
. The
Ybarra
Court declined to consider a situation in which the search warrant itself authorized the search of unnamed persons found in a particular place. Such a warrant would be based on "probable cause to believe that persons who will be in the place at the time of the search will be in possession of illegal drugs.”
Ybarra,
. In this regard, Holder’s argument that the door was ajar because he was on his way out does little to aid his case. Whether he was entering, exiting, or merely present, the situation still would have suggested that he was attempting to make a purchase, had just made a purchase, or was involved in the distribution operation himself. All three possibilities involve a crime.
