The State appeals from an order granting a pretrial motion to suppress certain evidence in the case against Anthony Burroughs (“defendant”), who was charged with driving while impaired (“DWI”). After careful review, we reverse and remand for additional findings of fact.
On 26 March 2005, officers from the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department (“CMPD”) set up a DWI checkpoint (also referred to as a “sobriety checkpoint”) on a certain section of Park Road in Charlotte. Defendant was stopped at the DWI checkpoint by Officer Matthew Pressley. The officer asked defendant how he was doing, explained that the officers were conducting a’ DWI checkpoint, and asked defendant for his driver’s license, which defendant gave him.
Officer Pressley testified at the hearing on the motion to suppress that he noticed defendant’s eyes were glossy and bloodshot and that his breath had a strong odor of alcohol. He also testified that defendant admitted upon questioning that he had consumed two glasses of wine half an hour earlier. Officer Pressley asked defendant to exit his car and submitted him to several alcohol screening tests. As a result of these tests, Officer Pressley believed defendant was impaired and placed him under arrest.
Defendant entered a plea of guilty in district court to the charge of DWI on 8 December 2005. On 3 February 2006 and 3 April 2006, defendant filed motions in superior court to suppress the evidence derived from the DWI checkpoint stop, arguing that the checkpoint was unconstitutional. On '3 August 2006, the court issued an order suppressing the evidence obtained from the stop pursuant to the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution and N.C. Gen. Stat. § 20-16.3 (2005). The State appeals from this order.
*498
The trial court based its holding on the motion to suppress almost entirely on this Court’s decision in
State v. Rose,
2. That the decision of the North Carolina Court of Appeals in State v. Rose,170 N.C. App. 284 ,612 S.E.2d 336 (2005)[,] is applicable to the facts in this case;
3. In Rose, the court stated that trial courts are required to make findings of fact regarding the “primary programmatic purpose” of a checkpoint based on the decision in Indianapolis v. Edmond,531 U.S. 32 [,]148 L.Ed.2d 333 ,121 S. Ct. 447 (2000);
4. That the trial court cannot simply accept the State’s invocation of a proper purpose but must examine the available evidence to determine the purpose at the programmatic level and cannot probe the minds of individual officers;
5. That the State has the burden of establishing that the primary programmatic objective, and not the subjective intent of the officer for initiating a suspicionless vehicle stop, was not merely to further general crime control;
6. That even an apparently] lawful purpose is insufficient without additional information that the lawful purpose was the primary programmatic purpose and that the checkpoint did not have a multi-purpose objective;
7. That in this case the “checkpoint plan” contained information about the location of the checkpoint and assertions, but no documentation, as to why the decision was made at the programmatic level to place the checkpoint at the place and at the time it was established;
8. That the [testimony presented relied solely on Officer Pressley’s explanation for why the checkpoint was an appropriate DWI Checkpoint for that time and location. Officer Pressley was .not a supervisor at the programmatic level as contemplated by State v. Rose, and the State offered no testimony from an officer acting at the programmatic level. As a result, this Court was deprived of the opportunity to conduct a close review of the checkpoint scheme [,] a review which is mandated by the United States Supreme Court; see Ferguson *499 v. City of Charleston,532 U.S. 67 (2001). It is the State’s burden to prove the primary programmatic purpose of a checkpoint and to provide the trial judge with sufficient evidence to make a determination as to whether a particular checkpoint passes constitutional muster. The State failed to carry its burden in this matter;
9.That the Court of Appeals in Rose specifically prohibits reliance on the individual arresting officer’s primary purpose or intent when inquiring into the programmatic purpose of the checkpoint;
10. That Park Road in Charlotte[,] North Carolina, is a lengthy stretch of road from downtown Charlotte to Pineville, North Carolina, and runs through diverse areas of town involving industrial, residential, and commercial areas which present a diverse number of challenges for law enforcement activity which could involve use of roadblocks or checkpoints;
11. That without more information contained in the plan or communicated from the programmatic level, the court cannot ascertain the primary programmatic purpose of the checkpoint in issue, and whether the checkpoint was sufficiently tailored by a supervisory official to permit a suspicionless stop of a vehicle;
12. That the checkpoint plan as presented fails to meet the necessary constitutional and statutory standards as set out in State v. Rose,170 N.C. App. 284 ,612 S.E.2d 336 (20.05).
13. That the testimony presented fails to prove the primary purpose in implementing the roadblock was a “Sobriety Checking Station” and the Court cannot presume from an unsubstantiated record that the constitutional requirements have been satisfied. See Rose at 341 citing Baker v. State,252 Ga. App. 695 , 698-99,556 S.E.2d 892 , 897 (2001)[.]
Because of this heavy reliance on our holding in
Rose,
we believe a close examination of that opinion is appropriate here. First, however, a brief summary of the case on which
Rose
in turn heavily relies—
City of Indianapolis v. Edmond,
In
Edmond,
the defendant challenged a checkpoint with the stated and actual purpose of detecting narcotics.
Id.
at 34, 148
*500
L. Ed. 2d at 339. In its opinion, the Court summarized a series of its earlier cases which had considered the constitutionality of certain programmatic purposes,, including sobriety and border patrol checks, and noted that this case presented for the first time the programmatic purpose of narcotics possession.
Id.
at 37-40,
This Court applied the principles of
Edmond
in
Rose.
The language in
Rose
requiring an examination of a checkpoint’s purpose— specifically, that the trial court must “ ‘examine the available evidence to determine the primary purpose of the checkpoint program’ ” — comes directly from
Edmond. Rose,
This Court reversed, remanding the case for the trial court to make findings of fact as to the checkpoint’s purpose.
Id.
at 285-86,
Further, four of the five officers involved in the checkpoint were narcotics detectives, and the arrest at issue was not for a faulty license or registration, but for possession of drugs and a weapon.
Id.
at 290,
The Court concluded in
Rose
that the evidence presented at trial clearly tended to show that the actual purpose of the checkpoint was simply to check the vehicles for “possible criminal activity” — specifically, narcotics possession — a purpose which had been held unconstitutionally broad by the United States Supreme Court.
Rose,
Thus, our holding in Rose was that where contradictory evidence exists as to the actual primary purpose of a checkpoint program, the trial court must examine the available evidence to determine the actual purpose, because bare assertions of a constitutional purpose cannot be allowed to mask actual purposes that are unconstitutional. In Rose this Court cited Edmond on this point:
Petitioners argue that the Indianapolis checkpoint program is justified by its lawful secondary purposes of keeping impaired motorists off the road and verifying licenses and registrations. If this were the case, however, law enforcement authorities would *502 be able to establish checkpoints for virtually any purpose so long as they also included a license or sobriety check. For this reason, we examine the available evidence to determine the primary purpose of the checkpoint program.
Edmond,
In Edmond, the Supreme Court noted that there was no question as to whether the actual purpose of the checkpoint was the same as its stated purpose; thus, it focused its inquiry on the constitutionality of that purpose. In Rose, however, this Court was forced to closely examine the facts surrounding the checkpoint’s purpose because its alleged purpose — to check licenses and registrations, which the Supreme Court has held to be constitutional — was belied by substantial evidence to the contrary showing the checkpoint’s actual purpose was almost certainly to check for narcotics, which the Supreme Court has expressly held to be unconstitutional. This, then, is why this Court held in Rose that the trial court was required to make findings of fact as to the checkpoint’s purpose: Not because every trial court in every case must make such findings of fact, but because in this specific case, bare statements that the checkpoint had a constitutional purpose were unreliable.
The trial court, as mentioned above, relied heavily on Rose. It stated in Conclusion of Law 3 that our opinion in Rose “stated that trial courts are required to make findings of fact regarding the ‘primary programmatic purpose’ of a checkpoint based on the decision in Indianapolis v. Edmond].]” The court then stated in Conclusions of Law 7 and 8 that no proper documentation as to the programmatic purpose was presented. This dearth of evidence as to the checkpoint’s programmatic purpose, the court stated in Conclusions of Law 9 and 11, meant it could not evaluate whether the checkpoint was “sufficiently tailored” to permit a suspicionless stop. Therefore, the court held, the evidence must be suppressed.
This holding misconstrues the principles of Rose and Edmond. Both cases hold that only certain purposes for checkpoints are constitutionally allowed, and where the stated purpose is at odds with the evidence brought forth, the trial court must inquire as to the actual purpose. The trial court’s order in this case, however, misapplies these principles. Neither Rose nor Edmond mandates that every trial court make extensive inquiries into the purpose behind every checkpoint. No evidence was brought forward in the case at hand *503 to suggest that the stated purpose of the checkpoint (sobriety), which has been affirmatively declared constitutional by both this Court and the Supreme Court, was a mask for another, unconstitutional purpose. As such, the trial court was in error in holding that the lack of such evidence required it to exclude the evidence obtained by the stop.
From the available evidence, it is clear to this Court that the actual purpose of the checkpoint was the same as its stated purpose: To check for sobriety. Because such a purpose has been expressly held constitutional, and because the trial court misconstrued our holding in Rose, we reverse the trial court’s order.
However, the constitutional inquiry into the checkpoint does not end here. As the trial court’s final three conclusions of law correctly note, after a checkpoint has been found constitutional, the next inquiry must be whether the checkpoint was conducted in a constitutional manner — that is, whether the individual stop at issue was itself constitutional.
See Rose,
Because the trial court’s order misapplies Rose, we reverse its order excluding the evidence of the stop but remand the case for further findings of fact as to the constitutionality of the individual stop of defendant.
Reversed and remanded.
