MA: Detailed description of car involved in two robberies near in time and location to when it was seen was PC

The officer had a wealth of information for probable cause to stop and search defendant’s car for two robberies. The fact that six hours elapsed between the two didn’t make the first one stale. Defendant’s argument the officers acted in bad faith in not getting a warrant first is unavailing. Commonwealth v. Hernandez, 2015 Mass. LEXIS 901 (Dec. 29, 2015):

The information supporting probable cause included the following: (1) a robbery involving a firearm occurred at 8:30 to 8:45 p.m.; (2) the vehicle involved in the robbery was a green Honda Civic sedan, bearing a specified license plate number, and with a Dominican Republic flag hanging from the rear view mirror; (3) the perpetrators were described as two Hispanic males; (4) an armed home invasion, where two people were shot, occurred approximately five hours after and approximately fifty yards from the armed robbery; (5) a vehicle matching the exact description of the vehicle used in the armed robbery was going in the general vicinity of the two crimes approximately six hours after the robbery; (6) the vehicle changed direction after the police cruiser approached, turning 180 degrees from its original direction; (7) the vehicle failed to stop at a stop sign after the police cruiser approached; (8) the occupants of the vehicle were two Hispanic-appearing males; (9) the driver of the vehicle was belligerent and made furtive gestures; and (10) no weapons or contraband were located inside the interior of the vehicle. The sum of the information known to police formed a sufficient basis on which to search the entire vehicle, including the trunk, because the officers could have appropriately concluded that the vehicle used in the armed robbery, occurring hours prior in the same general proximity to the location of the stop, contained evidence of that crime.

The defendant’s argument against probable cause hinges on the six-hour gap between the armed robbery and the stop, and the lack of a specific description of the perpetrators. We disagree that either factor is fatal. Although “[f]acts supporting probable cause must be ‘closely related to the time of the issue of the warrant [so] as to justify a finding of probable cause at that time,’” we conclude that the temporal component was satisfied under these circumstances. See Commonwealth v. Matias, 440 Mass. 787, 792, 802 N.E.2d 546 (2004), quoting Commonwealth v. Cruz, 430 Mass. 838, 843, 724 N.E.2d 683 (2000).

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