[¶ 1.] As a condition of his release on parole, defendant signed a waiver allowing warrantless searches of his home and person by parole agents or law enforcement officers, whenever a reasonable suspicion arose that he was violating a condition of his parole. Sioux Falls police suspected defendant in a burglary that appeared to have been an “inside job.” Dеfendant had recently been fired from the burglarized business. Because the officers knew defendant had signed a waiver, they searched his home without a warrant. They found a methamphetamine pipe, and defendant was charged and convicted of possession of a controlled substance. In this appeal, defendant contends that the warrantless search was illegal, and even if his waiver allowed fоr this type of search, there was still no reasonable suspicion to justify it. We affirm.
Background
[¶2.] Defendant, Michael J. Kottman, signed a supervision agreement in 2000, allowing a
parole agent
to search his “person, property, place of residence, vehicle and personal effects” when
“reasonable cause
is ascertained.” (Emphasis added). Then in 2002, as a result of the United States Supreme Court decision in
United States v. Knights,
*117 [¶ 3.] On November 16, 2003, the security alarm went off at Empire Plastics, a Sioux Falls business. The alarm sounded at 2:52 p.m., and two Sioux Falls police officers arrived four minutes later. Officers Kurtis Daughters and Travis Olsen noticed a broken exterior window. They contacted the business owner, Doug Edwards, and foreman, Nick Swier, who assisted them in examining the premises. The owner, Edwards, identified the location of the motion sensors and indicated that only one had been activated. He also tоld the officers that nothing seemed out of place and that the only thing missing was “the metal cash box, which contained between $200 and $300, and which had been kept inside a back office closet.” Because the business had multiple motion sensors and only one was activated and also because the cash box was in the closet of an interior office, where there were no motion sensors, Edwards told the officers that the “intruder must have had knowledge of the layout of the building, and about where this cash box had been stored.”
[¶ 4.] Other officers joined Daughters and Olsen and assisted in the remainder of the search of Empire Plastics. After the search, Officer Daughters asked Edwards if he had any suspects in mind. Edwards responded that he had a good relationship with all his past and current employees except one, Michael Kottman. Edwards said that he had fired Kottman just five days earlier and that Kottman knew where the cash box was located because he had recently stocked the storage room. Thereafter, Daughters spoke with the foreman, Swier, who indicated that Kottman had worked for Empire Plastics for only two weeks. In addition, he “emphasized that [Kottman] had even said that he had a ‘methamphetamine problem’ and that he ‘was a user.’ ”
[¶ 5.] In response to this information, Daughters went to his squad car and performed a preliminary background check on Kottman. The check revealed that Kott-man was on parole and had previously been convicted of four burglaries and other theft crimes. When Daughters attempted to contact Kottman’s parole agent, he was unable to reach him and instead spoke with another pаrole agent, John Schultz. During this conversation, Daughters confirmed that Kottman was on parole for burglary and theft convictions and as a condition of parole he had signed a search and seizure waiver. Then Daughters obtained the address Kottman reported as his residence and informed Schultz that he planned to “go to Kottman’s residence and conduct a warrantless search of the premises and his vehicles.” Because Daughters was familiar with the waiver provision in the parole supervision agreements, he did not obtain a copy of Kottman’s agreement before conducting the search.
[¶ 6.] When the officers arrived at Kottman’s home, his girlfriend, Shannon Weiss, let them inside, and then she went downstairs to get Kottman, who was showering. Thereafter, the officers explained to Kottman that they suspected him of burglarizing Empirе Plastics and that they would be searching his home and vehicles. “Daughters began his search of the premises by going downstairs first to the basement section of [Kottman’s] split-level home, which had four floors.” He noticed that the shower had recently been used and that a pile of clothes were on the floor in the north-east bedroom. While in the bedroom, Daughters also noticed a “karate-type shirt” located аbout two feet *118 from the pile of clothes and it was “nicely rolled up.” When he picked up the shirt, a glass methamphetamine pipe containing “a white powdery residue” rolled out onto the carpet. Daughters concluded that the bathroom and bedroom he had just searched belonged to Kottman, who was upstairs waiting with Officer Mike Iverson.
[¶ 7.] During the officers’ search of the remainder of the home and аll the vehicles, they did not find any other drugs or paraphernalia. However, they found and seized several items as possible evidence connecting Kottman to the burglary. 2 Kottman was thereafter charged with possession of methamphetamine and he moved to suppress the evidence because the officers did not have a warrant and there were no “exigent circumstances necessitating thеir entrance and search of [Kottman’s] home.” Kottman also claimed that the officers did not have enough information to conclude with reasonable suspicion that Kottman burglarized Empire Plastics.
[¶ 8.] His motion was denied, and, after a jury trial, he was convicted of possession of a controlled substance. Kottman appeals, claiming (1) the warrantless search of his home was illegal because it violated his Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures, (2) the United States Supreme Court case,
U.S. v. Knights,
Standard of Review
[¶ 9.] “ ‘A motion to suppress for an alleged violation of a constitutiоnally protected right raises a question of law, requiring de novo review.’ ”
State v. Hess,
Analysis and Decision
[¶ 10.] Even though Kottman maintains that the officers needed a warrant to enter his home or that the entry without a warrant must have been supported by exigent circumstances, Kottman sacrificed substantial Fourth Amendment rights when he signed the supervision agreement as a condition of his parole. The constitutionality of these conditional waivers has previously been upheld by this Court.
See State v. Ashley,
[¶ 11.] Nevertheless, Kottman insists that the existence of this conditional waiver does not negate the officers’ violation of the stalking horse doctrine, which “prevents law enforcemеnt officers from unfairly exploiting search and seizure waivers in probation and parole agreements to skirt Fourth Amendment rights.” Kottman cites
Ashley,
where we adopted the stalking horse doctrine.
[¶ 12.] In response, the State asserts that “the United States Supreme Court’s analysis in
U.S. v. Knights
supersedes Ashley.” In
Knights,
the defendant signed a probationary agreement with waiver language almost identical to Kottman’s supervision agreement.
See
[¶ 13.] Even though Kottman’s claims are similar, he insists that
Knights
does not apply and that this Court should continue to regard
Ashley
as the controlling authority. Kottman argues that
Knights
“should not reflect the law and policy in South Dakota with respect to parole searches” because South Dakota “acknowledges a higher degree of Fourth Amendment protection than that offered by the United States Constitution.”
See State v. Opperman,
[¶ 14.] We think it significant that after
Knights
the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals, and most other appellate courts, rejected the previously accepted stalking horse doctrine.
United States v. Brown,
[¶ 15.] Because the stalking horse doctrine no longer applies, we are left to evaluate Kottman’s claim that the officers did not have reasonable suspicion to justify the search.
6
What showing must be made by parole agents and law enforcement officers to uphold a warrantless search and seizure under a conditional waiver requiring a threshold determination of reasonable suspicion? This Court has not yet addressed this question, and a review of
Knights
and the Eighth Circuit’s
*121
analysis in
Brown
provide little guidance because the parties in those сases conceded the existence of reasonable suspicion.
See
[¶ 16.] Here, the circuit court found that the circumstances supported the existence of reasonable suspicion based on the informаtion the officers obtained and the inferences the officers could have reasonably drawn. Even though the trial court’s findings are reviewed under the clearly erroneous standard, “[i]t is our duty to make our own legal assessment of the evidence to decide under the Fourth Amendment whether the officers’ actions were ‘objectively reasonable.’ ”
State v. Chavez,
[¶ 17.] Kottman claims that “[i]t is difficult to believe that [his] parole status and prior employment justified
individualized
suspicion ... to such a high degree that law’ enforcement could forgo the inconvenience of investigating further and simply raid [Kоttman’s] home.” However, reasonable suspicion does not implicate the individualized suspicion required under ordinary Fourth Amendment analysis.
See State v. Hirning,
[¶ 18.] Thus, we review the particular facts surrounding the officers’ actions and determine whether they support an “objectively reasonable suspicion” that Kottman burglarized Empire Plastics.
See Ballard,
[¶ 19.] The officers were able to identify a suspect after they spoke with the owner and learned that Empire Plastics had a goоd working relationship with all its past and current employees, except Kottman. The officers’ suspicion was strengthened when they learned that Kott-man knew where the cash box was located and had been fired only five days earlier. Further, Officer Daughters performed a background check and learned that Kott-man “was a multiple previously convicted felon including convictions for offenses
*123
such as burglary and grand theft and that [he] was then released from the Penitentiary on parole supervision.” With these facts, the circuit court ruled that the officers had reasonable suspicion to search Kottman’s home. We conclude that the officers’ knowledge based on their investigation “taken together with rational inferences” constitutes reasonable suspicion under these circumstances.
See State v. Lockstedt,
[¶ 20.] Affirmed.
Notes
. The exact language of the waiver condition states: "I will submit my person, property, *117 place of residence, vehicle and personal effects to search and seizure at any time, with or without a search warrant, whenever reasonable suspicion is determined by a parole agent or law enforcement.'’
. A lock box was seized but it could not be identified later as the оne taken in the burglary. The State voluntarily dismissed the charge of third-degree burglary on June 11, 2004.
. "Probation” and "parole” are used interchangeably, but we have not addressed whether there is a difference between parolees or probationers. However, the Third Circuit stated that there
is "no constitutional difference between probation and parole for purposes of the fourth amendment.” United States v. Harper,928 F.2d 894 , 896 n. 1 (9th Cir.1991) [ (citаtions omitted) ]. In fact, parole may be an even more severe restriction on liber *119 ty because the parolee has already- been adjudged in need of incarceration. See United States v. Cardona,903 F.2d 60 , 63 (1st Cir.1990), cert denied,498 U.S. 1049 ,111 S.Ct. 758 ,112 L.Ed.2d 778 (1991). United States v. Hill,967 F.2d 902 , 909 (3d Cir.1992). See also United States v. Williams,417 F.3d 373 , 376 n. 1 (3d Cir.2005).
. See, e.g., Williams,
. The Court in
Knights
recognized that "[t]he touchstone of the Fourth Amendment is reasonableness, and the reasonableness of a search is determined 'by assessing, on the one hand, the degree to which it intrudes upon an individual’s privacy and, on the other, the degree to which it is needed for the promotion of legitimate governmental interests.’ "
. The language of Kottman’s conditional waiver requires reasonable suspicion and Kottman is not claiming that рrobable cause or reasonable cause should be required before a warrantless search can be conducted.
. While it is trae the Eighth Circuit used
Knights’
"traditional Fourth Amendment balancing test to determine the search's constitutionality,” it did so in order to reject the distinction between probation and investigatory related searches and not to define what constitutes reasonable suspicion.
Brown,
. For exámple, when the North Dakota Supreme Court modified its method of review for the validity of probationary searches after
Knights,
it applied a reasonable suspicion standard adopted from its investigatory and traffic stop cases.
See State v. Maurstad,
New Mexico also applied a reasonable suspicion standard bаsed on its previous decisions in investigatory stop cases.
See State v. Baca,
Similarly, the Supreme Court of Illinois aligned its reasoning with an investigatory stop case.
See People v. Lampitok,
In contrast, Pennsylvania and New Jersey applied specific statutes which defined reasonable suspicion under warrantless searches based on conditional waivers.
See Commonwealth v. Moore,
In addition to state courts, a review of the federal courts reveals that most circuits also adopted a reasonable suspicion standard derived from previous investigatory stop cases.
Williams,
