Gregory Tyrone Alston was convicted on Ms conditional guilty plea of possession of more than one-half ounce but less than five pounds of marijuana with intent to distribute, in violation of Code § 18.2-248.1. On appeal, Alston contends the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress the marijuana found on his person and in his car as the product of an unlawful seizure that violated his Fourth Amendment rights. Finding no error, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
I. Background
In reviewing a trial court’s denial of a motion to suppress, we view the evidence and all reasonable inferences fairly deducible from that evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the party prevailing below.
See Weathers v. Commonwealth,
After driving approximately fifty yards into the complex, Hixson observed a purple Nissan car in the complex “come around the corner” and head in the officers’ direction. Alston, whom Hixson did not know at the time, was driving the car, and there were two passengers in the rear seat and one in the front seat. As Alston drove by the patrol car, Hixson recognized the passenger in the front seat as Pierre Stanberry, someone who Hixson knew had been banned by court order from entering the Ruffin Road apartment complex. Hixson had previously arrested Stanberry for trespassing on that property at least twice, the last time occurring in September or October of 2000. Hixson turned the patrol car around to investigate Stanberry’s presence in the complex. The officers observed Alston pull up to Ruffin Road at the entrance/exit of *734 the apartment complex and activate his turn signal “indicating [he was] going to make a left-hand turn” onto Ruffin Road. Then, “[a]ll of a sudden[,] the left turn signal went off and [Alston] made a quick right turn” onto Ruffin Road. Almost immediately, Alston pulled to the side of the road directly in front of a parked car, parked, and “quickly” got out of the car and started walking away.
Hixson, who had followed Alston onto Ruffin Road, pulled over next to Alston’s car, stopping in the road. He then stepped out of his vehicle and “asked” Alston, who had walked “into the roadway, right in front of [the police] vehicle,” to “have a seat back in his car.” Because the patrol car was “in the travel lane of Ruffin Road,” Hixson activated the car’s emergency lights at some point. 1
Complying with Hixson’s request to return to his car, Alston went back to his car and got in. Hixson then approached Alston’s car and immediately noticed a “box of open sandwich baggies” and an “open beer” in the car’s center console. He also smelled the odor of marijuana emanating from the car.
Hixson asked Alston for identification, which Alston provided. Returning to the patrol car, Hixson ran Alston’s information through “Richmond-Henrico NCIC” and learned that Alston had an outstanding warrant on file with the City of Richmond. Hixson arrested Alston on that warrant.
Incident to that arrest, Officer Durham searched Alston and his car. As a result of the search, Durham found marijuana on Alston’s person and in his car. Additional charges were then brought against Alston. Pierre Stanberry was also charged with several offenses, including trespassing.
On cross-examination at the suppression hearing, Hixson acknowledged that, as far as he knew, Alston was legally parked and had not engaged in any criminal activity when he *735 asked him to get back in his car. He further acknowledged that his investigation of Stanberry’s trespassing would not have been hindered if Alston had left because he could have gone directly to Stanberry, who stayed in the car, and asked him questions. When asked to describe the “reasonable and articulable suspicion” that served as the basis for having Alston get back in his car, Hixson explained, “It seemed suspicious to me the way he pulled out of the complex and then just pulled over right in front of the complex that he had just exited from, and then he quickly got out of the vehicle and walked.” Hixson further testified: “It all seemed very suspicious to me. Mr. Stanberry I knew was banned from the property. I knew him by name, and I just asked Mr. Alston to have a seat back in the vehicle.”
Officer DeGrauwe, who was called as a witness for Alston, testified that, when he saw Alston get out of his car and start to walk “across the street,” he got out of the patrol car and “got ready to run” after him, because, based on his training and experience, that was what normally happened under such circumstances. When asked to explain the circumstances that made him believe that Alston was going to try to run away, DeGrauwe stated that Alston’s “quick right turn” after signaling to turn left, his pulling over suddenly and parking, and his getting out of the car are occurrences that are generally followed by “a foot pursuit.” Ultimately, however, he did not have to pursue Alston, DeGrauwe stated, because “Officer Hixson looked at [Alston] and said get back in the car,” and Alston, who was approximately ten feet away, complied.
Alston testified at the suppression hearing. According to his testimony, he had never been banned from the Ruffin Road apartment complex and did not know that Stanberry, his cousin, had been. On the day in question, he had been visiting another cousin who lived at the apartment complex. When he was leaving the complex, she called on his cell phone to tell him he had left something at her place. He immediately pulled over to the side of the road, parked, and had started to walk the short distance back to his cousin’s apartment when the police pulled up. One of the “three or four” officers who *736 were there “told [him] to get back in the car.” Believing, based on the officer’s tone of voice, that he was not free to leave, he got back in the car, as ordered.
Alston admitted that he had missed an earlier court date and that he knew he had an outstanding warrant for failure to appear. He admitted there was a can of beer in his car but denied it was open. He also denied that there were “baggies” in the car or that anyone in the car had been smoking marijuana.
In a pretrial motion, Alston moved to suppress the marijuana as the product of an unlawful seizure. Ruling that, under the circumstances of this case, Hixson could ask Alston to get back in his car in order “to secure the situation just long enough to find out what [was] going on,” the trial court denied Alston’s motion to suppress.
Alston then entered a conditional plea of guilty, preserving his right to appeal the trial court’s denial of his motion to suppress. Upon that plea, the trial court found Alston guilty of possession of more than one-half ounce but less than five pounds of marijuana with the intent to distribute and sentenced him to thirty-six months of incarceration, with thirty months suspended for a period of five years on certain conditions. This appeal followed.
II. Analysis
“In reviewing a trial court’s denial of a motion to suppress, ‘[t]he burden is upon [the defendant] to show that th[e] ruling, when the evidence is considered most favorably to the Commonwealth, constituted reversible error.’ ”
McGee v. Commonwealth,
Encounters between the police and citizens “generally fall into one of three categories.” Id.
First, there are consensual encounters which do not implicate the Fourth Amendment. Next, there are brief investigatory stops, commonly referred to as “Terry ” stops, which must be based upon reasonable, articulable suspicion that criminal activity is or may be afoot. Finally, there are “highly intrusive, full-scale arrests” or searches which must be based upon probable cause to believe that a crime has been committed by the suspect.
Id.
(citations omitted) (quoting
United States v. Sokolow,
Alston contends he was unlawfully seized under
Terry v. Ohio,
The Commonwealth contends Alston was not seized for Fourth Amendment purposes until he was arrested on the outstanding warrant. Prior to that, the Commonwealth ar *738 gues, the encounter between Officer Hixson and Alston was entirely consensual.
Assuming, without deciding, that Alston was “seized” within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment when Officer Hixson stopped him from walking away, we agree with the trial court that, on the facts of this case, that seizure was not in violation of Alston’s Fourth Amendment rights because Hixson was entitled to briefly detain Alston for investigative purposes in order to question him and maintain the status quo.
“The Fourth Amendment does not forbid all ... seizures but only those that are unreasonable.”
Cabbler v. Commonwealth,
“[I]f there are articulable facts supporting a reasonable suspicion that a person has committed a criminal offense, that person may be stopped in order to identify him, to question him briefly, or to detain him briefly while attempting to obtain additional information.”
Hayes v. Florida,
an officer need not suspect an individual of a particular crime in order to justify a Terry stop. A general suspicion of some criminal activity is enough, as long as the officer can, based on the circumstances before him at the time, articulate a reasonable basis for his suspicion.
Hatcher v. Commonwealth,
We are further mindful in assessing an officer’s justification for a seizure that “[tjhere are no bright line rules to follow when determining whether a reasonable and articulable suspicion exists to justify an'investigatory stop.”
Hoye v. Commonwealth,
In reviewing the propriety of an officer’s conduct, courts do not have available empirical studies dealing with inferences drawn from suspicious behavior, and we cannot reasonably demand scientific certainty from judges or law enforcement officers where none exists. Thus, the determination of reasonable suspicion must be based on commonsense judgments and inferences about human behavior.
In deciding whether to make an investigatory stop, “an officer is ‘entitled to rely upon “the totality of the circumstances — the whole picture.” ’ ”
Peguese v. Commonwealth,
Applying these principles to the present case, we conclude that, based on the totality of the circumstances confronting *740 him, Officer Hixson acted reasonably in stopping Alston from walking away and asking him to return to his car.
Hixson initially observed Alston driving on property that was posted “no trespassing.” As Alston drove by the patrol car, Hixson saw a passenger in the car who he knew had recently been barred from the property. On the basis of that observation, Hixson had a reasonable and articulable suspicion that the passenger in Alston’s car was trespassing. Hixson was therefore entitled to stop Alston’s vehicle in order to investigate the suspected criminal activity.
See Freeman v. Commonwealth,
Intending to conduct such an investigatory stop, Hixson turned his patrol car around and proceeded after Alston’s car. However, before the officer could initiate the stop, Alston, after signaling he was going to turn left upon leaving the property, abruptly turned right and almost immediately pulled to the side of the road and parked. Alston then “quickly” got out of his car and started to walk away. Hixson pulled up next to Alston’s car and, finding Alston’s conduct “suspicious” asked him to return to his car.
We conclude that Alston’s behavior reasonably suggested that criminal activity may be afoot. In light of Alston’s evasive driving maneuvers after passing Hixson’s patrol car and his quick exit and departure from his parked car, a reasonable officer could conclude that Alston sought to avoid contact with the police in order to elude their investigation.
See Hatcher,
Alston argues that his behavior was consistent with innocent conduct and showed “no indicia of criminal activity.” We find, however, that, taken together as a whole, Alston’s actions after he drove by the patrol car were sufficiently suspicious to provide Hixson with the requisite reasonable and articulable suspicion to stop Alston from walking away from the scene.
See Terry,
Alston further contends that, even if Hixson had grounds to support a reasonable and articulable suspicion that he was engaged in criminal activity, the officer could only detain him briefly “at the point where he stood, after he immediately stopped when hailed by the police.” By ordering him back into the confines of the car, Alston argues, Hixson transformed any possible investigatory detention into a custo *742 dial seizure requiring probable cause, which, at that point, did not exist.
We disagree with Alston that, by asking him to get back into his car rather than questioning him outside the car “where he stood,” Hixson changed the nature of the detention from an investigatory stop into a full-fledged arrest. “The perception ... that one is [in custody] is insufficient to convert a
Terry
stop into an arrest. A brief but complete restriction of liberty is valid under
Terry.” United States v. Moore,
Moreover, “[c]ourts have routinely allowed officers to insist on reasonable changes of location when carrying out
Terry
stops.”
United States v. White,
Thus, “[f|ollowing a lawful traffic stop, the Fourth Amendment permits the police to order the passengers to get out of the car pending the completion of the stop.”
Harris,
Applying these principles to the circumstances of the present case, we conclude that Officer Hixson did not violate Alston’s Fourth Amendment rights by having him get back in his car before questioning him. In doing so, Hixson took steps that were reasonably necessary not only to protect Alston, himself, and his fellow officers from the dangers inherently associated with a roadside stop but also to maintain the status quo during the stop. Even though this case did not involve a situation that was overtly dangerous, such as “a dark and deserted spot or one lone officer facing a carful of suspects, our reluctance to second-guess the judgment of experienced officers is not limited to such extreme situations.”
White,
Thereafter, Officer Hixson, in approaching Alston’s car to investigate the suspected trespassing and Alston’s possible criminal involvement, saw a “box of open sandwich baggies” and an open container of beer in plain view in the center console of the car and detected an odor of marijuana emanating from the car. Based on those observations, Hixson had a reasonable and articulable suspicion that justified fur *744 ther investigation of Alston’s suspected criminal activity. Hixson’s subsequent discovery that there was an outstanding warrant for Alston then provided the officer with the probable cause necessary to arrest Alston. Incident to that arrest, the police conducted a search that led to the discovery of the marijuana on Alston’s person and in his car.
We hold, therefore, based upon our de novo review, that, under the facts and circumstances of this case, the trial court did not err in denying Alston’s motion to suppress.
Accordingly, we affirm Alston’s conviction.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Hixson acknowledged at the suppression hearing that the patrol car’s emergency lights were activated during the course of the investigation. However, he could not recall whether he activated the emergency lights before or after he asked Alston to return to his car. Alston testified that he did not "remember [the] emergency lights being on.”
