A jury convicted Ricky Davis of possession of cocaine, and the district court assessed punishment at twelve (12) years confinement in the penitentiary. Davis now complains that the district cоurt erred when it denied his motion to suppress evidence. Because the district court properly denied Davis’ motion, we will affirm the judgment of conviction.
*124 BACKGROUND
Austin Police Officer McKenzie responded to a “suspicious person” call from an anonymous source. The police department had received a call stating that a person with a gun was in the area of the 5300 block of Samuel Huston Avenue. McKenzie could not remember whether the dispatcher said the suspect was in a car or on foot. The back-up officer, Scales, also cоuld not remember the dispatcher’s call with certainty, but Scales thought that the dispatcher referred to a car.
Officer McKenzie arrived at the scene around 9:30 p.m. He noticed two men seated in a Pontiac Trans Am parked in front of a house. With his lights turned off, he pulled up behind the suspects’ car. McKenzie approached these suspects because they were the only people at the location described by the police dispatcher.
McKenzie exited his squad car and began to walk toward the driver’s side of the Pontiac. McKеnzie observed that the two suspects glanced back at the officer and then at each other several times as McKenzie walked up to the car. The car was parked in a location with good lighting. McKenzie noted that this location is regularly frequented by drug dealers who sell drugs to people who drive up and briefly stop. As McKenzie approached, he nоticed that the passenger, Davis, was clutching something in his left hand; Davis’ hand was clenched in a fist next to the driver; and then Davis removed his clenched hand from this area. Because of the reрort of a possible gun, McKenzie attempted to keep a close watch on the suspects’ hands.
Suspecting that he had interrupted a drug deal and fearing that the suspects might havе a weapon, McKenzie asked the driver to step out of the car. The driver opened the door slightly, and the dome light came on. At that time, McKenzie saw Davis make a downward motion toward the floorboard with his clenched hand and noticed several packets containing a white substance on the passenger-side floorboard below Davis’ legs.
Officer Scales arrived seconds later. Scales approached the passenger side of the Trans Am, and McKenzie again asked the driver to exit the vehicle. McKenzie took the driver to thе rear of the car and asked Scales to remove Davis from the passenger side. While Scales watched the two suspects at the rear of the car, McKenzie retrieved thе packets from the floorboard. McKenzie noted that he did not have to search the car; he had seen the packets in plain view after Davis moved his hand in a downward motion tоward the floorboard. McKenzie then communicated in code to Officer Scales that they should arrest the two suspects. Davis immediately fled, apparently realizing that he was abоut to be arrested.
With this evidence in mind, we turn to Davis’ sole point of error: the district court erred in denying Davis’ motion to suppress evidence “because there was [sic] insufficient facts to сorroborate the anonymous telephone tip that was relied upon to create a reasonable suspicion that Davis was committing a crime.” After considering the totality of Davis’ argument, we conclude that the dispositive issue presented requires us to decide whether Officer McKenzie possessed sufficient reasonable suspicion to justify the investigative dеtention of the two suspects that began when McKenzie asked the driver to step out of the car.
INVESTIGATIVE STOPS AND DETENTIONS
Davis argues that Officer McKenzie made the investigative stop based solely upon an insufficiently corroborated anonymous tip. The State argues that during the course of a legitimate investigation, Officer McKenzie observed additional facts that not only corroborаted the anonymous tip but also established the necessary basis for an investigative detention.
Circumstances short of probable cause for arrest may justify temporary detention for purposes of an investigation because a narrowly tailored investigation is not as intrusive upon personal liberty as an arrest.
Schwartz v. State,
In order to justify an investigative stop, the officer must have “specific articu-lable facts which, in light of his or her experience and personal knowledge, together with other inferences from those facts, would warrant” the stop.
Schwartz,
The reasonableness of an investigative detention turns on the totality of circumstances in each case.
United States v. Mendenhall,
ANONYMOUS TELEPHONE TIPS
Different levels of police intrusion upon a citizen’s liberty require different levels of constitutional analysis. An anonymous telephone call usually will justify the
initiation
of a police investigation.
Clemons v. State,
If an anonymous tip has a fairly low degree of reliability, more information will be required to establish the requisite level of suspicion necessary to justify an investigative detention.
White,
— U.S. at-,
CONCLUSION AND HOLDING
In contrast to the lack of subsequent extraordinary facts corroborating the anonymous tip in Glass, Officer McKenzie testified that when he approached the rear of the Trans Am, the driver and Davis glanced back at the officer and then at one another several times, and that Davis appeared to be clenching *126 something in his left hand as he moved it away from the driver. McKenzie pointed out that he observed unusual activity in the car at the location described by the anonymous caller — a location that McKenzie personally knew to bе notorious for curb-side drug trafficking.
We note that the anonymous call here may not have been considered reliable; McKenzie could not even remember if the suspicious-persоn dispatch referenced a car. Nevertheless, the initial intrusion upon the suspects’ liberty — McKenzie’s request that the driver get out of the car— was relatively slight in the context of the cirсumstances present to the officer at the time of the detention. The car was located where a person with a gun had been reported; Officer McKenzie was alone at night in an area where he knew that curb-side drug sales regularly took place; he also knew from experience that drug dealers often carry weapons; and he saw suspicious mоvements consistent with the interruption of a “drug transaction” after he concluded that the suspects saw him approaching.
See Brown,
Accordingly, we overrule Davis’ point of error and affirm the judgment of conviction.
