OPINION
Nаrcotics Field Unit Officer Robert McDonnell, a 13-year police force veteran, received a tip from a known, confidential informant, stating appellee, Thomas Brown, would be distributing prescription pills between 3:30 and 5:30 p.m. at a particular intersection. The informant described Brown as a white male, age 27 to 28, standing 5'9" to 5'11", and weighing 150 to 160 pounds. He also stated Brown would be carrying a gun and driving a mid-1990s Ford Taurus with a specific license plate number. Officer McDonnell went to the intersection at the specified time and observed Brown, who matched the informant’s description, driving the vehicle the informant described. He watched Brown leave the vehicle empty-handed, return several minutes later, place a brown paper bag in the trunk, and drive away.
Officer McDonnell notified back-up officers to conduct an investigative stop of Brown’s vehicle. They pulled Brown over аnd saw a bottle of prescription pills on the front seat. After obtaining a warrant to search the vehicle, officers discovered various other prescription drugs and a handgun in the trunk, *202 as well as a notebook entitled “Thomas Brown money list” in the glove compartment. Brown was charged with pоssession with intent to deliver prescription pills and other offenses arising from the stop. Brown filed a pre-trial motion to suppress all physical evidence seized. At the suppression hearing, Officer McDonnell testified he “used” the informant before, but gave no specifics as to the informant’s reliability; Brown presented no evidence. The trial court granted the motion to suppress, finding no reasonable suspicion warranting the stop. The Commonwealth appealed.
The Superior Court affirmed the trial court’s decision.
Commonwealth v. Brown,
Any experienced officer knows that he has to present the number of times he used the informant, the number of times he made arrests and found drugs based on his information, the number of convictions as a result, etc. Based on the fact that the officer did not offer any such evidence, it seems clear that the informant was not ever found to be reliable. Thus, any statement by the informant must be considered akin to an anonymous tip, or at most a tip from a named citizen. Therefore, there must be corroboration to provide reasonable suspicion.
Id.,
at 1189 (emphasis in original). The court proceeded to analyze the stop pursuant to
Commonwealth v. Goodwin,
In reviewing an appeal by the Commonwealth of a suppression order, we may consider only the evidence from the appellee’s witnesses along with the Commonwealth’s evidence which rеmains uncontroverted. Our standard of review is restricted to establishing whether the record supports the suppression court’s factual findings; however, we maintain
de novo
review over the suppression court’s legal conclusions.
Commomvealth v. Snyder,
The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution protects citizens from unreasonable searches and seizures.
1
Article I, § 8 of the Pennsylvania Constitution,
2
though similarly phrased, generаlly provides greater protection than that provided by the Fourth Amendment, because “the core of its exclusionary rule is grounded in the protection of privacy while the federal exclusionary rule is grounded in deterring police misconduct.”
Commonwealth v. Williams,
While warrantless seizures such as a vehicle stop are generally prohibited, they are permissible if they fall within one of a few well-delineated exceptions.
Commonwealth v. Chase,
Informants’ tips, like all other clues and evidence coming to a policeman on the scene, mаy vary greatly in their value and reliability. One simple rule will not cover every situation. Some tips, completely lacking in indicia of reliability, *205 would either warrant no police response or require further investigation before a forcible stop of a suspect would be authorized. But in some situations — for example, when ... a credible informant warns of a specific impending crime— the subtleties of [the information coming from a source outside an officer’s personal observation] should not thwart an appropriate police response.
Adams v. Williams,
An anonymous tip, corroborаted by independent police investigation, may exhibit sufficient indicia of reliability to supply reasonable suspicion for an investigatory stop.
Alabama v. White,
Thе Commonwealth contends even the higher, more stringent standard of probable cause may be established from information provided by an informant with a record of providing accurate information in the past.
See Commonwealth v. Luv,
*206 Brown asserts the known informant in this case was no more reliable than an anonymous source, as no testimony established the informant’s reliability, nor was the actual source of the information made known. Brown argues the tip did not constitute predictive, insider information, but could have been provided by anyone who had even minimal knowledge of Brown’s affairs; thus, the information provided did not warrant the stop.
The constitutional test requires sufficient suspicion but, unlike the Superior Court’s recitation, does not delineate specific details that must be listed like a recipe in order to give rise to that suspicion. Cf. Brown, at 1189. Listing an informant’s history is one way to give credence to the information — a common way to be sure — but it is not the only way. Moreover, leaping to the conclusion that the information was never found to be reliable is not warranted. The record indicates the 13-year veteran police officer previously used the informant. Logically, if the information was “not ever found to be reliable,” the officer would not have followed up on his information here. Id. The fact the officer did so bespeaks some measure of confidence in the information, not the contrary.
We also disagree with the Superior Court’s determination that “any statement by the [history-less] informant must be considered akin to an anonymous tip, or at most a tip from a named citizen.” Id. We are unaware of any authority supporting such a conclusion, and we decline to adopt it now. Fundamentally, the tip in this case was not anonymous, nor akin to anonymous, nor do we find any reason to equate anonymity with a known citizen. Informants remain, after all, known citizens; they are known citizens who have previously helped police. Simply because the officer did nоt delineate reasons to find the informant credible beyond a prior undetailed “usage” does not render the informant the legal equivalent of anonymous. If the information from an anonymous informant is false, no action against the informant is possible; however, providing false information will have consequences for a known informant such as this one, distinguishing the *207 presumptive quality of the information, and tipping the scales toward credibility, not away from it.
This is not statutory interpretation where the absence of an element creates a presumption that it is intentionally missing
3
—the totality of the circumstances is a measure of what is there, not what is inferred to be absent.
See Commonwealth v. Torres,
In
White,
a truly anonymous tip provided detаil much like that provided in this case, and was found to provide sufficient indicia of reliability to warrant an investigative detention. An anonymous tip revealed White would be leaving an apartment building at a particular time in a specific vehicle and would be going to a motel carrying cocaine inside a brown attaché case. Police proceeded to the named apartment complex and saw White leave the apartment, carrying nothing in her hands, and enter the vehicle described by the anonymous informant. Police officers followed the vehicle, stopping it as it neared the motel named by the informant. In the car, officers found a brown attaché case containing marijuana and three milligrams of cocaine in White’s purse.
White,
at 327,
With the exception of the type of informant,
White
and the instant case are factually indistinct. Here, Officer McDonnell was alerted by a known informant that Brown would be going to a particular area, around a particular time, in a specific make of vehicle, and would be dealing prescription drugs. Officer McDonnell, like the officers in
White,
did not act on the tip without first independently corroborating the
*208
details.
Id.,
at 327,
We reject Brown’s contention that police lacked reasonable suspicion because the information provided by the informant did not provide any insider information, but rather constituted mere description, which could have been provided by anyone who remotely knew him. This argument is a red herring. It matters not how many people knew he would be peddling pills as described. The question involves credibility of the one person who called police. The informant in this case was not anonymous, and the tip consisted of more than mere description. The informant provided police with information regarding imminent criminal activity committed by a specific person at a particular time and place. These facts, provided by a source known to police and сorroborated through police investigation certainly gave rise to reasonable suspicion sufficient to warrant an investigative detention.
Accordingly, considering the totality of the circumstances, we find the Superior Court erred in determining police lacked reasonable suspicion to stop Brown’s vehicle based upon the information provided by the known, but history-less, confidential informant. The totality of the circumstances standard remains the governing standard for the reasonable suspicion analysis and demands an objective consideration of all factors attеnding a tip provided by a police informant — anonymous or not.
The order of the Superior Court is reversed.
Jurisdiction relinquished.
Notes
. The Fourth Amendment states:
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
U.S. Const, amend. IV.
. Article I, § 8 provides:
The people shall be secure in their pеrsons, houses, papers and possessions from unreasonable searches and seizures, and no warrant to search any place or to seize any person or things shall issue without describing them as nearly as may be, nor without probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation subscribed to by the affiant.
Pa. Const, art. I, § 8.
. 1 Pa.C.S. § 1921(a)-(b);
see also Kmonk-Sullivan v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company,
