We granted the application of Jonathan LeRoux for an interlocutory appeal to consider the denial of his motion to suppress. He *311 contends that the police lacked an articulable suspicion to stop his vehicle. We disagree and affirm.
We must follow three principles when reviewing a trial court’s order concerning a motion to suppress evidence:
First, the judge sits as the trier of facts. The trial judge hears the evidence, and his findings based upon conflicting evidence are analogous to the verdict of a jury and should not be disturbed by a reviewing court if there is any evidence to support it. Second, the trial court’s decision with regard to questions of fact and credibility must be accepted unless clearly erroneous. Third, the reviewing court must construe the evidence most favorably to the upholding of the trial court’s findings and judgment.
(Citations and punctuation omitted.)
State v. Hester,
The officer observed the car as it drove through the gate and proceeded all the way to the end of the driveway, “a little over a quarter mile.” The officer testified that many areas along the driveway, including the area outside the gate, were available for the driver to turn around if he had made a wrong turn. As the officer followed the car, he saw it go all the way to the back parking lot, “go down, around, and then he looked like he did one full circle of the parking lot.” When the driver “was going for a second” loop, the officer stopped him because “he had no reason to be there and to be driving loops in the parking lot.”
While he acknowledged that the driver committed no traffic violations, in response to a question on cross-examination suggesting “there were no signs of any peculiar driving,” the officer responded, “Driving through the University of Georgia golf course at 2:30 a.m., I thought that was peculiar. That’s why I stopped him.” Upon being stopped, LeRoux was charged with DUI.
*312 At least three types of police-citizen encounters exist: verbal communications involving no coercion or detention; brief “stops” or “seizures” that require reasonable suspicion; and “arrests,” which can only be supported by probable cause. A first-tier encounter never intrudes upon any constitutionally protected interest, since the purpose of the Fourth Amendment is not to eliminate all contact between police and citizens, but simply to prevent arbitrary and oppressive police interference with the privacy and personal security of individual citizens. On the other hand, a second-tier encounter may violate the Fourth Amendment if the officer briefly “stops” or “seizes” a citizen without an articulable suspicion. Articulable suspicion requires a particularized and objective basis for suspecting that a citizen is involved in criminal activity.
(Citations omitted.)
Brittian v.
State,
This behavior was sufficiently unusual to provide a basis for the officer’s stated suspicion that LeRoux might be involved or about to be involved in criminal activity. 1 Under similar circumstances, an officer on routine patrol observed a vehicle parked in a remote area of a motel parking lot at 4:45 a.m. and approached to inquire what the occupants were doing there. As we observed in that case:
The officer testified that numerous other crimes had occurred in the area; and we believe his observance of the appellant and his companions sitting for no apparent reason in a parked automobile in a remote part of a motel parking lot located in a “high crime area” at 4:45 a.m. was sufficient *313 to excite a reasonable suspicion that criminal activity might be afoot. Consequently, we hold that the officer was authorized to conduct a brief on-the-scene investigative detention pursuant to Terry v. Ohio.
(Citations omitted.)
Bozeman v. State,
LeRoux argues that the officer had no articulable suspicion to stop his car, citing several Court of Appeals decisions involving traffic stops, primarily
State v. Winnie,
Here, unlike in Winnie, LeRoux did not briefly enter the parking lot of a business adjoining the public road, but drove through a gate and down a roadway a quarter mile through clearly marked private property and then circled the parking lot. The basis for the stop did not dissipate because LeRoux never left the parking lot. Instead, he was beginning his second circle when the officer stopped him. Moreover, the officer in this case testified specifically to problems with criminal activity on the golf course, while the officer in Winnie “had not received any report of criminal activity at the” property on which Winnie briefly parked. Id. at 229.
In
Attaway,
supra, the stop occurred not on private property but on a public street in a subdivision.
Other decisions cited by LeRoux are likewise distinguished by their facts. See, e.g.,
Baker v. State,
The trial court did not err in denying LeRoux’s motion to suppress.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
While the tried court suggested as an alternative basis that the officer could have intended to render aid to a lost driver, no evidence was submitted to support that conclusion. See, e.g.,
State v. Stearns,
