¶ 1. March 5, 2008. Defendant appeals the trial court’s denial of his motion to suppress the fruits of the stop which led to his arrest for driving with license suspended (DLS) and a third offense of driving under the influence of alcohol (DUI third). Defendant contends that he was stopped by the police officer without reasonable suspicion of criminal wrongdoing and without circumstances justifying a stop for public safety, or “community caretaking,” purposes. The stop occurred when an officer of the Stowe Police Department noticed defendant’s vehicle parked just off the southbound side of Route 100 at 11:30 p.m. Defendant’s automobile was half on the pavement, although past the right fog line, and half off the road. The car was parked before a slight curve and a slight narrowing of the road by guardrails, and hampered the visibility of other vehicles traveling south. Defendant was parked so close to the fog line that a person speaking to the driver through the driver’s-side window would have to stand in the traveled portion of the road. The car’s engine was turned off, but its headlights were on and the right directional light was flashing.
¶ 2. Thinking the car was disabled, the officer pulled in behind defendant’s vehicle, switching on his blue lights for safety. He approached defendant and asked if he was all right, and why he was pulled over. Defendant responded that he had stopped to let other cars go by, as the oncoming “lights were too bright.” The officer asked defendant to produce his license, registration and insurance card. After more than two minutes of fumbling around for these items, defendant admitted that he had no license and that he had lost it. Upon radioing his department, the officer learned that defendant’s license was suspended. While arresting defendant for DLS, the officer made observations that
¶ 3. Defendant moved to suppress the evidence supporting his subsequent citations for DLS and DUI third based on the officer’s lack of suspicion of any violation at the time of the stop, and absent any apparent reason to think the driver needed assistance. The trial court denied, and refused to reconsider, defendant’s motion. This appeal followed. Given the State’s concession that activation of the blue lights by the officer constituted a stop, and that the officer lacked reasonable suspicion of illegal conduct, the sole question on appeal is whether this police intrusion was justified under the community-caretaking doctrine, which allows police intervention in response to apparent distress or risk to safety. Because defendant challenges only the trial court’s legal conclusions regarding the applicability of the community caretaking doctrine, our review is de novo.
State v. St. Martin,
¶ 4. The parameters of permissible “community caretaking” action by police are discussed in a line of cases beginning with
State v. Marcello,
¶ 5. We have applied the “specific and articulable facts” test in a number of subsequent eases, establishing examples of when a stop may, or may not, be justified under the community-earetaking doctrine. Such stops are proper when officers can particularly describe a “perceived emergency or [an] indication of imminent threat to specific individuals” before effecting the stop.
St. Martin,
¶ 6. Here, the officer articulated specific facts to justify the stop on grounds of community caretaking. As described by the officer and found by the trial court, defendant’s car was pulled over, barely off the travel lane of the highway, late at night, and near a curve preceding a narrowing of the road such that it presented a potential hazard to other motorists negotiating the curve in the dark. The location of defendant’s car was abnormal and unsafe. These facts were sufficient to lead
¶ 7. Defendant cites
State v. Burgess
for the proposition that a car merely out of place at night with its lights on does not amount to a reasonable indicator that the car is disabled, or that its operator is in distress.
¶8. Defendant also argues that the State must establish that community earetaking was not just a pretext for an otherwise unconstitutional intrusion by proving the officer’s subjective intent to provide emergency aid, and not to investigate crime. This Court has held that warrantless entry of a premises based on an officer’s claim of necessity for emergency aid must be supported by a subjective and primary motive to assist the victim. See
State v. Mountford,
Affirmed.
Notes
As indicated in
Mountford,
“[w]e prefer to view the emergency assistance exception as separate from the community caretaking exception, although both involve the police operating outside of a criminal law enforcement role.”
Although
Campbell
recited the observation in
Mountford
that community caretaking stops can be distinguished by police motivation to aid victims rather than investigate crime, the holding of the case depended entirely upon “specific and articulable facts” objectively justifying the officer’s reasonable belief that defendant needed assistance.
