OPINION
Appealing from his conviction of fifth-degree controlled substance crime, appellant Daniel Bergerson argues that police lacked reasonable, articulable suspicion to stop his vehicle after driving away from a hardware store in which the owner had reported Bergerson’s purchase of two commonly sold items with lawful uses that also can be used along with other items to manufacture methamphetamine. Berger-son also argues that the evidence seized should be suppressed as fruit of the illegal seizure. We reverse.
FACTS
On November 14, 2000, the owner of a hardware store in Cambridge called the police to report that an individual had purchased rubber tubing and acetone, commonly sold items that can be used to manufacture methamphetamine. Cambridge Police Officers Todd Schuster and Jason Harvey and Isanti County Sheriffs Deputy Kevin Carlson were dispatched to the store. Officer Schuster arrived first and saw an individual, later identified as Bergerson, getting into a red Chevy Beretta.
Officer Schuster spoke with the store-owner, who identified Bergerson as the person who had purchased the items. By *794 the time Officer Schuster finished talking with the owner, Bergerson was driving out of the store’s parking lot. Officer Schus-ter requested that Deputy Carlson and Officer Harvey stop the vehicle, identify the driver, and determine his intentions.
Deputy Carlson testified that, as Ber-gerson proceeded westbound on highway 95, Bergerson’s vehicle did not exceed the speed limit. With Bergerson’s vehicle directly in front of his squad car, Deputy Carlson attempted to pull it over by activating his flashing red lights. Bergerson did not stop immediately and continued driving while other cars began pulling over. Deputy Carlson then shined his spotlight into the back of Bergerson’s vehicle, “[t]o make sure the person knew I was trying to stop him.” Deputy Carlson observed Bergerson “reaching towards the front passenger floor or looking] like he was putting stuff in the back seat, and it appeared suspicious, as furtive movement.” Deputy Carlson then activated his squad car’s siren.
After Bergerson had traveled approximately one mile beyond the point where Deputy Carlson activated his flashing lights, he stopped the vehicle abruptly, exited it, and ran through a ditch. During the subsequent pursuit, Bergerson fell and Officer Harvey was able to restrain him. Bergerson was arrested and pat searched. Red phosphorus, a substance used in the manufacture of methamphetamine, was recovered from Bergerson’s jacket pocket.
Meanwhile, Officer Schuster drove to the location where Bergerson had stopped his car and observed several items inside the vehicle, including coffee filters, distilled water, paper towels, a black Nike bag, and a briefcase. Officer Schuster obtained a search warrant for Bergerson’s vehicle. Upon executing the search warrant the next morning, Officer Schuster seized a handgun and a substance, which tested positive for methamphetamine.
Bergerson was charged with felony controlled substance crime in the fifth degree, in violation of Minn.Stat. §§ 152.025, subd. 2(1)(2000), and 609.11, subd. 5 (2000), and felony fleeing a peace officer in a motor vehicle, in violation of Minn.Stat. § 609.487, subd. 3 (2000). Following a contested omnibus hearing, the district court denied Bergerson’s motion to suppress the evidence seized. The state dismissed the latter charge, and the case was submitted on stipulated facts, pursuant to
State v. Lothenbach,
ISSUES
1. Was the stop of appellant’s vehicle supported by reasonable, articulable suspicion?
2. Should the evidence seized have been suppressed as fruit of an illegal seizure?
DECISION
When reviewing a pretrial order denying a motion to suppress evidence where the facts are undisputed and the trial court’s decision is a question of law, we independently review the facts and determine as a matter of law whether the evidence must be suppressed.
State v. Othoudt,
I.
The Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article I, Section 10, of the Minnesota Constitution protect against unreasonable searches and seizures. To conduct a stop for limited investigatory purposes, an officer must have reasonable, articulable suspicion of criminal activity.
State v. Munson,
594
*795
N.W.2d 128, 136 (Minn.1999) (citing
Terry v. Ohio,
The police must only show that the stop was not the product of mere whim, caprice or idle curiosity, but was based upon “specific and articulable facts which, taken together with rational inferences from those facts, reasonably warrant that intrusion.”
State v. Pike,
Bergerson argues that, without more, his purchase of rubber tubing and acetone at the hardware store was insufficient to provide Carlson with reasonable, articula-ble suspicion of criminal activity to lawfully stop his vehicle. The state does not dispute that a stop based solely on the purchase of legal items is invalid. But the state asserts that, when Bergerson failed to pull over in response to Carlson’s red flashing lights, spotlight, and siren, an investigative stop was justified.
Reasonable, articulable suspicion must be present at the moment a person is seized.
Terry,
[A] person has been seized if in view of all the circumstances surrounding the incident, a reasonable person would have believed that he or she was neither free to disregard the police questions nor free to terminate the encounter.
Id.; see United States v. Mendenhall,
Deputy Carlson activated his flashing red lights after following immediately behind Bergerson .for some time. Under certain circumstances, an officer’s flashing red lights can be a significant factor in determining whether a seizure has occurred.
See State v. Sanger,
We find support for our conclusion in
E.D.J.,
in which the Minnesota Supreme Court analyzed when a seizure occurred.
Having established the point of seizure, we proceed with the analysis of whether, at that moment, Deputy Carlson had reasonable suspicion to stop Berger-son. Prior to the seizure, Deputy Carlson knew only that Bergerson had purchased common, everyday items from the hardware store that can also be used for an unlawful purpose. Deputy Carlson had not yet seen Bergerson’s furtive movements, so we must exclude them from the analysis. Absent any other activity or information about Bergerson, merely purchasing two generic items from a hardware store, which separately and together have numerous legitimate uses, does not create reasonable suspicion of criminal activity. Mun
son,
Here, the facts are distinguishable from those presented in
State v. Vereb,
[W]e conclude that police had reasonable suspicion of criminal activity to support the stop of the vehicle, based on the following facts: (1) Chief Pender received a report from a Wal-Mart employee who observed two men purchasing a large number of cold tablets; (2) Chief Pender knew that cold tablets are precursor materials commonly used in the production of methamphetamine; (3) when Chief Pender arrived at the store, an employee met him and told him that the men had just left in a vehicle; (4) the employee observed the direction the vehicle had traveled and rode along with Chief Pender to search for the vehicle; and (5) Chief Pender observed the vehicle attempting to evade his pursuit by traveling at excessive speeds.
The speeding violation and evasive driving conduct alone justified the stop. These facts, coupled with appellant’s and [another individual’s] other suspicious conduct at the store, provided a reason *797 able articulable basis to stop the vehicle to investigate a possible traffic or controlled substance violation.
Id. at 347 (citations omitted).
Vereb is distinguishable from the instant case in two respects. First, the quantity and nature of the purchases made by the suspects in Vereb are different from those made by Bergerson. Repeated purchases of large quantities of cold tablets by the same two people are palpably more suspicious and suggestive of illegal activity than a single purchase of rubber tubing and acetone by an unknown individual. Although, as these cases demonstrate, merchants are becoming increasingly aware of the components necessary to manufacture methamphetamine, and, although the items purchased in both cases have both legal and illegal uses, an individual buying two items commonly found in a hardware store, coupled with no other suspicious behavior, distinguishes the facts here from those in Vereb.
Second, the driver in Vereb committed a traffic violation by speeding away from the police car at over 75 miles per hour. Id. at 345. Vereb’s facts do not establish explicitly or suggest that the police had activated flashing red lights to initiate a stop, or in any other way seized the individuals before their vehicle fled at a high rate of speed. In this case, it was not until after Deputy Carlson activated his flashing fights that Bergerson fled. The quality and quantity of evidence in Vereb were sufficient to support the officer’s reasonable, articulable suspicion. The same cannot be said about the evidence here.
The state argues that the stop was justified by Bergerson’s choice to' ignore Deputy Carlson’s indications that he was attempting to pull Bergerson over. But each of these indications occurred after Deputy Carlson seized Bergerson by activating the squad car’s flashing red fights. At the point of seizure, Carlson did not have reasonable, articulable suspicion to stop Bergerson. The seizure, therefore, was unconstitutional.
II.
Bergerson next argues that the evidence found as a result of the stop should have been suppressed under the exclusionary rule. Evidence obtained through an illegal seizure is inadmissible to support a conviction.
State v. Harris,
We examine several factors to determine whether evidence is fruit of the poisonous tree.
Knapp v. Comm’r of Pub. Safety,
A. The purpose and flagrancy of the misconduct
Athough Deputy Carlson’s conduct was not particularly flagrant, the stop he initi
*798
ated was unlawful, because reasonable suspicion did not support the stop. Deputy Carlson testified that he stopped Berger-son to identify him and discover his intentions. This is precisely the type of conduct the exclusionary rule is intended to prevent.
See State v. Hardy,
B. The presence of intervening circumstances
This factor requires us to determine whether the state has shown that Berger-son’s actions were “intervening circumstances sufficient to purge the illegality of its primary taint.”
State v. Ingram,
A defendant may not resort to self-help to resolve disputes concerning unreasonable searches and seizures, because the legal safeguards under the Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth . Amendments provide the victim of an unlawful search with realistic and orderly legal alternatives to physical resistance.
Id. at 178 (quotations and citations omitted).
Citing Ingram, the state argues that fleeing, without physical confrontation, is sufficient to purge the taint of illegal police conduct. We have rejected this interpretation of Ingram, however, and distinguished between two types of conduct that involve flight:
Ingram also explains that resisting arrest is different from merely fleeing and attempting to dispose of incriminating evidence; disposing of contraband is a “predictable and common response” to an illegal search that warrants suppression of the evidence.
Olson,
We conclude that Bergerson’s flight was an abandonment of evidence.
See. e.g. State v. Dineen,
C. Likelihood of discovery without the illegality
Were it not for Deputy Carlson’s seizure of Bergerson, it is unlikely that police would have discovered the methamphetamine in Bergerson’s car. The record *799 does not establish that police would have encountered the evidence in any other way. Thus, this factor weighs in favor of suppression.
D. Temporal proximity
“A close temporal proximity favors exclusion.”
Olson,
Balancing these four factors, we conclude that the discovery of the methamphetamine was the fruit of an illegal seizure. The chain of events leading to the discovery of the evidence was directly related to the stop, and Bergerson’s conduct did not create an intervening event that would have otherwise led the police to discover the evidence.
The officers obtained the methamphetamine as the result of an illegal seizure, which makes the evidence inadmissible to support a conviction.
Harris,
We are mindful that most investigatory stops occur when an officer has constitutional grounds to do so — namely, reasonable, articulable suspicion of criminal activity. Our ruling does not impede the use of this investigative tool, which is essential to effective law enforcement. We also are mindful of the important function served by observant citizens who assist police in ferreting out criminal activity. Our ruling does not diminish that important function. Simply put, the constitutional guaranties that our ruling is founded on require that police initiate stops only after their investigation has transformed the limited observations and hunches of citizens and police alike into “specific and articulable facts, which taken together with rational inferences from those facts,” reasonably establish suspicion of criminal activity.
Terry,
Reversed.
