OPINION
delivered the opinion of the Court
Appellant was charged with a Class B misdemeanor of driving while intoxicated (DWI). Following the trial court’s denial of appellant’s motion to suppress, appel-Iant pled nolo contendere, pursuant to a plea agreement, and was placed on community supervision for eighteen months. Appellant appealed the trial court’s ruling on his motion to suppress, and the court of appeals decided that reasonable suspicion of intoxication did not exist when the police detained appellant to investigate whether he was intoxicated. Foster v. State, 297 S.W.3d 386, 390-94 (Tex.App.Austin 2009) (“reasonable suspicion did not exist to justify Foster’s detention for DWI”). We will reverse.
The suppression-hearing record reflects that on September 13, 2007, at approximately 1:30 a.m., Austin Police Department Homicide Detective Kurt Thomas was stopped at a red light in the right lane of a two-lane one-way street in an unmarked police car a few blocks from Austin’s Sixth Street bar district. Appellant’s truck came up extremely close behind Thomas’s vehicle, which Thomas appeared to describe as a lurch. Thomas testified that he heard a revving sound and noticed appellant’s truck lurch forward again. Thomas believed that appellant was attempting to get into the left lane, but appellant was so close to thе police car that he did not have enough room to enter the left lane.
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Sergeant Eric de los Santos, driving a marked police car, pulled alongside Thomas and Foster, which “effectively prevented appellant from moving.”
See Foster,
Thomas testified that, before becoming a homicide detective, he worked traffic patrol and had been part of DWI arrests. He also testified that, based on his training and experience in traffic patrol, it is common for many people to be impaired in Austin’s Sixth Street bar district late at night. 4
*612 The trial court made express findings that Thomas’s testimony was credible and that he had reasonable suspicion to detain appellant for DWI in light of the time of night, the location near Austin’s downtown bar district, and appellant’s еrratic driving — the “lurching” movements described in Thomas’s testimony. 5 The State made no claim at the suppression hearing that appellant was not detained before the police approached his vehicle and smelled alcohol, and the trial court made no findings on exactly when appellant was detained by the pоlice. 6
The court of appeals decided that appellant “was detained at the time the police officers blocked his vehicle, preventing him from leaving the scene, and began to approach.”
See Foster,
1. Whether the Third Court erred in applying the “as consistent with innocence as with criminal activity” standard in analyzing the totality of the circumstances and determining whether the of- *613 fleers had reasonable suspicion to detain. 7
2. Whether the Third Court failed to give appropriate deference to the trial court’s implied factual findings when it held that Foster was detained “when he found himself barricaded on the front and side by two vehicles, one of which was a marked police car.” 8
A law enforcement officer may stop and briefly detain a person for investigative purposes on less information than is constitutionally required for probable cause to arrest.
Terry v. Ohio,
The court of appeals cited to this Court’s decision in
Curtis
in support of its decision that “the plausibility of an innocent explanation affects [the] determination of whether there was a reasonable basis for suspecting that appellant was intoxicated.”
See Foster,
Our decision in
Curtis
also supports a decision that time of day is a relevant factor in determining reasonable suspicion.
See Curtis,
*614
Keeping in mind that the Fourth Amendment totаlity-of-the-circumstances test requires only- “some minimal level of objective justification” for the stop in this case,
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we hold there was reasonable suspicion for the police to have believed that appellant may have been intoxicated. In light of the time of night, the location, Thomas’s training and experience, and Foster’s aggressive driving, it was rational for Thomas to have inferred that appellant may have been intoxicated, thus justifying a temporary detention for further investigation.
See Curtis,
The judgment of thе court of appeals is reversed, and the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Notes
. Thomas explained Foster’s lurches:
Q. [DEFENSE ATTORNEY]: Now, in your offense report, you indicated that he pulled up initially extremely close to your vehicle. Right?
A. [THOMAS]: That is correct.
Q. Then you noticed you heard a revving sound from his engine; is that correct? A. Yes, sir. He — there was a revving sound and then there was another lurch forward.
Q. When he lurched forward, based on what you saw, you believe he tried to turn in to the next lane?
A. When he initially lurched, he lurched right behind me. It was the second time, I believe, that he was trying to get to the lane to the left of me.
. Thomas also testified that he thought that appellant had committed a Traffic-Code violation of “unsafe start from stop position,” which he was not able to find in the “Traffic” or "City” Code. The court of appeals decided that the police lacked reasonable suspicion to detain appellant for any Traffic-Code violations, and we did not grant discretionary review to review this decision.
See Foster,
Q. When he made this movement — and you have termed it "unsafe stаrt from stop position;” is that correct?
A. Correct.
Q. By the way, what is your basis for that traffic violation? Was it found in the Traffic Code? City Code?
A. After this has [sic] happened, after looking for that specific title, I have not been able to find it.
Q. Okay. Nevertheless, you decided to detain Mr. Foster?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Based on the traffic violation?
A. Based on what was occurring prior to my contact with him.
Q. Okay. And that is the lurching of the vehicle? Coming extremely close, trying to get by you? Those weird vehicle movements?
A. Well, I believed what was occurring behind me was unsafe, and I was concerned that — due to where we were at downtown and the time of night, I was concerned that maybe this driver was impaired. You know, that was one thing I was thinking of at that time.
. The State claims that this is when appellant was detained. In its brief in the court of appeals, the State argued:
The reporter's record shows that Detective Thomas “decided to detain” the driver because he thought the truck’s erratic movements and proximity to his own car were unsafe. Thomas was also concerned that the driver was impaired "due to where we were at downtown and the timе of night.” Was Foster detained when Thomas decided to detain him, as the defense implies? No, because the reasonableness test is objective. An officer’s secret ambition to detain therefore cannot be dispositive. Moreover, nothing in the record up to that point speaks to any show of police authority or restraint on Foster's freedom to drive away. Instead, the record shows that, after Thomas observed the erratic driving behavior, he and Officer de [sic] los Santos approached Foster’s truck, which was already at a standstill of its own accord. Both officers- detected a strong odor of alcoholic beverages about the driver. Thomas testified that Foster was then "removed from the vehicle.” It is reasonable to infer from this that Foster was detained when he got out of his truck so that police could investigate intoxication.
(Citations to record and authority omitted).
.Thomas described his police department experience:
Q. [STATE]: What were your duties before homicide detective?
A. [THOMAS]: Before I was a detective, I was a police officer.
Q. Did you ever work patrol or traffic?
A. Yes, I did.
Q. Have you had occasion to arrest or cite people for moving violations?
A. Yes.
Q. And have you ever been part of a DWI arrest or arrested anyone for DWI?
A. Yes.
Q. And have you ever been on patrol in this 6th Street area?
A. Yes, I have.
Q. So I will ask you again: Based on the training and experience you had, was it *612 common for people when driving in this area of 6th Street — that area of downtown late at night, is it common for many people to be impaired?
A. Yes.
Q. So would you say when you see someone indicating some erratic or unsafe driving in this part of town that it might be a natural inclination for someone to suspect that person of being impaired or intoxicated?
A. Yes.
. The trial court found:
Okay, Well, it is my — to sum this up, I find the officer’s testimony credible. I find that his testimony which indicated erratic movements of the defendant's car, including a lurch up to a distance within inches of the officer’s car, although he was — the officer was stopped at a red light; these movements occurring on 6th Street — in the 6th Street area;
probably this location being only a few blocks from the party district of 6th Street and occurring at 1:30 in the morning is sufficient evidence to justify the stop of this vehicle. I believe all of those factors together — maybe not if this happened in a neighborhood at 2:30 on Sunday afternoon, but the location and the time I think are factors that create a reasonable suspicion of DWI.
.
See also Foster,
.
See Woods v. State,
. Our disposition of the first ground for review makes it unnecessary to address the second ground for review. We will, therefore, presume that appellant was detained "when he found himself barricaded on the front and side by two vehicles, one of which was a marked police car.” We nevertheless question the court of appeals’s opinion to the extent that it suggests that a person is "detained” by the police simply because that person is in a vehicle behind an unmarked police car and alongside a marked police car at a traffic light. We express no opinion on whether appellant was "detained” when the officers exited their vehicles and began to approach appellant’s vehicle before they smelled alcohol.
. Our decision in Woods fully explains why this Court rejected the "as consistent with innocent activity as with criminal activity” construct for determining reasonable suspicion for a temporary detention.
. We note that the trial judge explained that her conclusion might have been different had "this happened in a neighborhoоd at 2:30 on Sunday afternoon.” Time and location are relevant and appropriate considerations when doing a totality of the circumstances review to *614 determine whether or not reasonable suspicion exists.
.
See United States v. Sokolow,
. We note that the court of appeals relied on its decision in
State v. Guzman
in which it declined "to hold that an officer may lawfully detain on suspicion of intoxication any driver who is seen by the officer to sрin a tire at a downtown intersection at night.”
See Foster,
