The People pursuant to C.A.R. 4.1 appeal from a ruling of the district court suppressing the use of both physical and verbal evidence against the defendant, Linel Wells, in a pending criminal prosecution. The district court concluded that because there was no reasonable suspicion to stop the defendant, the evidence was the fruit of an unconstitutional seizure of the defendant’s person. We reverse the suppression ruling.
The defendant, who was charged in the Adams County District Court with attempt to commit first degree criminal trespass, 1 filed a motion to suppress all the prosecution’s evidence on the ground that it was obtained as a result of an unlawful seizure of his person in violation of the United *700 States and Colorado Constitutions. U.S. Const. Amends. IV and XIV; Colo. Const. Art. II, Sec. 7. The only witness testifying at the suppression hearing was Officer Mark Nicastle of the Adams County Sheriffs Department. His testimony established the following facts.
On January 8, 1983, at approximately 7:30 a.m. Officer Nicastle was on routine car patrol near a warehouse complex located in the 1700 block, of East 85th Avenue in Adams County. Upon looking over the complex, the officer observed the defendant in the warehouse parking lot. The defendant, according to the officer, had backed up his vehicle, with the trunk open, against a tractor-trailer and appeared to be pulling on the gate handle of the trailer. Believing that the defendant might be unlawfully breaking into the trailer, the officer drove past the entryway to the warehouse and then proceeded to the parking lot. As the officer drove into the parking lot he saw that the defendant had already entered his vehicle and was leaving. The officer drove to the side of the defendant’s vehicle, rolled down his window, and told the defendant to "hold on a second.” The defendant stopped his car and the officer turned around and pulled up behind him.
In response to Officer Nicastle’s inquiry about what he was doing there, the defendant stated that he was looking for a job and was waiting for the driver of the tractor-trailer to arrive. The officer next requested the defendant’s driver’s license. When the defendant reached into his back pocket, he first pulled out a wrench-like tool and a “needle-nosed pair of pliers” and then his wallet. The officer took the defendant’s driver’s license and returned to his police vehicle where he called the police dispatcher for an identification check. He was informed by the dispatcher that the defendant was wanted on a Denver arrest warrant for second degree forgery. At this point Officer Nicastle made the decision to arrest the defendant and requested assistance from an officer in another police unit. When the other officer arrived, the defendant was arrested and searched. The wrench was recovered from his back pocket.
Shortly after the defendant’s arrest, Officer Nicastle was able to contact the driver of the tractor-trailer. The driver came to the scene and, upon checking the trailer, determined that the aluminum seal on the back of the trailer had been removed. The officer perused the area and found the seal, which appeared to have been cut, lying on the ground about ten feet from the trailer. Officer Nicastle then arranged for the towing of the defendant’s vehicle to the police station. He looked into the passenger compartment of the vehicle and observed the pliers, previously seen by him when the defendant removed his wallet from his rear pocket, stuffed inside the headrest of the driver’s seat. The officer seized the pliers and the defendant’s vehicle was later towed to the police station.
At the conclusion of the suppression hearing the district court ruled that the defendant’s act of pulling on the trailer gate handle and then attempting to leave the scene when the officer entered the parking lot did not amount to a reasonable suspicion to justify the initial stop and accordingly granted the motion to suppress. 2 *701 Although the court did not specify what evidence was suppressed, it apparently intended to include in its suppression ruling any and all evidence obtained subsequent to Officer Nicastle’s stop, including the officer’s observations at the scene, the defendant’s post-stop statement to the officer, and any physical evidence taken by the police. The People, conceding that Officer Nicastle lacked probable cause to make an arrest when he first stopped the defendant in the warehouse parking lot, nonetheless claim that the officer’s observations prior to the stop constituted reasonable suspicion to temporarily detain the defendant in order to investigate the circumstances of his conduct. We agree with the People’s argument.
An investigatory stop, short of the traditional arrest, is an intermediate form of police response that may be utilized on less than probable cause under narrowly defined circumstances.
Terry v. Ohio,
A subjective and unarticulated hunch of criminal activity will not support the “reasonable suspicion” necessary for an investigatory stop.
E.g., Brown v. Texas,
When the officer initially observed the defendant in the warehouse parking lot, the defendant had backed up his car with the trunk open, to the rear of the tractor-trailer, and was “pulling on the trailer-gate handle” in an obvious effort to open it. The officer reasonably inferred from this observation that the defendant was attempting to gain access to the interior of the trailer so that goods stored therein could be placed in the trunk of his vehicle. Given the common practice of unloading trailers on loading docks with the use of
*702
forklifts or other special equipment, the defendant’s actions understandably aroused the officer’s suspicion. As the officer entered the warehouse parking lot, the defendant, apparently aware that he had been seen by the officer, attempted to leave the scene. While admittedly the mere effort to avoid police contact does not give rise to a reasonable suspicion that criminal activity may be afoot, evasive action by a suspect does take on a sufficiently suspicious character to justify a stop when it is “coupled with an officer’s specific knowledge connecting that person to some other action or circumstance indicative of criminal conduct.”
People v. Thomas,
Because the initial stop was a legitimate intrusion into the defendant’s personal security, the officer’s observations in the course of the stop, as well as the defendant’s statement to the officer immediately after the stop,
3
were not the products of an unconstitutional seizure of the defendant’s person. Furthermore, once the officer was informed by the dispatcher of the outstanding arrest warrant, he was entitled to act on that information and arrest the defendant.
People v. Gouker,
The suppression ruling is reversed.
Notes
. Sections 18-2-101 and 18-4-502, C.R.S.1973 (1978 Repl.Vol. 8).
. In granting the defendant’s suppression motion, the district court relied primarily on
People v. Quintero,
. Because the sole issue raised at the suppression hearing was whether Officer Nicastle had reasonable suspicion to initially stop the defendant, the district court had no occasion to consider whether the defendant's statement to Officer Nicastle at the scene was the result of custodial interrogation which should have been preceded by a proper advisement of the defendant’s
Miranda
rights.
See Miranda v. Arizona,
