OPINION
In a pretrial appeal, the state challenges a district court order quashing an arrest and suppressing evidence obtained after a state trooper stopped a vehicle for a seatbelt violation. Under Minnesota law the observed seatbelt violation did not provide a constitutionally reasonable basis for the stop, and we аffirm.
FACTS
Nathan Fiebke was stopped by a state trooper when the trooper observed that Fiebke and his front-seat passenger were not wearing their seatbelts. The trooper asked for Fiebke’s driver’s license and ran a check of the license number. The cheek revealed that Fiebke’s license had been suspended for nonpayment of а Florida traffic fine. The trooper issued Fiebke a citation for driving after suspension. Fiebke was not cited for driving without a seatbelt.
In a pretrial ruling, the district court held that the state trooper improperly detained Fiebke, and the court quashed the arrest and suppressed evidence that Fiebke’s license had been suspended. The state appealed.
ISSUE
Did the driver and front-seat passenger’s failure to wear their seatbelts provide a reasonable basis for the stop?
ANALYSIS
To prevail in a pretrial appeal frоm an order suppressing evidence, the state must show both that the district court’s ruling is erroneous and that the ruling will have a critical impact on the outcome of the criminal prosеcution.
State v. Webber,
When a police officer stops a vehicle, it constitutes a “seizure” within the meaning of thе Fourth Amendment.
Delaware v. Prouse,
The Minnesota seatbelt law rеquires that the driver and front-seat passenger in a motor vehicle wear seatbelts. Minn.Stat. § 169.686, subd. l(l)-(2) (1994). “Unless otherwise declared * * * with respect to particular offenses, it is a petty misdemeanor for any person to do any act forbidden or fail to perform any act required by [the traffic regulations].” Minn.Stat. § 169.89, subd. 1 (1994) (emphasis added). The seatbelt law includes a declaration restricting when a violator may receive a citation: “A peace officer may not issue a citation for a violation of [subdivision 1] unless the officer lawfully stopped or detained the driver of the motor vehicle for a moving violation оther than a violation involving motor vehicle equipment.” Minn.Stat. § 169.686, subd. 1 (1994).
The seatbelt law’s restrictive enforcement provision eliminates the primary reason for an officer to stoр a motorist when observing a violation: to
enforce
the traffic laws. “ ‘[T]he foremost method of enforcing traffic and vehicle safety regulations * * * is acting upon observed violations,’ which afford the ‘ “quantum of individualized suspicion” ’ necessary to ensure that police discretion is sufficiently constrained.”
Whren,
— U.S. at -,
The definition of an offense is within the province of the legislаture.
State v. Olmscheid,
Thе analysis of constitutional reasonableness also takes into account an officer’s attendant circumstances when stopping an individual for a suspected violation.
See generally Cripps,
Fiebke’s seatbelt violation did not accompany an offense that made the violation enforceable. And the violatiоn by itself did not reasonably give rise to a suspicion of illegal activity. The stop of Fiebke’s ear had no law enforcement purpose other than one dependent on thе whim or hope of finding evidence of a nonseatbelt violation. Thus, the stop was unreasonable under the circumstances and violated Fiebke’s Fourth Amendment rights.
2
Other jurisdictions
*758
with similar enforcemеnt restrictions on seatbelt offenses have reached consistent decisions.
See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Henderson,
Our interpretation of the seatbelt law is not at odds with apparent legislativе intent. A review of the legislative history of Minn. Stat. § 169.686 demonstrates that the legislature specifically conditioned the seatbelt offense so a traffic stop could not be justified solely on the basis of failing to wear a seat-belt. Representative McEachern, the co-author of the amendment restricting seatbelt enforcement to moving violations, described the amendments’s effect: “What it really says is that you won’t be stopped on roadways if you’re not wearing your seatbelt by a police officer.” House Floor Debate on S.F. No. 121 (May 8, 1987) (statement of Rep. MсEachern). Representative Vellenga, the sponsor of the bill to which the amendment was attached, concurred that “under the McEachern amendment [police offiсers] could not stop you unless you [also] committed a traffic offense.” Id. (statement of Rep. Vellenga). She accepted the amendment to dispel concerns “that the police officers who do stop people for not wearing their seat-belts] will be told that they are harassing drivers” if permitted to stop vehicles for violations of the stаtute. Id. And Representative Dempsey observed that the amendment prevented the seatbelt law from being used “as a pretext for a stop when you really have another рurpose in mind * * *. The reason to make the first stop has to be something other than the seatbelt.” Id. (statement of Rep. Dempsey).
DECISION
The stop of the vehicle, based solely on observation of a seatbelt violаtion, was unreasonable under the circumstances, and evidence of the drivers license violation was properly suppressed.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The Minnesota Constitution provides the samе protection. Minn. Const, art. I, § 10. And the Minnesota Supreme Court has generally interpreted the protections offered under the state Constitution to be the same as those under the federal Constitution with minor exceptions not applicable to this case.
See In re Welfare of E.D.J.,
. If the justification offered for the stop were an opportunity to warn motorists about the hazards оf travelling without a seatbelt rather than the enforcement of a traffic regulation, then the constitutionality of the stop might require a balancing analysis.
See Whren,
- U.S. at -,
