OPINION OF THE COURT BY
The defendants were convicted of a firearms violation under HRS § 134-6. The defendants appeal from the judgment and sentence of the trial court. At issue is whether the trial court should have suppressed handguns recovered by the police following a stop of the vehicle in which the defendants were riding. These handguns were seen and recovered from the floor of the automobile.
While making an investigative check on a known pimp at his residence at Hawaii Kai, at approximately 11:45 p.m., Officer Wheeler Brown, who was accompanied by Officer Marc Greenwell, noticed three men entering a green Mustang automobile which was parked in one of the apartment *387 building’s parking stalls. The officers testified that as the vehicle was backing out of the stall, they saw the defendants looking in their direction. The defendants (but not the driver) then appeared to assume a crouching position so that their heads disappeared from view. However, after the vehicle had completed its reverse movement and was moving forward, the defendants resumed their upright position. It was at that point that the officers decided to stop the automobile to investigate. Following the stop, Officer Brown saw the weapons with the aid of his flashlight and recovered them from the floor of the automobile.
The seizure of the firearms was proper only if the initial stop was proper.
State v. Ogata,
Reversed.
