The State appeals an order of the District Court (South Paris, MacNichol, J.) suppressing evidence of defendant Mark E. Hill’s operating a vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquors. 29 M.R.S.A. § 1312-B (1978 & Pamph.1991). We vacate the suppression order.
Mark E. Hill was charged in District Court with OUI. Hill filed a motion to suppress and the court held a hearing. Officer Geoffrey Low of the Norway Police Department, the sole witness at the hearing, testified that he was on duty in Norway around 1:40 a.m. on April 20, 1991, when he observed a pickup truck drive by with no rear bumper and no discernible rear license plate. Officer Low pulled into traffic intending to stop the truck for failing to display a rear plate in violation of 29 M.R.S.A. § 381 (1978 & Pamph.1991) (“a registration plate shall be attached to the rear of each vehicle”), but before he could do so the driver pulled the truck into a rest area. Officer Low pulled in behind the truck, put on his blue lights, and walked up to the truck to ask the driver for his license and registration. Just before reaching the cab of the truck, Officer Low noticed an *795 unilluminated license plate in the rear window of the cab. Nonetheless, Officer Low asked the driver for his license and registration. Officer Low’s observation of the driver, who turned out to be Hill, producing his license and registration led to his arrest for operating under the influence.
At the conclusion of the hearing, the court granted Hill’s motion to suppress Officer Low’s testimony because the basis for his reasonable suspicion had dissipated before he requested Hill’s license and registration. The State’s appeal followed.
In determining the reasonableness of Officer Low’s investigatory
Terry
stop, “the court must first consider whether the officer’s action was justified at its inception; and, second, whether the action taken was reasonably related in scope to the circumstances which justified the interference in the first place.”
Terry v. Ohio,
The
Terry
requirement of specific and articulable facts protects a defendant from the intrusion of random police stops.
See Delaware v. Prouse,
Hill argues, however, that the request for his license and registration is invalid under
Garland,
because Officer Low’s reason justifying the initial stop dissipated on seeing the license plate in the rear window of the truck. Hill’s reliance on
Garland
is misplaced. In
Garland
we acknowledged an affirmative duty on the part of a police officer “to discontinue the investigation and forego a
Terry-type
stop of [an] individual when
by the time of the intended stop
justification for the initial suspicion has evaporated.”
Garland,
This reasonableness determination involves a “weighing of the gravity of the public concerns served by the seizure, the degree to which the seizure advances the public interest, and the severity of the interference with individual liberty.”
Brown v. Texas,
The entry is:
Remanded to the District Court for entry of an order denying the motion to suppress.
