Defendant entered a conditional plea of guilty to carrying a concealed weapon, MCL 750.227; MSA 28.424, following the trial court’s denial of his motion to suppress evidence and this Court’s denial of his application for leave to appeal (Docket No. 94571). Sentenced to two years probation with thirty days in jail, defendant now appeals from the suppression ruling as of right. We affirm.
Defendant was one of three passengers in a car stopped at approximately 1:30 a.m. on Saturday, April 12, 1986, by Police Officer Henry Hartfelder. The driver of the vehicle was arrested for drunk driving. Neither the propriety of the traffic stop nor that arrest is challenged.
After arresting the driver, Officer Hartfelder learned that none of the three passengers had a valid driver’s license. According to Hartfelder, when he informed the passengers that the vehicle would have to be impounded, defendant asked how they were going to get home. Hartfelder told them *149 that they could either walk or be transported to either a nearby all-night restaurant or to the police station to arrange and wait for transportation. The passengers chose to take a ride to a restaurant. Hartfelder then left them with backup Officer Mark Cole to be given a ride. The officers agreed that none of the passengers appeared armed or dangerous and all were free to leave the scene.
According to Officer Cole, he also reviewed the passengers’ options with them and they said they wanted to be taken to a nearby restaurant. Because of the late hour, the fact that the men had been drinking, and because he could not contain their movement in the patrol car, Cole told the passengers they would have to be patted down before entering his patrol car. None objected or left the scene. Defendant was the second passenger to be patted down. During the pat-down, Cole discovered a pistol in defendant’s overcoat pocket.
According to the police officers, none of the passengers ever indicated that he wanted to walk to a phone. The officers never suggested that the passengers had to ride with them; the ride was offered as a courtesy and for their safety. According to Officer Cole, the pat-down was consensual. According to defendant, on the other hand, the officers never asked him what he wanted to do and never offered him a ride. Instead, defendant planned to walk to an all-night gas station approximately one hundred yards away. He was unaware that he was going to be searched until he saw Cole pat down one of the other passengers. When he told Cole that he wanted to walk to the gas station the officer responded by conducting a nonconsensual pat-down.
Defendant contends that the pistol should have been suppressed as the product of an illegal pat-
*150
down under
Terry v Ohio,
Courts in at least three states have considered factual situations similar to that presented in this case. In
People v Scott,
16 Cal 3d 242;
Two other courts, however, have reached the opposite conclusion. In
People v Coleman,
In
Commonwealth v Rehmeyer,
349 Pa Super 176;
A previous decision of this Court suggests that the better reasoning lies with the New York and Pennsylvania courts, rather than the California court. In
People v Otto,
[W]e have no trouble in sustaining the subsequent pat-down as being reasonable under the circumstances. The alternate to the frisk would be to handcuff defendant but that in itself would be a greater intrusion than a pat-down. Frisks, when made for the officer’s own protection, are justified under both Terry and [Pennsylvania v] Mimms, [434 US 106 ;98 S Ct 330 ;54 L Ed 2d 331 (1977)]. As the Terry court noted:
*152 "Certainly it would be unreasonable to require that police officers take unnecessary risks in the performance of their duties. American criminals have a long tradition of armed violence, and every year in this country many law enforcement officers are killed in the line of duty, and thousands more are wounded. Virtually all of these deaths and a substantial portion of the injuries are inflicted with guns and knives.”392 US at 23-24 .
In Mimms, the Supreme Court noted that a significant number of killings of police officers occurred in connection with traffic stops. While the instant case is not the usual traffic stop where the officer on foot approaches the stopped vehicle, it is obvious that an officer whose hands are on the wheel of his own vehicle is an easy victim of an armed passenger sitting behind him. [91 Mich App 451 -452.]
In the instant case, we do not believe that the limited intrusion created by the pat-down search for weapons was, on balance, an unreasonable search under the circumstances. The officers testified that while they do not automatically search everyone entering a police car while not under arrest — it was suggested that there would be an exception for an injured person being taken to a hospital for emergency treatment — they usually do so, particularly where, as here, they are dealing with persons who have been drinking, it is late at night or early in the morning, and particularly where, as here, an officer has no partner who might keep watch on the passengers while another officer attends to the driving. The Fourth Amendment was surely not intended to stand for the proposition that police officers must either abandon civilians on highways at night or transport them at the risk of personal safety, rather than transport them at reduced risk of personal safety by first subjecting them to a frisk for weapons.
*153
Defendant cites
People v Parham,
Finally, defendant urges that, because there was a twenty-four-hour gas station across the street from where the vehicle was stopped, he should have been allowed to go to the station to make his telephone call, rather than being subjected to a pat-down search preparatory to being transported to the restaurant. The trial court resolved the question of fact as to whether defendant had sought to exercise this option against the defendant and this Court will not disturb that determination. The trial court reasonably accepted the officer’s testimony that defendant had either requested or volunteered for the ride with the officer to the restaurant. Given that factual premise, the officer’s subsequent conduct was entirely reasonable and not in violation of the Fourth Amendment.
Affirmed.
