(dissenting). Ulysses Walker was convicted of possession of heroin.1
The issue is whether heroin found when he was arrested should be suppressed because the police did not have probable cause to arrest him.
The police acted on (i) information telephoned *585by an anonymous informant that Walker had left town to pick up a "load of dope” and would be returning in a few hours, (ii) corroboration, as a result of investigation, of details, in themselves innocent, furnished by the informant concerning the means and time of the journey, and (iii) police suspicions that Walker was a dope dealer based on his conviction one year earlier for possession of marijuana and other unspecified information, admittedly insufficient to justify an arrest, that he was peddling narcotics.
The Court of Appeals, reversing the trial court, declared that "the corroborative evidence offered here is essentially neutral and cannot be made to look suspicious by the informant’s tip”.2
This Court, pursuing Aguilar’s3 "two-pronged” analysis, concludes that the police were justified, on investigative corroboration of "self-verifying” details furnished by the anonymous informant, in concluding that he had obtained his information in a reliable manner, that he was reliable, and there was probable cause to believe his assertion that Walker was in possession of narcotics.
We would affirm the Court of Appeals decision reversing Walker’s conviction.4
Where the informant is unknown, there is no information regarding his reliability. His reliability cannot reasonably be inferred on verification of *586innocuous information there is no reason to believe the accused would conceal.
Corroboration of innocent details tends to show that the informant is acquainted with the accused, but does not tend to show present criminal activity absent the "track record”5 of the reliable informant who can tell the police when, without shooting in the dark, there is reason to proceed against the accused. Without a track record there is no way of knowing whether the anonymous tipster is acting on anything more substantial than personal animus6 or his suspicions — of less, certainly no greater, probity than a police officer’s suspicions,
Suspicion shared by more than one or any number of officers is not probable cause. Police suspicion bolstered by an anonymous informant’s assertion not shown by some evidence of present criminal activity to be other than the product of suspicion has no greater dignity. Suspicion corroborated by suspicion is not probable cause.
The corroboration in the instant case of innocent details supplied by the anonymous informant and the unspecified suspicions that Walker dealt in narcotics did not establish the reliability of the anonymous tip that he would on this occasion be returning with a load of dope.7 The facts and *587circumstances known to the police "of which they had reasonably trustworthy information” were not "sufficient to warrant a prudent man in believing” that Walker "was committing an offense”. Beck v Ohio, 379 US 89, 91; 85 S Ct 223; 13 L Ed 2d 142 (1964).
I
A person who refused to identify himself telephoned a Benton Township police officer and told him that Walker had "left town a short time ago going to Detroit to pick up a load of dope” and that he would be "returning to Benton Harbor in approximately five hours” and going to 668 Superior Street. "He is driving either a bronze-colored four-door Cadillac with Indiana license plates or a black-over-yellow four-door Oldsmobile with Michigan plates. Two women are with him.”
Investigation revealed that Lucille Gayten lived at 668 Superior Street and that a 1969 Oldsmobile with 1970 Michigan plate GKV 275 was registered in her name. A bronze-colored Cadillac was in the garage but not the Oldsmobile.
About five hours after receipt of the tip officers watching for the Oldsmobile saw it going west on the 1-94 business loop leading into Benton Harbor. The officers pulled behind the Oldsmobile in their unmarked car. The Oldsmobile changed from the right to the left lane and made a left turn. The right rear window was partially open (it was February) but not in the process of being rolled down.
*588The officers turned on flashers and began sounding a siren and honking their horn. The Oldsmobile was forced off the road approximately 100 feet from the intersection. It lurched forward another three feet before finally coming to rest. Three officers, their weapons drawn, identified themselves as police officers and told the occupants they were under arrest. Three women and two men got out of the car, including Walker who made a throwing motion of a white powdery substance later determined to be heroin.
The officer who received the anonymous tip and ordered the arresting officers to watch for and stop the Oldsmobile and arrest Walker was aware that he had been convicted one year earlier of possession of marijuana and that three months before his arrest, Walker had been under surveillance for peddling narcotics.
II
The decisions of the United States Supreme Court in Draper,8 Aguilar, Spinelli,9 Whiteley10 and Harris11 "frame but do not entirely solve the problem here presented”. United States v Canieso, 470 F2d 1224, 1230 (CA 2, 1972).
Draper and Whiteley considered whether police officers had probable cause to arrest. Aguilar, Spinelli and Harris considered the sufficiency of a showing on affidavit to a magistrate of probable cause for a search.
*589All the cases, except, it would appear, Whiteley, concern tips supplied by a confidential informant known to the police. In the instant case, the tip was supplied by an anonymous informant unknown to the police.
While the ultimate question in Draper and the instant case (where the defendants were arrested without a warrant), and in Aguilar, Spinelli and Harris (concerning search warrants) and in Whiteley (arrest on a defective warrant) is the sufficiency of the showing of probable cause,12 the primary focus in the warrant cases was whether the magistrate had been furnished with adequate information so that he could make an independent judgment.
Two-pronged analysis, developed in Aguilar and extended in Spinelli in the confidential informant situation, obliges police seeking a warrant to detail their knowledge of the informant, the underlying information he provided and any other facts and circumstances on which they rely so that the magistrate, independently of the officer’s conclusory allegations, can assess whether the informant is reliable and whether he appears to have obtained his information in a reliable manner.
Where, as here, the defendant is arrested without a warrant the inquiry does not concern the contents of an affidavit — there is none — but whether the officers themselves had information constituting probable cause for an arrest.
In Aguilar there was no occasion to discuss the adequacy of the probable cause showing because the affidavit so plainly was conclusory and defi*590cient in every respect.13 In Spinelli the Court sought to refine Aguilar by elucidating the kind of information that did not and the kind of information that might provide a magistrate with a basis for finding that the informant was reliable and his information was obtained in a reliable manner and of probable cause but, having concluded that the showing was inadequate,14 could not decide what would constitute a sufficient showing of probable cause. Despite the length and care of the Spinelli analysis, all that it tells us is what is not an adequate showing of probable cause in a conñdential informant situation, not what is sufficient in an anonymous informant situation.
*591In Whiteley, where a conclusory affidavit was declared insufficient, the Court concluded that the other information of which the arresting officers were aware did not establish probable cause.
Draper and the lead opinion in Harris alone show what the Court regards as a sufficient showing of probable cause in the conñdential informant situation. They can only hint at the standards to be applied in the anonymous informant situation.
Ill
This Court, relying principally on Spinelli and Draper, concludes that the requirements of two-pronged analysis have been satisfied because the tip "contained sufficient self-verifying detail to warrant an inference that the informant obtained his information in a reliable manner” and that "[a]fter several details of the tip were corroborated by independent police work * * * the police could reasonably conclude that this was an informant whose reliability had been clearly demonstrated”.
This, however, is but one-pronged analysis. Saying that self-verifying detail has been corroborated is but another way of saying that detail deemed self-verifying has also been otherwise verified.15
*592In Draper (arrest without a warrant) there was information separate and apart from the "self-verifying” detail regarding the informant’s reliability. In Draper, as in Harris,16 the officers were satisfied, based on their dealings with the informant, that he was reliable.
The (pre-Aguilar) Draper Court concluded, without the intricacies of Spinelli analysis,17 that when *593the officer had verified the details provided by his informant — whom he had "always” found to be accurate and reliable — he had reasonable grounds to believe the unverified "critical fact” that Draper was carrying narcotics.
Although Spinelli (which found the probable cause showing inadequate) in distinguishing Draper (which found it adequate) refers to the detailed report given by the Draper informant and the corroboration by the police of all the details except the allegation that Draper was carrying narcotics, Draper itself does not contain particularized analysis of the substantiality of the officer’s belief that his informant was reliable or of the sufficiency of the detail to establish that the information he supplied had been compiled in a reliable way.
The Draper Court’s emphasis on the informant’s history of accuracy and reliability18 negatives this Court’s apparent conclusion, reached by applying Spinelli’s confidential informant analysis in an anonymous informant case, that Draper would have been decided the same way if the tip had been anonymous. Draper does not hold that the police can arrest a person debarking from a train or plane when someone who knows him well enough to describe his dress, appearance, gait and movements (commonplace, readily verifiable details), telephones ahead his time and place of arrival and charges that he will be carrying contraband. "To hold otherwise would result in a *594completely unacceptable and dangerous precedent. Any unverified and unverifiable tip would result in any passenger being detained and searched merely on a phone call giving a time, a flight and description accompanied by an accusation of criminal activity.”19
Nor can an arrest be made merely because the report is more credible because the accused has been suspected by the police of engaging in the very criminal activity described by the anonymous tipster. Otherwise a person harboring malice or suspicions might harass anyone with a criminal record or suspected by the police who, on nothing more than a telephone call describing him and his anticipated movements, could be arrested.20
Absent incriminating evidence that substantiates the suspicion or anonymous assertion that the accused is currently engaged in criminal activity he cannot be arrested for the apparent purpose of conducting a search for evidence of criminal activity as an "incident” of a "lawful arrest”. We have not yet, I hope, reached the point where there is year-round open season on ex-convicts and those whom the police suspect that can be hair-triggered by an anonymous telephone call and substantiation of innocuous details any acquaintance and many strangers could provide.
A judgment that there is evidence of criminality *595may be reasonable where the informant, as in Draper, has always supplied accurate and reliable information of criminality or, as in Harris,21 provides information against his penal interest. Absent such a record of reliability or other substantial reason to believe the assertions of present criminal activity, there is no thread of criminality elevating suspicion to probable cause unless further investigation or other information provides some evidence of present criminal activity.
Draper cannot properly be invoked in this case where there is no evidence whatsoever of the accuracy and reliability of the informant.
IV
The inherent unreliability of an anonymous informant distinguishes confidential informant cases like Draper from this case. The analysis appropriate to resolution of the question whether there was probable cause for an arrest in this case is to be found upon examination of other anonymous informant cases.
In Whiteley a business establishment was broken into. The sheriff "acting on a tip”22 signed a complaint charging the accused and another person with committing the offense. A bulletin was put out on the radio which described the two suspects and the automobile in which they probably would be riding. They were arrested the next day. Although their car matched the car described in the radio bulletin and the accused was known to the sheriff as a person who committed such offenses, the Court concluded that there was not sufficient information to justify an arrest.
*596The Court declared that while resort may be had to information gathered by the arresting officers where the information supplied by the informant is inadequate, "the additional information acquired by the arresting officers must in some sense be corroborative of the informer’s tip that the arrestees committed the felony or, as in Draper itself, were in the process of committing the felony” (emphasis supplied).23 Since "the arresting officer was not himself possessed of any factual data tending to corroborate the informer’s tip that Daley and Whiteley committed the crime” (emphasis supplied)24 he did not have probable cause to arrest.
The emphasis on corroboration of the asserted criminality finds expression and application in the decisions of Federal and state courts which have considered the question in the anonymous informant context.
In Canieso the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs obtained information from an informant that a Philippine diplomat would be carrying 20 kilograms of heroin in two blue plastic suitcases from southeast Asia to New York City and that he would be traveling with a Chinese national. Agents observed the two suspects, seated across an airplane aisle, travel halfway around the world exchanging glances but not recognition, and, after the diplomat had cleared his luggage at Kennedy Airport without customs inspection, on signal from the diplomat get into the same taxicab and travel to a Manhattan hotel. The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit assumed, arguendo, despite ample corroboration of innocent details, that the tip failed to pass either prong of the *597Aguilar/Spinelli test. Stressing the culprits’ studied avoidance of each other on the airplane and recognition after the suitcases had cleared customs the court declared that "the observation of acts as suspicious as those in this case affords a basis for probable cause far more solid than a routine recitation meeting the tests of Aguilar” (emphasis supplied).25 The court said that where a tip, in itself insufficient, generates "police investigation and this has developed significant corroboration or other 'jprobative indications of criminal activity along the lines suggested by the informant’ ” it "may be used to give such additional color as is needed to elevate the information acquired by police observation above the floor required for probable cause”.26
The United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit sustained a search where the police corroborated by surveillance that, as the informant had advised, the defendant was a black man with a wide-brimmed hat who drove a Pontiac Grand Prix and verified that his first name was Cleveland, and had observed at a distance two transactions between the defendant and other persons in a neighborhood where narcotics transactions occurred and saw him deposit something with a white cloth cover in the trunk of his car after they said they thought he had spotted them. This, in the view of the majority "was a highly suspicious circumstance”.27 Judge McCree agreed with the analysis but took a different view of the facts. He observed in dissent that the officers were not in uniform and expressed his opinion that the transfer of the article to the trunk was neither a *598criminal act nor inherently suspicious. He agreed with the majority "that an otherwise insufficient tip can be augmented to the point of affording probable cause by police observation which might verify the information provided by the tip. This verification may, in some cases, satisfy both requirements: that the information was obtained in a reliable way and that the informer was trustworthy. But when a tip is received from a completely unknown source, there must be some independent veriñcation of the fact that criminal activity has occurred” (emphasis supplied).28
The United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ruled that a tip from an apparently anonymous informant "that a vehicle of a described make with an identified license number will be proceeding toward Los Angeles from El Centro at a certain time is information that could be readily obtained by any bystander observing the vehicle on the road from El Centro to Los Angeles or, as in Spinelli, that 'could easily have been obtained from an offhand remark heard at a neighborhood bar.’ ”29 In holding a search invalid, the court said:
"Nothing about the described features of the car or its direction points to anything suspicious, let alone criminal. That a vehicle matching the description was spotted along a highway from El Centro in the general direction of Los Angeles corroborates nothing except, possibly, the ability of the informant accurately to relay what he has seen or what he has overheard. ”30
The court contrasted the "few innocuous details” *599with the details in another case which "were themselves suspicious”.31
The United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit concluded that there was probable cause "based upon the specific detailed information of the [anonymous] informant’s reports, in addition to the agents’ observations of the appellants’ activities indicating criminal conduct”.32
In holding that officers did not have probable cause to arrest defendant on deplaning in Detroit, the United States District Court declared that Draper was "clearly distinguishable” because the informant in that case "had, from past experience, proved to be reliable to the satisfaction of the police”. Recognizing that a tip from an unknown informant may be corroborated by other information, the court declared that "in every instance examined, the later information which corroborated the tip was substantial and was of a nature which might reasonably lead to the conclusion that an illegal activity was ongoing”.33
Another judge of the same court declared that there was no probable cause where the officers had observed nothing that was "inconsistent with com*600pletely innocent behavior. There was nothing to suggest that the defendant was engaged in any criminal conduct".34
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals in a case where the police received an anonymous tip that 15 minutes earlier Alfred L. "Sonny” Truitt, Jr., "was enroute from Dallas to Greenville with approximately ten pounds of marihuana in his gold Firebird automobile,” and officers dispatched to intercept the automobile observed a gold Firebird slow and leave the expressway and stopped it, distinguished Draper on the ground that "the informant was completely anonymous and not shown to be credible. To allow the informant’s brief conversation to constitute probable cause would be in effect allowing it to serve as the 'underlying circumstance’ for determining his veracity” (emphasis supplied).35 Citing Whiteley, the court declared that "the additional information acquired by the arresting officers must in some sense be corroborative of the informer’s tip that *601the arrestee committed the felony, or was in the process of committing the felony”.36
The Colorado Supreme Court declared that there was no probable cause for an arrest where the police received a number of telephone calls from unknown informants regarding the activities of Loretta Ann and Bobby Joe Williams. One caller said that Loretta Ann was making trips to Texas to obtain heroin, the other related that she would be returning from Texas that evening and would be met by Bobby Joe. The officers had no prior communication with the informants and "had had no independent corroboration that a crime was in fact being committed. Nevertheless, acting on this information, they proceeded to the airport and arrested [Loretta Ann] after she arrived at the airport and was met by [Bobby Joe].” The court said:
"The information imparted by [the anonymous informants] lacked the detail which would clearly manifest its reliability. Finally, the corroborating facts gathered by the officers prior to arrest conñrmed only innocent incidents of the tip, i.e., that [Loretta Ann] was on a flight from El Paso and that Bobby Joe Williams was awaiting her arrival. The officers had no independent information that either [Loretta Ann] or Bobby Joe Williams was involved in criminal activity apart from these anonymous telephone calls.”37
Rhode Island police received an anonymous tip that "a tall, white male hitchhiker, who was dressed in a khaki jacket, dungarees and a ski-type toque, had just alighted from [the informant’s] automobile and could be found hitchhiking on *602Tower Hill Road at the intersection of Routes 1 and 138. [The informant] further advised that he believed the described person possessed marijuana and possibly other drugs”.38 Shortly thereafter the hitchhiker was arrested. The state claimed that the tip had been corroborated because "a person who precisely fitted the tipster’s description as to appearance, attire and activity had been seen at the time when and at the place where the informer had advised that such a person would be found”.39 In holding that there was no probable cause for an arrest the court distinguished Draper, saying that the informant in that case was "a special employee of the Bureau of Narcotics who had previously furnished reliable information regarding narcotics violations; in this case it came from an unidentified source who had not established his reliability and who, although he expressed a 'belief that defendant possessed narcotics, did not furnish the police with any basis, support or underlying reason for that belief”:
"For aught they knew his reported 'belief was no more than a baseless suspicion or spiteful prank. * * *
"In sum, what was relayed to the arresting officer concerning defendant’s appearance and where he would be found, while accurate, was insufficient as a basis for an arrest unless accompanied by 'reasonably trustworthy information’ placing him in criminal circumstances, and in that aspect the knowledge supplied the arresting officer was deficient.”40
Other state courts have declared that where the officer’s information regarding the reliability of a confidential informant is inadequate, information obtained as a result of further investigation, as*603sertedly corroborative of the tip, is insufficient where it "related only to innocent activity”,41 or where the "police observed nothing that could be described as furtive or suspicious in any of this conduct.”42
V
This Court has ruled that the police may not act on an anonymous tip. In People v Charles D Walker, 385 Mich 565; 189 NW2d 234 (1971), the police, in their unmarked automobile, cut in front of defendant’s automobile after it left the expressway and entered Grand Rapids. The police jumped out with guns drawn, arrested the occupants and seized heroin. At the hearing, the officer was reluctant to give any information but did say that the police had received information about "this Pontiac” over the telephone and had information on the driver "dating back some time”. This Court said:
"From both the Michigan and Federal cases, it is clear that while police officers may proceed upon the basis of information received from an informer and need not disclose the identity of the informer, in order to establish probable cause there must be a showing that the information was something more than a mere suspicion, a tip, or anonymous telephone call, and that it came from a source upon which the officers had a right to rely.”Id, p 575 (emphasis supplied).
Similarly, see People v Guertins, 224 Mich 8, 10; 194 NW 561 (1923), declaring that "an officer has not the right to arrest a person without a warrant and upon information which is given anonymously,” and People v Zeigler, 358 Mich 355, 360; *604100 NW2d 456 (1960): "There was no other information, free from the infirmity of being anonymous * * *
Requiring probable cause assures that a citizen will not suffer unjustified intrusions upon his privacy. Simply stated, probable cause requires that there be good reason for an arrest. In the instant case the police acted on an anonymous tip setting forth innocent facts in support of an allegation of criminal activity. The tip did not reveal the basis of the informant’s allegation and therefore we do not know whether his information was based on personal observation, a report of a person he believed to be reliable or mere rumor. Since the informant was anonymous there is no way of substantiating his personal reliability. The corroboration was weak; no criminal activity was observed, only part of the story related by the informant was verified.43 The additional information in the possession of the police (defendant’s marijuana conviction and the earlier surveillance for reasons unspecified and with a result not disclosed other than that there was no probable cause for arrest), did not substantiate the charge of current criminal activity. This amalgam of rumor, unsubstantiated allegation and unspecified suspicion does not rise to the level of probable cause. It operated in this case not as a reason for an arrest but as an excuse.44
Clearly there was an arrest45 and just as clearly *605the arrest was without probable cause.46 The fruits of the arrest, the evidence that Walker was in possession of narcotics, should, accordingly, be suppressed.47
*606We would affirm the Court of Appeals and remand to the trial court.
Kavanagh, C. J., concurred with Levin, J.MCLA 335.153; MSA 18.1123, repealed by 1971 PA 196, effective April 1, 1972, substituting the provisions of present law. See MCLA 335.341 et seq.; MSA 18.1070(41) et seq.
People v Walker, 64 Mich App 138, 146; 235 NW2d 85 (1975).
Aguilar v Texas, 378 US 108; 84 S Ct 1509; 12 L Ed 2d 723 (1964).
The disposition of the Court of Appeals is stated in the last paragraph of its opinion:
"The trial court’s denial of defendant’s motion to suppress was, therefore, in error. Reversed and remanded for a new trial.2
“2 This holding does not, as defendant requests, require us to order the dismissal of charges against defendant. People v Burrill, 391 Mich 124; 214 NW2d 823 (1974).”
People v Walker, 64 Mich App 138, 147; 235 NW2d 85 (1975).
LaFave, Probable Cause from Informants: The Effects of Murphy’s Law on Fourth Amendment Adjudication, 1977 U 111 L Forum 1, 5.
See Norton v Turner, 427 F Supp 138, 142 (ED Va, 1977), an action against FBI and local law enforcement officers for wrongful entry and search of plaintiffs apartment on an anonymous tip that Patricia Hearst and other fugitives were in the apartment: "It has subsequently been determined that the 'tip’ was probably made by a neighbor of the plaintiff with whom Ms. Norton frequently quarreled.”
Not only were the details corroborated innocent, but not all the details supplied by the informant were corroborated before the arrest. When the police stopped the Oldsmobile they had not corroborated the informant’s assertion that it would be going to Detroit and returning to Benton Harbor; the State Police had been asked to watch for this automobile, but the local police had not received any report *587that the Oldsmobile had been sighted. It was possible that the Oldsmobile had come from the north on Highway 196, from the southwest on 1-94, from anywhere east of Benton Harbor on 1-94, or from within the city itself. Further, the informant’s assertion that there would be two women in the Oldsmobile was uncorroborated; actually there were three women and one man in addition to Walker. Finally, Walker had not been observed in the Oldsmobile.
Draper v United States, 358 US 307; 79 S Ct 329; 3 L Ed 2d 327 (1959).
Spinelli v United States, 393 US 410; 81 S Ct 584; 21 L Ed 2d 637 (1969).
Whiteley v Warden, Wyoming State Penitentiary, 401 US 560; 91 S Ct 1031; 28 L Ed 2d 306 (1971).
United States v Harris, 403 US 573; 91 S Ct 2075; 29 L Ed 2d 723 (1971).
" * * * the standards applicable to the factual basis supporting the officer’s probable-cause assessment at the time of the challenged arrest and search are at least as stringent as the standards applied with respect to the magistrate’s assessment.” Whiteley v Warden, Wyoming State Penitentiary, supra, p 566.
The affidavit stated only that the affiant had "received reliable information from a credible person and do believe that heroin * * * and other narcotics * * * are being kept at the above described premises for the purpose of sale”. Aguilar v Texas, supra, p 109.
In explaining its conclusion, the Court articulated the "two-pronged” test which has been the focus of subsequent litigation and scholarly comment: "[T]he magistrate must be informed of some of the underlying circumstances from which the informant concluded that the narcotics were where he claimed they were, and some of the underlying circumstances from which the officer concluded that the informant, whose identity need not be disclosed * * * was 'credible’ or his information 'reliable.’ ” Id, p 114.
See LaFave, supra; Moylan, Hearsay and Probable Cause: An Aguilar and Spinelli Primer, 25 Mercer L Rev 741 (1974). See also Current Development, Probable Cause and the First-Time Informer, 43 Colo L Rev 357 (1972).
The affidavit stated the FBI had been "informed by a confidential reliable informant” that Spinelli was operating a handbook and accepting wagers by means of telephones, the numbers of which were identified, that he is known to the affiant and to law enforcement agents "as a bookmaker, an associate of bookmakers, a gambler and an associate of gamblers”; that the telephones were listed under the name of Grace P. Hagen, and that Spinelli was seen on four days in the parking lot of her apartment house and on one occasion entering her apartment. The Court said:
"Though the affiant swore that his confidant was 'reliable’, he offered the magistrate no reason in support of this conclusion. Perhaps even more important is the fact that Aguilar’s other test has not been satisfied. The tip does not contain a sufficient statement of the underlying circumstances from which the informer concluded that Spinelli was running a bookmaking operation.” Spinelli v United States, supra, p 416.
"Self-verification” as an alternative to requiring a statement as to the manner in which the informant acquired the information has been subject to repeated criticism:
"[I]f it may be so easily inferred from the affidavit that the informant has himself observed the facts or has them from an actor in the event, no possible harm could come from requiring a statement to that effect, thereby removing the difficult and recurring questions which arise in such situations.” Spinelli v United States, supra, p 426 (concurring opinion of White, J.).
"Because the self-verifying details approach has little going for it as compared to an explicit statement of the basis of the informant’s knowledge, it should be used to uphold an arrest or search only when the details clearly indicate that the informant’s basis of knowledge must have been sufficient.
What is needed, then, before details properly may be *592characterized as self-verifying, is that the facts detailed are incriminating facts rather than mere innocent facts. Only in such circumstances may it fairly be assumed that the informant obtained those facts either by personal observation or by another’s admission against penal interest.” LaFave, supra, pp 44, 47-48. See, also, Note, The Informer’s Tip as Probable Cause for Search or Arrest, 54 Cornell L Rev 958, 966 (1969).
The lead opinion, signed without qualification by its author, the Chief Justice, and Justices Black and Blackmun, observing but deemphasizing two-pronged analysis, declared: "Aguilar cannot be read as questioning the 'substantial basis’ approach of Jones [v United States, 362 US 257; 80 S Ct 725; 4 L Ed 2d 697 (1960)].” The conclusion in Harris was that the affidavit there "like that in Jones, contained a substantial basis for crediting the hearsay”. 403 US 581.
The affiant, a police officer, stated that Harris had a reputation of being a trafficker in non-tax paid distilled spirits and that a stash of illicit whiskey had been located in a house under his control, that he had received information from a person whom he had interviewed and believed to be "prudent" and who had recently purchased illicit whiskey from Harris at a described location.
The lead opinion declared that, in contrast with Spinelli, the affidavit there before the Court had explained how the informant had come by his information indicating that the information had been gained in a reliable manner and that there was an "ample factual basis for believing the informant which, when coupled with affiant’s own knowledge of the respondent’s background, afforded a basis upon which a magistrate could reasonably issue a warrant. The accusation by the informant was plainly a declaration against interest since it could readily warrant a prosecution and could sustain a conviction against the informant himself’. Id, pp 579-580.
Justice White, one of the five majority votes, said that he concurred with part III of the opinion treating the informant’s statement against penal interest as evidence of his reliability, and that the affidavit considered as a whole was sufficient to support issuance of the warrant.
Justice Stewart joined in part I, which did not specifically advert to the reliability of the informant, and "in the judgment of the Court”.
Draper preceded Aguilar’s articulation of the two-pronged test in response to the utter failure of the affidavit in that case to provide any basis for an independent determination of probable cause by the magistrate.
The officer "had 'reasonable grounds’ to believe that the remaining unverified bit of [the informant’s] information — that Draper would have the heroin with him — was likely true” where he "had always found the information given [by the informant] to be accurate and reliable” and "had personally verified every facet of the information given him by [the informant] except whether petitioner had accomplished his mission and had the three ounces of heroin on his person or in his bag”. Draper v United States, supra, pp 309, 313 (emphasis supplied).
United States v Bryant, 406 F Supp 635, 639 (ED Mich, 1975).
A rule permitting such searches would encourage busybodies and paid and unpaid police informants to call in such tips anonymously. Upon corroboration of innocent self-verifying detail an arrest could be made. If contraband or other incriminating evidence is found, the informant may claim credit and his reliability is substantiated for future tips. If nothing is found, the informant does not claim credit and his reputation for reliability remains untarnished.
Such a rule would also encourage prevarication of "anonymous” phone calls to explain investigatory stops and arrests ostensibly upon corroboration of readily observable details purportedly supplied by the unknown and therefore reliably uncontrovertible informant.
Four justices subscribed to this view. See fn 16, supra.
Whiteley v Warden, Wyoming State Penitentiary, supra, p 562.
Id, p 567.
Id, p 568.
United States v Canieso, 470 F2d 1224, 1231 (CA 2, 1972).
Id.
United States v Edmond, 548 F2d 1256, 1259 (CA 6, 1977).
Id, p 1260.
United States v Larkin, 510 F2d 13, 15 (CA 9, 1974). The court said that the tip had been received "from an informant whose reliability was not proved and the dependability of whose information was not established”. Id, p 14.
Id, p 15.
Id.
An informant had described two persons and alleged they were in route from Chicago to El Paso in a described automobile to procure heroin. Agents located the suspects and they were placed under surveillance. The suspects made telephone calls to the west side of Chicago, "an area where problems with narcotics are prevalent”. The court described in some detail the movements of the suspects from one motel to another, their frequent changes of vehicles and other details which in addition to corroborating "the specific details of the informer’s report * * * indicated] possible criminal conduct. During the surveillance previously described the agents observed that the suspects were simply not conducting themselves in the manner of typical tourists or businessmen”. United States v Horton, 488 F2d 374, 377, 379 (CA 5, 1974).
Narcotics officers received a tip that the defendant, whose dress and appearance was described in some detail, would be arriving at Detroit Metropolitan Airport on a 3:45 p.m. flight from Kansas City and that she would be carrying narcotics. United States v Bryant, supra, p 638.
Narcotics agents received a physical description of Miles and a tip from an anonymous informant that he would be returning to Detroit from Los Angeles with a load of heroin. Miles was detained when he deplaned because he matched the description and arrested when he produced identification indicating that his name was Miles. United States v Miles, 425 F Supp 1256, 1259 (ED Mich, 1977).
Similarly, see United States v Pearce, 356 F Supp 756 (ED Pa, 1973). The FBI received an anonymous telephone call advising that Pearce was dealing in counterfeit $50 bills, was driving a stolen 1972 grey Chevelle and was living at a Philadelphia address. Pearce was observed getting into such an automobile at that address. The FBI was aware that Pearce had been named in a stolen motor vehicle case but the case had been terminated with no determination that he was involved. In holding that there was no probable cause the court declared "[tjhere was nothing about Pearce’s movements, or the movements of Miles, his passenger, in or about the vehicle, that appeared to be anything but innocent. Their movements were not furtive, and their conduct did not indicate that they were attempting to flee some imagined captor”. Id, p 759.
Truitt v State, 505 SW2d 594, 595, 597 (Tex Cr App, 1974).
Id, pp 597-598.
People v Williams, 186 Colo 72, 74-75; 525 P2d 463, 464-465 (1974).
State v Soroka, 112 RI 392, 393-394; 311 A2d 45, 46 (1973).
Id, p 395.
Id, pp 396-397.
Garner v State, 314 A2d 908, 911 (Del, 1973).
Carson v State, 326 NE2d 624, 625 (Ind App, 1975).
See fn 7, supra.
A tip from an anonymous informer may aid the police in narrowing the search for suspects. See People v Wilson, 8 Mich App 651, 658; 155 NW2d 210 (1976).
In People v Gonzales, 356 Mich 247, 253; 97 NW2d 16 (1959), this Court adopted the following definition of arrest:
" 'An arrest is the taking, seizing, or detaining of the person of another, either by touching or putting hands on him, or by any act which indicates an intention to take him into custody and subjects *605the person arrested to the actual control and will of the person making the arrest. The act relied upon as constituting an arrest must have been performed with the intent to effect an arrest and must have been so understood by the party arrested.’ 4 Am Jur, Arrest, §2.”
The people contend alternatively that this was an investigatory stop. Adams v Williams, 407 US 143; 92 S Ct 1921; 32 L Ed 2d 612 (1972); People v Whalen, 390 Mich 672; 213 NW2d 116 (1973). See also United States v Brignoni-Ponce, 422 US 873; 95 S Ct 2574; 45 L Ed 2d 607 (1975).
While "[t]he detention of a person need not be accompanied by formal words of arrest or stationhouse booking in order to constitute an 'arrest’ requiring probable cause under the Fourth Amendment,” United States v Brunson, 549 F2d 348, 357 (CA 5, 1977), citing Davis v Mississippi, 394 US 721, 727; 89 S Ct 1394; 22 L Ed 2d 676 (1969), in this case there were formal words of arrest. The officers’ actions— forcing the Oldsmobile off the road and jumping out with drawn guns including a rifle or sawed-off shotgun — cannot be described as a "modest” intrusion. United States v Brignoni-Ponce, supra, p 883.
In United States v Strickler, 490 F2d 378, 380 (CA 9, 1974), two squad cars moved directly in front of and behind a Cadillac, a third drew along side it and the patrolman in the passenger seat pointed a gun at the suspects ordering them to raise their hands. This, said the court, was not an investigatory stop:
"[W]e simply cannot equate an armed approach to a surrounded vehicle whose occupants have been commanded to raise their hands with the 'brief stop of a suspicious individual in order to determine his identity or to maintain the status quo momentarily while obtaining more information’ which was authorized in [Adams v] Williams [407 US 143, 146; 92 S Ct 1921; 32 L Ed 2d 612 (1972)].”
Similarly, see, United States v Larkin, supra, p 14, n 1; United States v Birdsong, 446 F2d 325 (CA 5, 1971) (appellant’s arrest was complete when officers ordered him out of his car, surrounded him and removed the keys from his car’s ignition); United States v Lampkin, 464 F2d 1093 (CA 3, 1972) (arrest completed at the instant agents approached defendant on foot with guns drawn, halted him and identified themselves); United States v Ramos-Zaragosa, 516 F2d 141, 144 (CA 9, 1975):
"The arrest was completed when the appellant and his passenger complied with the order to get out of the pickup. The encounter of the agents and the appellant and his passenger was an arrest, as opposed to an investigatory stop, because the agents at gun point, under circumstances not suggesting fears for their personal safety, ordered the appellant and his passenger to stop and put up their hands.”
Brown v Illinois, 422 US 590; 95 S Ct 2254; 45 L Ed 2d 416 (1975); People v Charles D Walker, 385 Mich 565; 189 NW2d 234 (1971); Garner v State, supra.