delivered the Opinion of the Court.
€ 1 In this interlocutory appeal, the prosecution challenges an order of the Arapahoe County District Court granting the defendant's motion to suppress evidence. The order suppressed evidence of marijuana seized from the defendant, as well as the defendant's statements to the investigating officer.
12 The investigating officer initially observed the defendant, Anthony Michael Re-voal, at 11:30 p.m. standing to the side of a closed sandwich shop, then walking across a parking lot to the side of a liquor store while looking left and right, as if "watching for something," which the officer considered suspicious. After continuing to observe Revoal begin to walk behind the liquor store, the officer pulled his patrol vehicle over to make contact with him. When Revoal saw the patrol vehicle, he turned and began walking away from the vehicle. Revoal complied with the officer's instructions to stop. The officer informed Revoal that he was going to frisk him and asked if Revoal had anything illegal on his person. Revoal replied, "my right front pant pocket." The officer removed marijuana, and also found additional marijuana and a scale containing marijuana residue upon further search.
T 3 The trial court suppressed the marijuana evidence and Revoal's statements to police because the facts and circumstances the investigating officer knew at the time of the intrusion did not satisfy the threshold constitutional test for reasonable suspicion.
T4 We affirm the suppression order. We hold that the facts and cireumstances the officer knew at the time of the intrusion, viewed either individually or in conjunction with each other, did not amount under the totality of the cireumstances to reasonable suspicion sufficient to justify the officer's investigatory stop of Revoal.
I.
T5 On March 26, 2011, Officer Jonathan McCants was on routine patrol in an area of Aurora, Colorado, which at the time had experienced a recent history of robberies. At approximately 11:80 p.m., McCants observed Revoal standing on the side of a closed Subway sandwich shop, looking "left to right as if he was looking for something or watching for something." McCants testified this consistent with the behavior of someone staking out a business or seanning for police. Revoal then proceeded to walk across a parking lot to stand on the side of an open liquor store and continued to look left and right. McCants then observed Revoal begin to walk behind the liquor store, where it was dark.
T 6 McCants directed Revoal to stop, come towards him, and sit on the curb; Revoal complied. Following standard procedure, McCants radioed for backup. While waiting for a cover officer to arrive, he asked Revoal what he was doing in the area; Revoal re
T7 The prosecution charged Revoal with one count of possession with intent to manufacture or distribute marijuana in an amount less than five pounds.
IL.
18 We hold that the facts and cireum-stances the officer knew at the time of the intrusion, viewed either individually or in conjunction with each other, did not amount under the totality of the circumstances to reasonable suspicion sufficient to justify the officer's investigatory stop of Revoal.
A. Standard of Review
T9 We review a trial court's suppression order with deference to the trial court's findings of historical fact and will not overturn them if supported by competent evidence in the record. People v. Castaneda,
B. Applicable Law
110 The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution protects against unreasonable searches and seizures. U.S. Const. amend. IV ("The right of people to be secure against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated."); Colo. Const. art. II, § 7 ("The people shall be secure ... from unreasonable searches and seizures."); Terry v. Ohio,
(1) the officer must have a reasonable suspicion that criminal activity has occurred, is taking place, or is about to take place; (2) the purpose of the intrusion must be reasonable; and (3) the scope and character of the intrusion must be reasonably related to its purpose.
People v. Padgett,
111 In determining whether an investigatory stop is valid, a court must take into account the facts and cirenmstances known to the officer at the time of the intrusion. Id. at 815. In order to justify an investigatory stop, "the police officer must be able to point to specific and articulable facts which, taken together with rational inferences from those facts, reasonably warrant that intrusion." Terry,
C. Application to This Case
{12 Here, the facts and circumstances the police knew at the time of the intrusion were: (1) it was 11:30 pm.; (2) robberies had recently occurred in the area; (3) Revoal was standing on the side of a closed Subway, looking left to right; (4) Re-voal walked to the side of an open liquor store, continued looking left to right, then walked toward the back of the liquor store, where it was dark; and (5) Revoal turned and walked away from McCants when he observed the patrol vehicle. We conclude that these facts, viewed together in light of the officer's training and experience, did not amount to reasonable suspicion sufficient to justify the investigatory stop.
13 In Greer, we held that a close conversation between two individuals in a parking lot adjacent to a bar well known for narcotics sales, where one of the individuals was observed putting currency into his pocket, did not justify a stop.
T 14 In contrast, in People v. Ratcliff, we held an investigatory stop was justified where a detective testified to observing a known user and supplier of drugs, who had an outstanding arrest warrant, walk up to another individual in a known drug area and simultaneously exchange objects.
€ 15 This case is closer to Greer and Pad-gett than to Ratcliff and Canton. Here, as in Greer and Padgett, the police observed a man late at night in an area that had experienced recent crime engage in an ambiguous and, as the officer admitted in his testimony, "aimless" action-looking left to right and wandering across a parking lot. By contrast, both cases where the court found reasonable suspicion involved more deliberate, suspicious conduct supported by corroborating evidence. In Ratcliff the defendant was a known user and supplier of drugs, and the officer observed him exchange objects with another individual.
{ 16 We have often stated that, standing alone, a history of past eriminal activity in a locality does not justify suspension of the constitutional rights of everyone, or anyone, who may subsequently be in that locality. See, e.g., People v. Rahming,
{17 Although we must consider the location and the hour together with Revoal's actions, the actions of looking left and right and wandering across the parking lot in a seemingly aimless fashion (as opposed to engaging in more deliberate conduct) are too ambiguous to amount to reasonable suspicion that a crime had occurred, was in progress or was about to occur. Revoal's behavior falls below the level of suspicion aroused by the observed behavior in Terry, where the defendants paced "alternately along an identical route, pausing to stare in the same store window roughly 24 times," conferring with each other in between passes and then conferring with a third individual. Terry,
18 Finally, although flight from police may support an informant's claim that an individual is engaged in drug trafficking, Canton,
{19 Under the totality of cireunmstances, the facts the police knew at the time of the intrusion did not satisfy the threshold constitutional test for reasonable suspicion.
IIL.
120 Accordingly, we affirm the trial court's suppression order and return this case to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The prosecution phrased the issue as follows: "'The district court erred in holding that the officer lacked reasonable suspicion to stop the defendant."
. Although the officer originally testified that there was nothing behind the liquor store except dumpsters, he corrected his testimony when shown a satellite photograph of the area that showed a gas station in that location.
. § 18-18-406(6)(b)(I), (III)(A), C.R.S. (2011).
. Because the trial court suppressed Revoal's statements as "fruit of the poisonous tree" from the improper investigatory stop, it found that Revoal's separate motion to suppress statements was moot.
