OPINION
Thе City of St. George (the City) appeals the trial court’s order granting defendant’s motion to suppress. We reverse.
BACKGROUND
Defendant was a drive-through customer at an Arby’s restaurant in St. George. Rick Hafen, an Arby’s employee, noticed a can of Keystone beer in defendant’s laр when he collected defendant’s money, and later saw him drink from the can. Based on how far defendant tipped the can when drinking, Hafen estimated that the can was approximately half full. Hafen called and informed police dispatch that a driver with an open container in a small white Dodge pickup with a camper shell had just gone through Arby’s drive-through window. Hafen’s description included the license plate number as well as the make and model of defendant’s vehicle. Hafen also informed dispatch that there was a passenger in the vehicle. Approximately two minutes later, police dispatch called Hafen back to find out where the vehicle went. Hafen maintained visual contact with defendant’s vehicle while it exited Arby’s and parked on a nearby street. Hafen did not see defendant discard the Keystone beer can before he left Arby’s property.
Officer Jason Whipple of the St. George City Police Department was informed by dispatch that an Arby’s employee had seen an open container in a vehicle at a drive-through window. Dispatсh relayed the description of a white compact vehicle with a camper shell and two occupants. Officer Whipple located defendant’s vehicle parked near Arby’s. Officer Whipple drove past the vehicle and saw defendant and another occupant eating sandwiches. Officer Whipple then parked behind defendant’s vehicle and activated the overhead lights on the patrol car. Upon approaching the vehicle, Officer Whipple informed defendant that his vehicle matched the description of a vehicle reported to have an open container inside. Defendant denied having any open containers of alcohol in the vehicle and denied drinking any alcohol. Officer Whipple did not see any open containers through the windоw, and a warrants check came back negative.
Officer Whipple testified that he was unable to detect the smell of alcohol because of the odor of food inside the vehicle. Upon returning to the vehicle after the warrants cheek, Officer Whipрle asked defendant to exit the vehicle without his food. His reason for doing so was to try to detect the smell of alcohol without it being masked by the odor of the food. Upon talking with defendant outside his vehicle and away from the food, Officer Whipple detected the smell of alcohol on defendant’s breath. He thereupon asked for, and received, defendant’s consent to search the vehicle for open containers. The search yielded eight empty beer cans, one partially full beer can under the front seat, a baggie of marijuana, and a marijuana pipe. Officer Whipple then conducted field sobriety tests and placed defendant under arrest.
Defendant was charged with DUI, possession of a controlled substance (marijuana), open container violation, and possession of paraphernalia. Defendant moved to suppress all the evidence, claiming it was obtained by an unreasonable search and seizure. The trial court granted defendant’s motion to suppress based on the conclusion that, although Officer Whipple had reasonable suspicion to stop defendant, he exceeded the scope of the stop when he asked defendant to exit the vehicle. The trial court therefore granted defendant’s motion to suppress the evidence obtained after defendant exited the vehicle as it was the product of an unreasonable search and seizure. The City appeals.
*168 ISSUES AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
The City contends the trial court erroneously concluded that Officer Whipple had no legal basis to ask defendant to exit the vehicle for further investigation and, therefore, the seized evidence should not have been suppressed.
“‘[W]e review the factual findings underlying the trial court’s decision to grant or deny a motion to suppress evidence using a clearly erroneous standard.’ ”
State v. Pena,
ANALYSIS
“ ‘[Shopping an automobile and detaining its occupants constitute a “seizure” within the meaning of [the Fourth and Fourteenth] Amendments, even though the purpose of the stop is limited and the resulting detention quite brief.’ ”
State v. Case,
Reasonable Suspicion
We first examine whether Officer Whipple had reasonable suspicion to justify detaining defendant. “While the required
level of suspicion is lower than the standard required for probable cause to arrest, the same totality of facts and circumstances approach is used to determine if there are sufficient ‘specific and articulable facts’ to support reasonable suspicion.”
Id.
(quoting
Terry,
*169
In
Case,
this court concluded that there was no factual basis for reasonable suspicion to dispatch an officer by radio to a suspected cаr prowl or vehicle burglary at the University of Utah around midnight.
See Case,
This court has recently held that an informant’s tip constitutes reasonable suspicion to justify а detention or seizure of a vehicle and its driver if the information is reliable, provides sufficient detail of criminal activity, and is confirmed by the investigating officer.
See Kaysville City v. Mulcahy,
The second factor addresses whether the informant provides enough detail about the criminal activity, i.e., illegal activity observed, description of the vehicle, license number, and location to support reasonable suspicion.
See id.
In
Mulcahy,
the informant timely reported personally observing a drunk individual leaving his residence in a white, possibly Toyota, car heading in a particular direction.
See id.
The third factor is whether the investigating officer is able to verify the information provided by the informant. See id. This does not require the officer to observe the reported behavior, e.g., indications of driving drunk in Mulcahy; it is enough that the officer verified the car’s description and location within a few minutes of the report. See id.
Evaluating the facts now before us against Case and Mulcahy, we conclude thаt the information provided by Hafen established reasonable suspicion of criminal activity. Hafen was a citizen-informer who informed dispatch that while at work at Arby’s, he had just personally observed a driver come through the drive-through window with an open can of beer. Hafen also provided the plate number, make, model, and color of the truck, along with his telephone number and location. Dispatch later returned Hafen’s call and Hafen informed dispatch where the vehicle had moved. In short, Hafen provided the information and detail necessary to establish reasonable suspicion. Hafen was a reliable citizen witness who provided detailed information of the criminal violations he personally observed and the description of defendant’s vehicle. This information was verified by Officer Whipple, who located the described vehicle at the described location within minutes of receiving the information from dispatch. 2 Therefore, Officer Whipple’s detention of defendant was supported by reasonable suspicion.
Scope of Detention
The second prong of the
Terry
analysis asks whether the scope of the detention was reasonably related to the circumstances that justified the stop.
See Terry,
The purpose for the stop in the instant case was to determine if defendant had an open container in the vehicle and whether he had been drinking. Officer Whipple’s observations while defendant was eating inside his vehicle, and the subsequent warrants cheek, did not confirm or dispel Officer Whipple’s reasonable suspicion that defendant had an open container in his vehicle and could possibly be under the influence of alcohol. When an officer has reasonable suspicion of criminal conduct, the officer must diligently pursue a means of investigation likely to confirm or dispel the suspicions quickly.
See United States v. Sharpe,
Defendant contends that once he denied having open containers in the vehicle and denied drinking alcоhol, and once the warrants check came back negative, Officer Whipple had no right to detain and investigate defendant any longer. We disagree. A Terry stop can go beyond mere interrogation. See 4 Wayne R. LaFave, Search and Seizure: A Treatise on the Fourth Amendment § 9.2(f), at 51-55 (1996). Given Officer Whipple’s inability to confirm or dispel his reasonable suspicions while defendant was in his vehicle with his fоod, Officer Whipple’s request that defendant exit his vehicle was permissible. Balancing the potential public safety risk against the minimal intrusion of asking defendant to step outside his vehicle, we conclude that the detention and investigation by Officer Whipple was not an intrusion into defendant’s right against unreasonable search and seizure.
CONCLUSION
The informant’s tip in this case provided the reasonable suspicion for the detention. The scope of the detention was limited to its purpose, i.e., determining whether defendant had an open containеr in his vehicle and whether he had been drinking. On balance, Officer Whipple’s investigation outside defendant’s vehicle was reasonable.
We therefore reverse the suppression order and remand the ease for such further proceedings as may now be apprоpriate.
BILLINGS and GREENWOOD, JJ„ concur.
Notes
. This standard is also codified as follows:
A peace officer may stop any person in a public place when he has a reasonable suspicion to believe he has committed or is in the act of committing or is attempting to commit a public offense and may demand his name, addrеss and an explanation of his actions.
Utah Code Ann. § 77-7-15 (1995).
. Officer Whipple testified that dispatch informed him that an Arby's employee working at the drive-through window had seen an open container in the subject vehicle. Thus, Officer Whip-pie knew the underlying facts for a possible violation and did not merely rely on a description of who to stop.
