OPINION '
Statement of the Case
Thе State appeals from an order granting a motion to suppress evidence seized after James .R. Glass was stopped by an officer responding to a dispatcher's call. The State contends that the officer was justified in relying upon information provided by the dispatcher to mаke the stop. Because the telephone call from an unnamed person did not in itself contain sufficient indicia of reliability, and because the police officer did not independently confirm the reliability of the caller or the salient information provided, we affirm.
Facts and Procedural History
At apprоximately 1:80 p.m. on January 1, 2000, Connersville Police Officer Dana Fluery received a dispatch advising him of a "suspicious vehicle for reckless driving." Tr. p. 9. Accordingly to Fluery, dispatch knew the identity of the caller and "gave a description of the vehicle to be on the lookout for." Tr. p. 183. Officеr Fluery found Glass driving the described vehicle in the 900 block of Eastern Avenue in Connersville. The officer followed Glass for approximately one block, but witnessed no traffic violations or inappropriate driving. Nevertheless, Officer Fluery activated his emergency lights. Class stopped in the roadway, then followed Fluery's direction and drove into a nearby lot.
Officer Fluery approached Glass and requested his driver's license and vehicle registration. Glass produced a recently expired driver's license. Fluery obsérved that Glass was shaking and his eyes were bloodshot. At Officer Fluery's request, Glass exited his vehicle. After pulling himself out, Glass leaned against the vehicle, still shaking. He volunteered that he had a handgun in the vehicle and produced his permit. Officer Fluery asked if Glass had other weapons, and Glass responded in the negative.
When Fluery performed a pat down search, hе felt a hard rectangular-shaped object in the front groin area of Glass's trousers. The officer "presumed it could have been, anything, it could have been a weapon or a knife." Tr. p. 12. Glass did not respond to questioning about the object, and he appeared more nervous to the officer. Through the top of Glass's trousers, Fluery "felt and [saw] a wooden box type object."! Tr. p. 12. Fluery removed the box containing a green leafy substance *641 Glass agreed to and a smoking device: submit to a chemical test, and he was transported to the Fayette Memorial Hosрital for a drug screen. Test results were positive for THC. Subsequent testing of the green leafy substance revealed the presence of marijuana or hashish.
The State charged Glass with possession of marijuana as a Class A misdemeanor, 1 reckless possession of paraphernaliа as a Class A misdemeanor, 2 and operating a vehicle with a controlled substance or metabolite in his body as a Class C misdemeanor. 3 Glass moved to suppress all evidence, arguing that the detention and search occurred without reasonable suspi-clon. At the hearing on the motiоn, Officer Fluery testified he neither knew nor had worked with the person initiating the report. The caller did not testify and remains unidentified, Following the hearing, the trial court entered findings with its order granting Class's motion to suppress.
The State filed two motions to reconsider, both of which were denied. Upon the Statе's motion, the trial court dismissed the case. This appeal followed. 4
Discussion and Decision
The State challenges the order granting Glass's motion to suppress. In the suppression hearing, the State had the burden of demonstrating the constitutionality of the measures it used to secure evidence. State v. Ashley,
At issue in this case is an investigatory stop. The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution prohibits "unreasonable searches and seizures" by the Government, аnd its safeguards extend to brief investigatory stops of persons or vehicles that fall short of traditional arrest. United States v. Arvizu,
Cases recognize that reasonable suspicion is a "somewhat abstract" concept, not readily reduced to "a neat set of legal rules." Arvigy,
Here, the trial court granted the motion to suрpress based upon our decision in Washington v. State, 740 NE.2d 1241 (Ind.Ct.App.2000), trans. denied. In Washington, an anonymous informant reported a possible drunk driver to the Lafayette State Police Post. The informant, whose identity and reliability were unknown, advised that the driver was in a black and white Cadillac with a particulаr license plate number traveling southbound on Interstate 65. An off-duty police officer received the call and stationed himself at the roadside. When the Cadillac passed, the officer followed the car for approximately one-half mile and verified the license number. Without observing any evidence of drunken or erratic driving, the officer stopped the Cadillac. In concluding that the officer did not have reasonable suspicion to stop the car, we held:
[Aln anonymous telephone tip, absent any independent indicia of reliability or any officer-observed confirmation of the caller's prediction of the defendant's future behavior, is not enough to permit police to detain a citizen and subject him or her to a Terry stop and the attendant interruption of liberty required to accomplish it.
Id. at 1246 (ending footnote deleted).
The State disputes the relevance оf Washington, and argues instead that State v. Eichholtz governs this case.
Our court recognized that, unlike the anonymous informant in Washington, Thatch identified himself to the 911 opera *643 tor in such a manner that he could have been held legally responsible if he had filed a false police report. Id. at 167. We also pointed out that the pоlice officer was able to confirm specific information about both cars and their location. Id. Thus, we held that the officer had reasonable suspicion to conduct the stop without having personally confirmed the erratic driving. Id. at 168.
The reasonable suspicion inquiry is determined оn a case-by-case basis. Francis,
In contrast to Washington, the dispatcher here knew the identity of the caller." Although we cannot discern if Offiсer Fluery also knew the caller's identity, an investigative stop may be based upon the collective information known to the law enforcement organization as a whole. See Kindred v. State,
Generally, informatiоn gleaned from a telephone caller differs from that obtained in a face-to-face encounter. In the latter situation, a trained officer has the opportunity to assess credibility and motive by observing facial expressions and subtle body language. See, eg., Bogetti v. State,
In Eichholtz, the police officer visually confirmed that the caller was following the alleged offender and, thus, could reasonably have observed errant driving patterns. No such confirmation cccurred in this case. The fact that a named caller with an untested reputation called the police does not in itself establish reasonable suspicion. 6
We next review the content and reliability of the information offered by the caller. The transcript shows that Officer Fluery was not permitted to recount the dispatcher's exact words. He merely testified that the dispatcher "gave a description of the vehicle" allegedly driving recklessly, which at some point he "found." Tr. p. 183. *644 Without more, we cannot determine whether Fluery identified Glass's vehicle based upon the color and make of the car, its age, its Hcense plate, its location or direction of travel, a description of the occupant, or a combination of those factors. Nor can we determine the elapse of time between the dispatch and Fluery's identification of the vehicle.
Although the police may have possessed more information, we must base our decision on the record before us. The State merely showed that the caller described а car sufficiently to permit Officer Fluery to identify a similar vehicle. The officer followed the vehicle for about one block without observing any driving irregularities. Officer Fluery did not personally observe facts to verify the reliability of the caller or the reliability of any significant information provided by the caller. 7 To the extent that the caller predicted future conduct, it did not occur.
Reasonable suspicion requires more than conjecture. On the record created, the State has not demonstrated that Officer. Fluery had an objective and articulable suspicion that Glass had committed, was committing, or was about to commit legal wrongdoing. The investigative stop violated Glass's Fourth Amendment rights. The trial court's decision to suppress evidence seized was not contrary to law.
By our decision today, we do not intend to discourage citizens from reporting incidеnts involving driving irregularities. With the advent of cell phones, drivers quickly can call police to initiate timely investigation and possible prevention of death or injury. The responding state action, however, must comply with the dictates of the Fourth Amendment.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. Ind.Code § 35-48-4-11(1).
. Ind.Code § 35-48-4-8.3(c).
. Ind.Code § 9-30-5-1(b) (recodified at 9-30-5-1(c)).
. The State appeals under Indiana Codе § 35-38-4-2(5), which authorizes the State to appeal the trial court's suppression of evidence where the suppression effectively precludes further prosecution. State v. Morris,
. The State asserts that, because it is appealing from a negative judgment, this court considers only the еvidence most favorable to the judgment. We recognize that nearly identical language is found in a number of our cases. See State v. Estep,
. In drawing this conclusion we are cognizant of our supreme court's statement: 'Where police officers in the street act in good faith reliance on a dispatch from their own or anоther police agency that a crime has been committed, there is no need to show the source of the dispatcher's information or the reliability of the dispatcher's informant." Moody v. State,
. The State directs us to Glass's statement that he had passed a car that then followed him into Connersville According to the State, Glass's testimony shows the information provided by the caller was based upon personal observation. Our concern today, however, is not with Glass's knowledge at the time of the stop but, rather, with Officer Fluery's knowledge. Francis, 764 NE.2d at 644. Fluery did not mention having seen the caller's vehicle.
