OPINION
STATEMENT OF THE CASE
The State appeals the trial court's order granting the motion of Jessi L. Campbell to suppress evidence obtained when officers stopped her vehicle in order to inves
We reverse and remand.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In the early morning hours of August 23, 2008, Deputy Marshall Mike Clark of the Galveston Police Department received a call from dispatch regarding a fight at Dusty's Tavern. 1 Deputy Marshall Clark arrived at the tavern and questioned two men and a woman in the tavern parking lot. The men denied any knowledge of the event, but the woman stated that the fight had been between a married couple and that the wife's name was Jessi. She further reported that the couple lived in Peru, that the husband had "drugged [sic] the wife into the vehicle[,}" and that they had left in a white Chevrolet Tahoe, turning first onto Syeamore Street then eastbound onto State Road 18 toward Highway 31. Transcript at 8. Deputy Marshall Clark advised dispatch of the report and the direction the Tahoe had been heading. Then he proceeded eastbound on State Road 18 to try to locate the vehicle.
Deputy Joe Nies and two other deputies with the Cass County Sheriffs Department responded by radio to Deputy Marshall Clark's report and stated that they were headed in the direction that the female witness had reported the Tahoe to have been traveling. Driving separate vehicles, the sheriffs deputies turned eastbound on [State Road] 218 "to see if [they] could cut the vehicle off at [the intersection of U.S. Highway] 31 and 218." Id. at 14. But the officers did not see the Tahoe before arriving at Highway 31. At the request of Sergeant Zeider, Deputy Nies turned back and headed westbound on 218 in an attempt to locate the Tahoe in case it had turned off onto a county road. Just after Deputy Nies crossed over into Cass County on 218, he observed an eastbound white Tahoe matching the description that Deputy Marshal Clark had given. He then turned around, followed the Tahoe, and advised Sergeant Zeider and Deputy Wells that he had located the vehicle 2
Deputy Nies waited for Sergeant Zeider and Deputy Wells to arrive before the three initiated a traffic stop together just across the Cass County border in Miami County on 218. With his headlights shining on the Tahoe in front of him, Deputy Nies saw two people in the Tahoe at the time of the stop, and he saw no other white Tahoes on the road. Sergeant Zeider approached the Tahoe on foot and spoke with Campbell, who had been driving, and her husband, who was bloody, in the passenger seat. Deputy Nies testified that the officers then learned from the occupants of the Tahoe that the husband had been in a fight at the tavern. Sergeant Zeider smelled alcohol, "proceeded to do what he is trained to do at that point in time[,]" and arrested Campbell for operating 3 while in-Transeript at 29.
DISCUSSION AND DECISION
The State contends that the trial court erred when it determined that the evidence obtained as a result of the stop of Campbell's vehicle must be suppressed. Generally, we review a trial court's decision to grant a motion to suppress as a matter of sufficiency. State v. Lucas,
The trial court granted Campbell's motion to suppress after finding that the officers lacked reasonable suspicion to stop Campbell's vehicle. In Terry v. Ohio,
In this case, Deputy Marshall Clark received a report from dispatch that a husband had dragged his wife into a white Tahoe at Dusty's Tavern. Such conduct fits the definition of criminal confinement.
4
See Ind.Code § 35-42-3-3(a)(2) (person
Deputy Clark reported the results of his investigation to dispatch. Assuming the couple would be driving to their home in Peru, three Cass County sheriff's deputies who heard the report traveled to the area near the intersection of State Road 218 and Highway 31 in an attempt to intercept the Tahoe. When Deputy Nies spotted the Tahoe traveling eastbound on 218, he turned around to follow it. Subsequently he and the other two sheriff's deputies, who were then traveling westbound toward the Tahoe, initiated a traffic stop. The purpose of finding and stopping the Tahoe was to investigate the welfare of the wife who had reportedly been dragged into the vehicle. Under the totality of cireum-stances, we conclude that Sergeant Zeider had reasonable suspicion to stop the Tahoe to investigate whether the offense of criminal confinement had been committed.
Campbell argues that the law enforcement officers did not have reasonable suspicion to stop Campbell's Tahoe because they observed no traffic violations to warrant the stop and because Deputy Marshall Clark did not adequately investigate the scene of the alleged criminal confinement. We address each contention in turn.
First, a traffic violation is not a condition precedent to a stop otherwise supported by the facts,. See Bannister v. State, No. 03804-0904-CR-166,
Similarly, Campbell's other two arguments assert that Deputy Marshall Clark did not adequately investigate the report that a man had forced his wife into a white Tahoe at the parking lot of Dusty's Tavern. To the contrary, Deputy Marshall Clark investigated the report by driving to the tavern and speaking with three people in the parking lot, one of whom witnessed the possible crime and provided the deputy with specific details of what she had observed. And Deputy Marshall Clark testified at the suppression hearing that the couple drove the Tahoe on one of the routes that led from the tavern to Peru.
Campbell also argues that Deputy Marshall Clark should have verified the reliability of the report from the woman in the parking lot and that he should have
Finally, Campbell asserts that the officers lacked reasonable suspicion to stop the Tahoe because there was "no evidence linking the initial dragging incident to the reported fight" in which Campbell's husband had participated in the tavern. But, again, we have already concluded that the officers had reasonable suspicion to stop the vehicle based on the report of a possible criminal confinement, the description given by the tavern witness, and the location and heading of the Tahoe when located by the Cass County officers. As such, the law enforcement officers were not required to link the report of a possible criminal confinement to a fight at the bar or to any other offense in order to establish reasonable suspicion to stop the Tahoe.
In sum, the trial court erred when it found that the law enforeement officers did not have reasonable suspicion to initiate a stop. A witness told Deputy Marshall Clark that she had seen a husband drag his wife, named Jessi, into a white Tahoe. The witness also said that the couple lived in Peru and that they drove the Tahoe in that general direction. Officers from Cass County Sheriff's Department then intercepted the Tahoe on one of the routes from the tavern to Peru. The witness's accurate prediction of the Tahoe's likely location and direction of travel lent eredi-bility to her information. Thus, we conclude that the officers had reasonable suspicion to stop Campbell's vehicle. As such, the trial court erred when it granted Campbell's motion to suppress evidence obtained as a result of the stop.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. At the suppression hearing, the trial court took judicial notice of where Dusty's Tavern is located, but Deputy Clark did not testify on that issue. We assume the tavern is located in Galveston because Deputy Marshall Clark is a Galveston law enforcement officer and because Campbell cites Deputy Marshall Clark's testimony in her brief to support the statement that Dusty's Tavern is located in Galveston.
. Neither the parties nor the transcript provide full names or law enforcement affiliations for Sergeant Zeider or Deputy Wells.
. Neither the parties nor the transcript of the suppression hearing provide details regarding
. Campbell argues, without explanation, that the conduct described by the woman in the parking lot is not, "in and of itself," a crime and that there was no report of violence, threatened violence, or that the wife was locked in the vehicle or was prevented from leaving the vehicle. But, as noted above, the act of forcibly moving a person from one place to another may constitute criminal confinement. Thus, Campbell's contention must fail.
. Campbell's argument here is phrased in terms of probable cause. But the trial court's decision was based on a finding that the officers did not have reasonable suspicion. Thus, we review the trial court's decision under the lower reasonable suspicion standard. See Membres v. State,
