Appellee was indicted for carrying a concealed weapon and carrying a weapon without a license. Appellee filed a motion to suppress the weapon, which had been found in a warrantless search of his vehicle. At the hearing on this motion, the following evidence was adduced: A known confidential informant told officers that appellee was sitting in a blue Oldsmobile 98 at a certain address and that he was selling cocaine. Acting on this information, the officers went to the address and discovered appellee sitting in a blue Oldsmobile 98. The officers approached the vehicle and asked appellee to step out. In a search of appellee’s person, nothing was discovered. Although no drugs were found in a search of the passenger compartment of the vehicle, a handgun was. On this evidence the trial court found that the officers had a sufficient articulable suspicion to authorize an investigatory detention of appellee, but lacked probable cause to search appellee’s vehicle. The trial court accordingly granted appellee’s motion to suppress the handgun and the State appeals from that order.
1. The evidence authorized the trial court’s finding that the officers lacked probable cause to believe that appellee’s vehicle contained drugs and the trial court’s conclusion that the officers were, therefore, unauthorized to conduct a warrantless search for those drugs. See
Polke v. State,
2. However, the evidence also authorized the trial court’s finding that the officers had a sufficient articulable suspicion to authorize an investigatory detention of appellee. See
Rucker v. State,
supra at 855;
Anthony v. State,
3. Although the trial court found that the officers had a sufficient articulable suspicion to authorize an investigative detention of appellee, it did not purport to address whether the search of appellee’s vehicle was authorized as an incident of that detention. It has long been recognized, however, that an officer with an articulable suspicion sufficient to authorize an investigative detention of a suspect is not constitutionally required to place himself in jeopardy and may, under certain circumstances, conduct a preliminary search for weapons.
Terry v. Ohio,
4. The articulable suspicion which the trial court found to exist in the instant case related to appellee’s suspected drug activity. “It is not unreasonable for officers to anticipate that those who are suspected of involvement in the drug trade might be armed. [Cit.]”
Condon v. State,
5.
Rucker u. State,
supra at 856 is not precedent for a contrary holding in the instant case. In
Rucker,
the issue of whether the search of the vehicle could be upheld as an authorized weapons search incident to the investigatory stop for suspected drug activity was not addressed. “ ‘Questions which merely lurk in the record, neither brought to the attention of the court nor ruled upon, are not to be considered as having been so decided as to constitute precedents.’ [Cits.]”
Albany Fed. S. & L. Assn. v. Henderson,
