Opinion
Richard Allen Hoye was convicted of driving after having been adjudicated an habitual offender. Hoye argues that the police officer had no legitimаte reason for making an investigatory stop of his vehicle and that the trial court erred in refusing to suppress evidence obtained from the stop. Because the evidence supports a finding that the stop was based upon а reasonable suspicion derived from articulable facts, we affirm Hoyе’s conviction.
On April 2, 1992, around 9:00 a.m., Fairfax County Police Officer Jennifer Otwell saw a vehicle which appeared to have an expired license рlate. She then checked the license plate number through the Division of Mоtor Vehicles (D.M.V.) data base on the computer in her police car. The computer returned information that the vehicle was a “1986
The computer also provided Officer Otwell with Hoye’s birth date, sex, weight, height, eye color and hair color. Officer Otwell, who was less than a car’s length behind the Jeep, testified that the man driving the vehicle matсhed the D.M.V. description. He appeared to be the same gender and approximate age, and to have the same weight, and hair colоr as the description provided by the D.M.V. Based on this information, she stopped the vehicle and found that Hoye was driving.
On appeal, Hoye has the burden, when viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, to prоve that the trial court’s denial of the motion to suppress constituted revеrsible error.
Fore
v. Commonwealth,
It is uncontroverted that when Officer Otwell pulled Hoyе’s vehicle over and inquired about his identity, he was “seized” for the purposes of the Fourth Amendment.
See Zimmerman
v.
Commonwealth,
“A police officer may stop a motor vehicle, without probable cause, for investigatory purposes if [the officer] possesses a reasonable and articulablе suspicion ‘that a motorist is unlicensed or that an automobile is not registered, or that either the vehicle or an.occupant is otherwise subject to seizure for violation of law.’ ”
Bulatko v. Commonwealth,
The trial judge found that Officer Otwell reasonably concluded that the vehicle’s driver matched the D.M.Y. description of the registered owner as to gender and approximate height, weight, аnd hair color. The court also noted that everything Officer Otwell could have observed about Hoye matched the description of the registered owner. We hold upon these facts that the trial court did not err in finding Officer Otwell had а reasonable suspicion based upon specific and articulable facts that the driver of the vehicle was an habitual offender. Accordingly, we hold that the stop did not violate the Fourth Amendment and affirm Hoye’s conviction.
Affirmed.
Fitzpatrick, J., and Duff, S.J., concurred.
