OPINION
I. Introduction
The State appeals from the trial court’s written order granting Appellee Lindsey Nichole Houghton’s motion to suppress evidence. The State argues in two points that the trial court erred by granting Houghton’s motion to suppress because reasonable suspicion supported the traffic stop of Houghton’s vehicle. Houghton has not filed a brief on appeal. We affirm.
II. Background
Houghton was charged with driving while intoxicated and filed a written motion to suppress. Officer Mark Epps was the only witness who testified at the suppression hearing. The State and Hough-ton stipulated that the scope of the hearing was the validity of the traffic stop. The trial court also watched the video recording from Officer Epps’s in-car camera.
Officer Epps testified that he has been a certified peace officer with the University of Texas at Arlington Police Department since December 2008 and that he had undergone “special training pertaining to DWI investigations” and “detecting signs that a person’s intoxicated.” He did not otherwise explain the nature of his training.
Officer Epps testified that he worked the third shift on January 15, 2011, that he was in uniform and in a marked patrol unit, and that there are known drinking establishments in the area. Officer Epps testified that he was conducting radar enforcement and sitting stationary in his vehicle when he first noticed Houghton’s vehicle. He could not remember what drew his attention to Houghton’s vehicle but testified, “[I]t was probably just going to be excessive speed over 35. I can’t remember.” He also testified that he observed Houghton’s vehicle “weaving from the left to right within the lane.” 1
Officer Epps testified that he began following Houghton’s vehicle and that he saw her “swerving.” He also stated, “The defendant, she was driving a silver Ford Mustang. When I got behind the vehicle, it immensely slowed its speed. Then I observed the vehicle swerving from left to right and then it drove left of center in about the 300 block of South Cooper Street.”
After the trial court admitted Officer Epps’s in-car video recording, which reflects that he stopped Houghton at 3:16 a.m., Officer Epps described what was depicted on the video as follows: “[T]he vehicle, when it came through the 300 block of South Cooper Street, it drove left of the center line, the yellow line, and it failed to make a left turn, and it came back into the lane closest to the center while driving northbound.” Officer Epps further testified that weaving can indicate impairment and that “[g]iven the time of night and the — the vehicle slowing down and swerving before, it usually, in my opinion, indicates intoxication.” Officer Epps agreed in response to questioning by the prosecu
On cross-examination, Officer Epps testified that he did not see Houghton leaving any bar on Cooper Street and that he could not recall how far Houghton’s vehicle was from his location when he first observed it. Officer Epps agreed that Houghton’s vehicle had remained within its lane when he saw it weaving before he turned on his recording device. He explained that “it was because she drove left of center which is what gave me probable cause to pull the vehicle over,” but he also stated that the tire of Houghton’s vehicle touched but did not cross the center line. This exchange followed:
Q. Okay. And it touched the line, and about how far of a distance did you follow the defendant’s vehicle, would you estimate?
A. Approximately, six blocks.
Q. Okay. And you’re saying that her tire touched the line one time in six blocks and you believe that gave you reasonable suspicion to make the stop?
A. Yes, sir.
The State then questioned Officer Epps as follows:
Q. Officer Epps, I just want to clarify. Can you tell us what — can you tell us what circumstances you took into consideration when you made the decision to pull the defendant over?
A. Yes. It was the — on the day, the time of night, and Cooper Street is generally known for having vehicles using it as a means to get home quickly. Usually, my experience is for people who are intoxicated at that time of night, will do — who move within their lanes or within a lane and then cross left of center and drive on the other side of the road.
Q. So did you take the totality of the circumstances into consideration that the defendant could possibly be impaired?
A. Yes, ma’am.
The trial court granted Houghton’s motion to suppress at the conclusion of the hearing. The trial court also denied the State’s motion to reconsider but granted the State’s requests for findings of fact and conclusions of law and for “specific findings” and “conclusions addressing evidence.” The trial court’s first set of factual findings largely recite Officer Epps’s testimony and we thus do not repeat them here. 2 The trial court’s conclusions of law, which include a determination that Officer Epps’s testimony was not credible, are as follows:
1. The initial observation of the defendant’s vehicle on South Cooper Street did not involve a traffic violation, insofar as the officer stated he could not remember if the defendant’s vehicle was speeding.
2. The detention of the vehicle by the officer based on the testimony elicited, and the DVD evidence presented was not based on reasonable suspicion or probable cause, as the court did not find the officer’s testimony to be credible, based on his lack of memory of the incident, and his poor skill at recounting the event. The testimony of the officer was more an agreement with the prosecutor, rather than the officer stating in his own words that he reached the conclusions arriving at reasonable suspicion or probable cause that served as thebasis for the stop himself, supported by his own observations.
3. The defendant was under temporary detention at the time the vehicle was stopped and she was approached by Officer Epps.
4. The temporary detention was not lawful, as it was not subsequent to a lawful traffic stop.
5. Any evidence obtained subsequent to the unlawful detention should be suppressed.
The trial court also made additional findings, indicating on an order prepared by the State that it made the following additional findings of fact: 3
a. Based upon the trial court’s previous finding regarding Officer Epps’ credibility, the trial court specifically disbelieved all of the testimony of the officer.
e. The court further specifies that the State’s evidence showed that the temporary detention of Defendant Houghton’s vehicle was not supported by reasonable suspicion or probable cause because the officer’s testimony was wholly incredible.
f. The court further specifies that the State’s evidence showed that the temporary detention of Defendant Houghton’s vehicle was not supported by reasonable suspicion or probable cause because the officer’s testimony was incredible pertaining to Defendant Houghton’s driving behavior.
g. The court further specifies that the State’s evidence showed that the temporary detention of Defendant Houghton’s vehicle was not supported by reasonable suspicion or probable cause because the officer’s testimony regarding the reasons for stopping Defendant Houghton’s vehicle were not credible.
h.The court further specifies that the State’s evidence showed that the temporary detention of Defendant Houghton’s vehicle was not supported by reasonable suspicion or probable cause because the officer’s testimony was not credible with respect to any possible speeding violation.
III. Standard of Review
We review a trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress evidence under a bifurcated standard of review.
Amador v. State,
Stated another way, when reviewing the trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress, we must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the trial court’s ruling.
Wiede,
The State argues that we are not required in this case to give almost total deference to the trial court’s factual determinations because witness credibility and demeanor are not at issue with the video recording and because the video recording contradicts the trial court’s factual determinations. The court of criminal appeals has held, however, that “a trial court’s determination of historical facts based on a videotape recording is still reviewed under a deferential standard.”
Carter v. State,
IY. Applicable Law
The Fourth Amendment protects against unreasonable searches and seizures by government officials. U.S. Const. amend. IV;
Wiede,
A law enforcement officer may lawfully stop a motorist when the officer has probable cause to believe that the motorist has committed a traffic violation.
Walter v. State,
V. Discussion
The State contends in its two points that the trial court’s legal conclusion concerning the lack of reasonable suspicion is erroneous and that the trial court’s factual determinations constitute an abuse of discretion because they contradict the “objective” evidence shown on Officer Epps’s in-car video recording. Specifically, the State argues that the video recording shows two traffic violations as well as other erratic driving. 5
We first consider the State’s contentions concerning traffic code violations.
See Walter,
Our review of the video recording confirms that the left-side tires of Hough-ton’s vehicle briefly touched but did not cross the double-yellow line approximately forty-two seconds after the recording began. The State, however, presented no evidence at the suppression hearing that this maneuver was performed in an unsafe manner. Officer Epps testified only that Houghton’s vehicle “drove left of the center line, the yellow line, and it failed to make a left turn, and it came back into the lane closest to the center while driving northbound.” He did not elaborate as to any articulable facts that he observed that would support a finding that Houghton made the maneuver in an unsafe manner.
See Ford,
The State also argues that the video recording shows a violation of transportation code section 544.004 because Hough-ton drove her vehicle “across the lined demarcation for a designated left-turn lane.” First, the State did not raise this section 544.004 argument until its motion for reconsideration. Nothing in the record suggests that Officer Epps observed before the traffic stop that Houghton allegedly violated section 544.004 by crossing the white line separating the left-turn lane from the regular lane of traffic. Officer Epps did not mention it during any portion of his testimony, nor did the State question Officer Epps about the movement into the left-turn lane during the suppression hearing. Moreover, the State did not argue at the suppression hearing that the movement into the left-turn lane constituted a traffic violation that gave Officer Epps either probable cause or reasonable suspicion to stop Houghton’s vehicle or even that crossing the white line was one of the articulable facts relied upon by the officer that the trial court should consider as part of the totality of the circumstances.
In a very similar case that also involved a video recording of the events leading to the stop of a defendant’s vehi
To establish reasonable suspicion, the state must show that,
at the time of the detention,
the officer had specific, articula-ble facts that established reasonable suspicion.
Terry,
Generally, law enforcement action can only be supported by facts the officer was “actually aware of at the time of that action.”
State v. Ruelas,
Additionally, the video recording does not “indisputably” show a violation of transportation code section 544.004, as contended by the State on appeal. That section requires an operator to comply with “applicable official traffic-control device[s].” Tex. Transp.Code Ann. § 544.004 (West 2011). The video reflects that, although Houghton’s vehicle crossed the solid white stripe that marks the right boundary of the left-turn lane, Houghton signaled a lane change, moved her vehicle into the left-turn lane, and waited for an approaching car to clear the intersection before turning left. This case is thus distinguishable from
Kortemier v. Texas Department of Public Safety,
No. 05-08-01182-CV,
Because the video recording does not clearly show that Houghton committed a traffic violation, we next consider whether sufficient specific, articulable facts justified the stop of Houghton’s vehicle. The video recording reflects that Officer Epps initiated his in-car recording device at 3:14 a.m. and followed Houghton’s vehicle for approximately one minute and forty seconds before turning on his overhead lights. As the recording begins, Officer Epps drove his vehicle forward and turned right onto Cooper Street. Officer Epps accelerated toward Houghton’s vehicle and began
The facts of this case are similar to two others in which reviewing courts affirmed the trial court’s grant of the defendant’s motion to suppress.
See State v. Hanrahan,
No. 10-11-00155-CR,
In
Hanrahan,
the officer saw Hanrahan driving at 1:00 a.m. and noticed that her vehicle swerved from side to side within its lane before crossing the fog line that marked the improved shoulder.
While in some instances an officer’s observation of a violation of the transportation code unequivocally establishes a violation of the law justifying a traffic stop, in this case, the trial court was able to not only consider the testimony of Officer Bell, but it also was able to consider the video recording of the incident. And in granting appellee’s motion to suppress, the trial court clearly did not believe the testimony of Officer Bell, and it did not believe that the videotape conclusively demonstrated a violation of the transportation code. Essentially, the determination of whether Officer Bell had reasonable suspicion to stop appellee turned on the trial court’s evaluation of Officer Bell’s credibility and an evaluation of the video recording within the context of Officer Bell’s testimony. In such instances, we afford “almost total deference” to the trial court’s conclusions. Furthermore, because the trial court entered fact findings stating that it did not believe that a traffic violation occurred, we must review the fact findings in a light most favorable to the trial court’s ruling.
Id. (citations omitted).
Applying the appropriate standard of review and giving almost total deference to the trial court’s factual determinations where appropriate, we hold that the State has not demonstrated that the trial court erred by granting Houghton’s motion to suppress. The record, viewed in the light most favorable to the trial court’s ruling, does not reflect sufficient specific, articula-ble facts that when combined with rational inferences from those facts, would have led Officer Epps to reasonably conclude that Houghton was, had been, or soon would be engaged in criminal activity. We therefore overrule the State’s first and second points. 7
VI. Conclusion
Having overruled each of the State’s points, we affirm the trial court’s order.
LIVINGSTON, C.J., concurs without opinion.
Notes
. This portion of Officer Epps's observation of Houghton’s vehicle is not reflected on the video recording.
. The trial court did include one finding of fact concerning the prosecutor's and officer's preparedness for the hearing on the motion to suppress, but that fact finding is not material to the disposition of this appeal and we do not address it.
. These additional findings are not consecutively numbered because the trial court did not adopt each of the State’s proposed additional findings.
. "Reasonable suspicion” examines whether there was an objective justification for the detention.
State v. Elias,
. The State uses the term "objective” with reference to the facts shown by the video twenty-four times in its brief, confusing the requirement of articulable facts upon which an officer relied in determining that a traffic stop was justified with the objective standard the court must apply of whether a reasonable officer would have relied upon those facts in making the stop. It is the standard for determining reasonableness that is "objective,” not the facts testified to by the officer, as discussed below. Likewise, the State is mistaken in arguing that this Court is not bound by the trial court’s findings that contradict the "historical facts” shown by the video. The relevant "historical facts” relied upon by the officer in making the stop are not those in the video, which he did not review until long after the stop but those which he testified he relied upon in making the stop.
.
See also United States
v.
Brewer,
. The State’s amended brief includes a request for abatement and limited remand for precise factual findings concerning the alleged traffic violations discussed above.
See State v. Mendoza,
