Defendant was charged with the offense of theft by receiving a stolen rental car. Defendant filed a motion to suppress, contending he was illegally stopped and searched by a law enforcement officer before his arrest. The evidence adduced at a hearing on this motion to suppress reveals the following: .
At about 9:12 in the morning on February 19, 1993, Deputy Joseph Lee Garland of the Douglas County Sheriff’s Department was parked across the street from Southern Federal Bank in Lithia Springs, Georgia, when he observed a black male drive a “white panel van [with a] rental sticker from a rental company, bumper stickers . . .” into the bank’s parking lot. A rash of recent bank robberies in the area had raised Deputy Garland’s suspicions so he pulled his patrol car into the bank’s parking lot and waved to the tellers in the drive-in windows. The deputy just wanted to “let them know [he was] there.”
As Deputy Garland drove around the bank building, he “noticed *554 through the office window that is on the side of the bank — there’s like a glass pane window — you can see the front door[,] a couple of tellers run up to the door as this guy was getting in the van to leave. [Deputy Garland] drove on around the bank and come (sic) around the other side of the bank to the drive-through window. ... It looked like [the tellers] were just trying to get a look or . . . maybe catch him to tell him he forgot something [, but] when [the deputy] noticed there were two of them and they didn’t go out the door, . . . then [he] thought they were trying to look at a tag number or something to get a tag number. [Deputy Garland then] sped up to drive on around to the other side of the bank [and he noticed that] one of the tellers came to the drive-through windowf. This teller] told [the deputy that] this person in this van was acting very suspicious.” The bank teller did not have time to tell Deputy Garland why she thought the man in the van was “acting very suspicious” because the suspect “was in the process of pulling out.” The deputy “went ahead and proceeded to pull in behind the van and follow him.”
Although Deputy Garland followed the van for quite some distance, he did not observe any traffic violations. Nonetheless, the deputy decided to stop the van to “[f]ind out if this person was a licensed driver, was possibly wanted, find out what his reason for being there was.” The suspect turned out to be defendant. Defendant did not have a driver’s license, and the van he was operating had been acquired (apparently by a third party) by use of a stolen credit card. Defendant was arrested and taken into custody.
The trial court denied defendant’s motion to suppress, and defendant filed an application for interlocutory appeal. Defendant filed a notice of appeal after we granted defendant’s request to appeal. Held:
In four enumerations of error, defendant challenges the denial of his motion to suppress.
“ ‘ “We have repeatedly held that an authorized officer may stop an automobile and conduct a limited investigative inquiry of its occupants, without probable cause, if he has ‘reasonable grounds’ for such action — ‘a founded suspicion is all that is necessary, some basis from which the court can determine that the detention was not arbitrary or harassing.’ (Cit.)” (Cit.)’
Brooks v. State,
“ ‘ “Although an officer may conduct a brief investigative stop of a vehicle, (cit.), such a stop must be justified by specific, articulable facts sufficient to give rise to a reasonable suspicion of criminal conduct,
Terry v, Ohio,
Judgment reversed.
