Dеfendant Lewis Edward Jacobs, III, who pled guilty to several drug-related offenses, appeals from the trial court’s denial of his motion to suppress evidence obtained in a search of his car and his person. Although defendant acknowledges that he consented to the search of his car and does not dispute that the officer had probable cause to search his person as a result of evidence obtained in the car search, defendant contends that the officer lacked reasonable suspicion to stop defendant’s car and detain defendant for five minutes of questioning. Based on the totality of the сircumstances, we disagree and affirm the trial court’s order.
Only the State offered evidence at the hearing on defendant’s motion to suppress. That evidence tended to show the following. At approximately 1:43 a.m. on 8 November 2001, Officer Chris Smith of the Burlington Police Department observed a car with a Tennessee license plate continuously weaving back and forth in its lane over a distance of three-quarters of a mile. There were several bars in the area where the officer spotted the car. Officer-Smith checked the tags and learned that the vehicle was registered to Gary McCray of Johnson City, Tennessee. That fact caused Officer Smith concern for two reasons. First, the FBI and the Johnson City Police Department had notified the Burlington Police Department that a suspect in a Johnson City murder was now in Burlington. Second, Officer Smith had been advised by vice officers that a substantial amount of drug-trafficking occurred between Burlington and Johnson City. A week earlier, he had stopped another car with Johnson City tags and arrested the driver for possession of marijuana.
Officer Smith stopped defendant’s car and called for back-up. He ordered defendant out of the car and conducted a pat-down search to ensure defendant was not armed. Defendant appeared to be the same age as the murder suspect. Officer Smith then asked defendant for his driver’s license, which listed defendant’s address as Durham, North Carolina. Officer Smith asked defendant who owned the car and defendant replied that it belonged to his brother, Gary McCray of Durham. Officer Smith then asked why the сar was registered in Johnson City and why defendant and his brother had different last names. Defendant could not give the officer an explanation for their different names and Officer Smith was never able to confirm that defendant and McCray were in fact brothers.
Officer Smith explained to defendant why he had stopped him and asked whether he knew the murder suspect. When defendant denied any knowledge of the man, Officer Smith asked defendant why he was in Burlington at that hour when he lived in Durham. Defendant claimed he was going to see a woman named Monica who lived on Maple Avenue near a particular apartment complex. He did not know her last name.
Officer Smith testified that during the questioning defendant “appeared to be nervous to me. . . . his hands wasn’t [sic] shaking or his body wasn’t shaking, but he just was kind of... antsy, just kind of moving around.” Officer Smith asked defendant whether he had been arrested for or convicted of any charges and then checked for active warrants. After determining that there were no outstanding warrants against defendant, Officer Smith explained to defendant that he had information regarding the transport of drugs between Johnson City and Burlington and asked if defendant had any illegal drugs in his car. When defendant said that he did not, Officer Smith asked defendant for consent to search his car.
Defendant consented to the sеarch and told Officer Smith that he had a large amount of money in the car, which defendant claimed was from the sale of a motorcycle. Officer Smith recovered a bundle of bills in a rubber band. Officer Smith noticed an odor of marijuana in the car and found loose tobacco. Based on his training and experience, Officer Smith believed the tobacco came from hollowed-out cigars used to smoke marijuana. When Officer Smith asked defendant about the tobacco and the smell of marijuana, defendant told him that someone had smoked marijuana in the car earlier in the day.
Officer Smith then conducted a search оf defendant’s person because, Officer Smith
When Officer Smith asked defendant to identify the object in his crotch area, defendant claimed it was a bag of Viagra that he had received as partial payment for the motorcycle. Officer Smith retrieved the plastic bag, which contained pink pills, and located a second bag, also in defendant’s crotch area, containing blue pills. Defendant claimed the blue pills were Viagra as well. All the pills were stamped; from his training, Office Smith recognized that the stamping likely indicated that the pills were methylenedioxymetham-phetamine (MDMA), also known as Ecstasy. The officer also found a third bag containing marijuana. He then arrested defendant for possession of marijuana and MDMA.
Defendant was charged with two counts of trafficking in a controlled substance by possession of MDMA; one count of possession of MDMA with intent to manufacture, sell and/or deliver a controlled substance; misdemeanor possession of marijuana; maintenance of a car for the use, storage and/or sale of a controlled substance; and attaining the status of habitual felon. Defendant moved to suppress the evidence gathered during the search of the car and his person on the grounds that the search violated his rights under the federal аnd state constitutions and under the General Statutes. Following the trial court’s denial of defendant’s motion, defendant pled guilty to all the charges, including attaining the status of habitual felon, but reserved his right to appeal the trial court’s order on his motion to suppress. The trial court sentenced defendant to 80 to 105 months in prison.
Review of a trial court’s denial of a motion to suppress is strictly limited tó a determination whether the trial court’s findings of fact are supported by competent evidence and whether those findings support the trial court’s ultimate conclusion of law.
State v. Thompson,
I
Defendant first challenges Officer Smith’s stop of his car. Before a police officer may stop a vehicle and detain its occupants without a warrant, the officer must have a reasonable suspicion that criminal activity may be occurring.
State v. McArn,
The trial court found thаt the stop occurred at 1:43 a.m. and that defendant’s vehicle was “slowly weaving within its lane of travel touching the designated lane markers on each side” prior to the stop. Based on
In
State v. Watson,
II
Defendant next argues that the search of his car was unlawful despite his consent because the length of the investigatory detention was unreasonable. Defendant contends the detention should have ended when Officer Smith completed the pаt-down search and determined there were no outstanding warrants against defendant.
Our Supreme Court has held that once an officer has lawfully stopped a person, the officer may further detain the person only if he has “reasonable suspicion, based on specific and articulable facts, that criminal activity is afoot.”
State v. McClendon,
After reviewing the evidence and the trial court’s findings, we conclude that several factors gave rise tо reasonable suspicion that justified the brief further detention. First, prior to the stop, Officer Smith was suspicious that defendant might be impaired, that defendant might be a murder suspect or have knowledge of the murder suspect, and that defendant could be involved in drug trafficking. Prior to his request for permission to search defendant’s cаr, Officer Smith spent three to five minutes asking defendant questions specifically focused on alleviating those concerns, as he was permitted to do. Id.
Defendant’s responses to Officer Smith’s questions did not fully resolve the officer’s suspicions. As a result of his questions, Officer Smith learned that defendant was not the owner of the cаr, but Officer Smith could not confirm that defendant was authorized to drive the car because he could not verify that the registered owner was, in fact, defendant’s brother. Further, Officer Smith could not resolve why defendant was driving a Johnson City, Tennessee car in the early hours of the morning in Burlington. Defendant could not even provide the lаst name or a precise address for the woman he said he was visiting at 1:43 a.m. Finally, as the trial court found, Officer Smith observed that, during this brief questioning, defendant was “acting very nervous.”
Other courts have found such circumstances sufficient to support a reasonable further detention.
See McClendon,
Defendant argues, however, that his nervousness was “the officer’s primary stated reason [at trial] for continuing investigative detеntion” and that nervousness is “not sufficient to justify further investigative detention[.]” Although defendant points to
State v. Pearson,
[W]e did not mean to imply [in Pearson] that nervousness can never be significant in determining whether an officer could form a reasonable suspicion thаt criminal activity is afoot. Nervousness, like all other facts, must be taken in light of the totality of the circumstances. It is true that many people do become nervous when stopped by an officer of the law. Nevertheless, nervousness is an appropriate factor to consider when determining whether a basis fоr a reasonable suspicion exists.
McClendon,
Even if further detention was justified, we must “examine whether the duration of that detention was reasonable.”
Id.
at 639,
Defendant argues alternatively that the State failed to establish that Officer Smith had sufficient reasonable suspicion to request defendant’s consent for the search. No such showing is required. As this Court stated in
State v. Sanchez,
Since the search of defendant’s car was admittedly consensual and was not tainted by an unlawful detention and since defendant has made no showing that the consent was involuntary, we hold that the search of defendant’s car was lawful. Defendant does not further challenge the search of his person. We therefore hold that the trial court did not err in denying defendant’s motion to suppress.
Affirmed.
