The district court denied habeas corpus relief to petitioner-appellant from his state cоnviction on a narcotics charge. The issue pertains to the validity of the search which disclosеd the narcotics.
The state trial court denied petitioner’s motion to suppress the evidence and received the evidence at the trial. The jury found defendant guilty and he was sentenced to the state penitentiary. The Colorado Supreme Court affirmed. Stone v. People, Colo.,
Denver police officer Mulnix had known petitioner for six or seven years, hаd arrested him once before, and had then seen that petitioner had needle injection marks. On August 17, аn informer told Mulnix that petitioner was using heroin and was selling heroin and marijuana. Previously the informer had given Mulnix rеliable and correct information on several occasions. Mulnix began a surveillance of рetitioner which lasted portions of two days. The license number of the automobile driven by petitionеr checked out to a vacant address. On August 19, Mulnix followed the car which petitioner was driving. About 3:55 P.M. on that day petitioner parked his car on a public street and started across the street. Mulnix told him to “hold it” and approached him for the purpose of getting the address on his driver’s license. Petitioner was wеaring a shortsleeve shirt, and Mulnix noticed fresh needle marks on petitioner’s arm. Mulnix arrested petitioner, took him to the police ear, and radioed for assistance. After another officer came, Mulnix went to the car which the petitioner had been driving and which Mulnix had under observation at all times after petitioner had left it. On the front seat Mulnix found a capsule of heroin and petitioner’s wallet. The heroin was introduced in evidence at the state trial.
The threshold question pertains to the action оf Mulnix in ordering petitioner to stop. Petitioner’s argument is that it does not fall within the stop and frisk exceptiоn to the probable cause requirement. See Terry v. Ohio,
The actions of the officer were well within the permissible area recognized by Adams v. Williams,
After the stop, Mulnix asked petitioner for his driver’s license, saw the needle marks, and then placed petitioner under arrest. We believe that Mulnix had probable causе for the arrest. The informer had told him that petitioner was selling heroin and marijuana, that he was presеntly using heroin, and that “he was strung out now.” Mulnix had had long experience in the narcotics field and had observed needle injection marks on different people “several hundred times.” He observed that the marks on petitioner’s arm were fresh. The information which Mulnix had received plus his personal observation wаs enough to give probable cause for the arrest.
The car search occurred some tеn minutes after the arrest and across the street from the point of arrest. The car had been under observation by Mulnix at all times after petitioner emerged from it. Petitioner argues that the search was not permissibly incident to the arrest because of the time and distance factors. We see no neеd to get into Chimel and Coolidge problems. See Chimel v. California,
Affirmed.
