OPINION
Opinion by
This is an appeal from revocation of Abel Flores’s community supervision for possession of cocaine. 1 The trial court sentenced Flores to seven years confinement in the Institutional Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice and assessed a $1,500 fine and court costs. In a single issue, Flores challenges the trial court’s revocation of his community supervision based on the fruits of an illegal traffic stop. We affirm.
*171 I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
The trial court placed Flores on community supervision in May 2001. His conditions of supervision included abstaining from the consumption of alcohol in any form (Condition 17). Around 1:45 the morning of January 2, 2003, a patrolling San Patricio Deputy Sheriff stopped Flores based on: (1) an anonymous tip reporting an intoxicated driver in the area; and (2) the deputy’s observations of Flores’s driving. After pulling Flores over, the deputy concluded that Flores was intoxicated and called for back-up. The back-up officer arrived and spoke with Flores. He, too, concluded that Flores was intoxicated. He arrested Flores for driving while intoxicated. Several days later, Flores admitted to his probation officer that he had six beers before his arrest.
The State filed a motion to revoke alleging, among other violations, that on or about January 2, 2003, Flores consumed alcohol in violation of Condition 17. Flores pleaded “not true” to each of the allegations. The trial court found that Flores had violated the terms and conditions of his community supervision and revoked it. This appeal ensued.
II. PRESERVATION OF ERROR
A. The Record
Flores filed a pre-revocation motion to suppress: (1) all testimony of law enforcement officers regarding the traffic stop, Flores’s arrest, and subsequent events; and (2) all oral and written statements Flores made during and after the stop. Although it is not clear from the record, the trial court apparently carried the suppression motion with the revocation hearing. No written order denying the suppression motion appears in the record. However, the parties presented evidence regarding the traffic stop and argued the legality of the stop at the close of evidence. Flores presented case law supporting his position that he had not committed a traffic offense before being stopped. The State argued that the deputy was justified in stopping Flores: (1) to investigate a possible driving-while-intoxicated offense or; (2) in fulfillment of the deputy’s community caretaking function. At the close of argument, the trial court revoked Flores’s community supervision but did not expressly rule on the suppression motion. Nor did the trial court make any fact findings.
B. Waiver Principles
A motion to suppress is a specialized objection to the admissibility of evidence.
Morrison v. State,
When a trial court overrules a suppression motion before trial, the accused
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need not object during trial to the same evidence to preserve error on appeal.
Wilson v. State,
We assume, without deciding, that Flores’s broadly worded suppression motion sought exclusion of the oral admission Flores made to his probation officer after his arrest. 2 Thus, the issue presented by this case is whether, to preserve error, an accused must object to admission of evidence subject to a suppression motion during a unitary proceeding in which the trial court carries the motion with the merits.
C. Waiver Analysis
1. Unitary Proceeding
The record reflects that the trial judge was fully aware of the basis on which Flores asserted that the evidence obtained as a result of the traffic stop should be suppressed.
See Morrison,
2. Unobjected Testimony
Flores’s probation officer testified as follows in response to the State’s direct examination:
Q. Did Mr. Flores make any admissions to you about whether or not he was in violation of his probation?
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Excuse me, Your Honor. I’m going to object to that and ask that I take the witness on voir dire before any further inculpatory statements that Mr. Flores might have been made are properly admonished.
THE COURT: All right. You may.
*173 [PROSECUTOR]: Well, Judge, I’d like to know what his objection is before—
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: The objection is that any admissions against interests will be impermissible unless he was Mirandized to the effect that he was susceptible of being — of his statement being used against him in the motion to revoke.
THE COURT: [Prosecutor].
[PROSECUTOR]: Well, let me ask—
Q. Was Mr. Flores in custody when he came to visit you at your—
A. No, he was not.
Q. Okay.
[PROSECUTOR]: Miranda would not then apply, Your Honor.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Excuse me; unless I misunderstood, you said this was on January the 7th?
A. On the 2nd I saw him in custody; on the 7th he saw me in person in my office.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Okay.
THE COURT: So the question was about the 7th.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Okay. Not the 2nd.
THE COURT: Not the 2nd. This is when he went to her office.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: And— okay.
THE COURT: You may answer the question. Do you remember it?
[PROSECUTOR]: Thank you, Your Honor.
Q. [BY PROSECUTOR] What admissions or comments did Mr. Flores make to you about his being in violation of the terms and conditions of his probation?
Let me ask you these one at a time. Did you ask him whether or not he had been drinking alcohol that night?
A. Yes.
Q. Did he tell you whether or not he had been?
A. Yes.
Q. What was his response to that question?
A. That he drank six beers.
Thus, Flores neither objected on the basis of his suppression motion nor obtained a ruling on the admissibility of his oral statement. Flores’s silence in the face of introduction of evidence he sought to exclude would have been permitted had the trial court denied his suppression motion before the revocation hearing.
See Momguez,
*174 III. CONCLUSION
Accordingly, we overrule Flores’s sole issue. Flores’s admission to his probation officer that he had consumed alcohol the night of his arrest supports revocation of his community supervision.
See Jones v. State,
