The trial court granted defendant’s motion to suppress the cocaine that police officers found in his vehicle during an inventory search. The State filed a petition for interlocutory review with the court of appeals, which granted the petition and reversed the suppression order. The court of appeals held that the trial court had misapplied the pretext stop doctrine and had failed to enter adequate findings of fact on reasonable suspicion.
State v. Lopez,
FACTS
Because the trial court’s written findings do not describe the circumstances giving rise to this case, we look to the record of the suppression hearing for the relevant facts. At about 9 p.m. on June 19, 1990, Officer Hamner saw defendant driving south on 400 East Street in Salt Lake City. He recognized defendant’s car as one he had seen on several occasions near two local bars where illegal drug use was known to occur. Ham-ner testified that he recognized defendant as Jose Cruz, a known drug dealer, from his undercover work on the Metro Narcotics Strike Force nine months earlier. During that time, defendant had been “pointed out” to him as Cruz. Hamner had on one occasion personally met the individual he believed to be Cruz. He had also seen photographs of Cruz during his work on the strike force.
Knowing that nine months earlier Cruz had not possessed a valid driver’s license, Hamner decided to run a license cheek on him. The check yielded, “[N]o record of [Cruz] having a driver’s license.” Relying on this information, he drove from the alley in which he was parked and began to follow *1130 defendant. Defendant turned left onto 700 South Street and, according to Hamner’s testimony, made the turn without signaling. Hamner then activated his overhead lights and stopped defendant. At the suppression hearing, he testified that he suspected defendant of illegal drug activity but that he made the stop because defendant was driving without a license and had failed to signal before turning.
Defendant was unable to produce a driver’s license, but he did give Hamner an identification card with the name Geraldo Lopez on it. A license and warrants check on Ger-aldo Lopez showed no license and three outstanding warrants. Hamner arrested defendant on the warrants and cited him for driving without a license and for failing to signal before turning. Later, officers conducted an inventory search of defendant’s car and discovered several bags of cocaine. The State charged him with unlawful possession of cocaine "with intent to distribute, a second degree felony under Utah Code Ann. § 58-37-8(l)(a)(iv).
Defendant moved to suppress the cocaine on the grounds that “there was no reasonable suspicion ... to believe that [he] had committed or was committing a public offense” and that “the stop was a pretext stop to conduct a fishing expedition type search.” The trial court granted defendant’s motion, concluding that the stop was a “pretext stop” and therefore the “subsequent search of the car and seizure of the contraband ... violated Mr. Lopez’s state and federal constitutional rights against unreasonable searches and seizures.”
The court of appeals granted the State’s petition for interlocutory review and, despite the State’s invitation to do otherwise, retained the pretext stop doctrine. In a lengthy dissenting opinion, Judge Russon accepted the State’s invitation to “reconsider the pretext analysis.”
Lopez,
The
Lopez
majority reversed the suppression order because the trial court had “erred in focusing exclusively on Officer Hamner’s subjective state of mind” in determining whether this was a pretext stop.
Lopez,
ADEQUACY OF TRIAL COURT’S FACTUAL FINDINGS
As cross-petitioner, defendant seeks to avoid remand, arguing that the trial court’s factual findings are adequate. Because search and seizure issues are highly fact sensitive, “detailed findings of fact are necessary to enable this court to meaningfully review the issues on appeal.”
State v. Lovegren,
Officer Hamner testified that while he was working as an undercover narcotics officer, defendant was “pointed out” to him as Jose Cruz, a known drug dealer. He also testified that he had personally met the individual he believed to be Cruz and had seen strike force photographs of him. A computer check on Cruz showed no driver’s license. The trial court did not explicitly find whether these facts gave Hamner reasonable suspicion that defendant was driving without a license. Nevertheless, we agree with defendant’s contention that the court of appeals erred in remanding the case for findings on this question.
A distinct finding that there was no reasonable suspicion to stop defendant for driving without a license would only make explicit what was already implicit in other findings.
Sorenson v. Beers,
Finally, noting that the court “referred to [the] turn of his car as a fact and to his alleged failure to signal as a contention of the officer,” defendant argues that it is reasonable for us to assume the court found that he did not turn left onto 700 South Street without signaling. The court did not make a specific finding on whether defendant made an illegal left turn. It simply found that “[0]fficer Hamner observed defendant make a left turn and
says
he did not see a signal at which time a stop was made” (emphasis added). A finding that defendant
did not
make an illegal turn is consistent with the court’s decision that the detention was a pretext stop. As the court of appeals explained, the pretext doctrine has been applied “where the facts demonstrated the driver did not commit a traffic violation.”
State v. Lopez,
Summarizing the testimony at the suppression hearing, the trial judge specifically found, “The officer testified he wouldn’t have stopped [Lopez] for the improper turn.” Under the court of appeals’ pretext stop doctrine, this testimony rendered the occurrence of the' improper left turn immaterial because Hamner essentially conceded that a reasonable officer would not have stopped defendant for that reason alone.
See State v. Sierra,
CONSTITUTIONALITY OF THE STOP
The Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution guarantees the “right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures.” U.S. Const, amend. IV. The United States Supreme Court has held that “stopping an automobile and detaining its occupants constituted a seizure” within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment, “even though the purpose of the stop is limited and the resulting detention quite brief.”
Delaware v. Prouse,
However, “ “what the Constitution forbids is not all searches and seizures, but unreasonable searches and seizures.’ ”
Terry v. Ohio,
As to the first inquiry, a police officer is constitutionally justified in stopping a vehicle if the stop is “incident to a traffic violation committed in the officers’ presence.”
State v. Talbot,
The second question is whether the stop was reasonably related in scope to the traffic violation which justified it in the first place. Once a traffic stop is made, the detention “must be temporary and last no longer than is necessary to effectuate the purpose of the stop.”
Florida v. Royer,
an officer conducting a routine traffic stop may request a driver’s license and vehicle registration, conduct a computer check, and issue a citation. However, once the driver has produced a valid driver’s license and evidence of entitlement to use the vehicle, “he must be allowed to proceed on his way, without being subjected to further delay by police for additional questioning.”
State v. Robinson,
Running a warrants check without reasonable suspicion of criminal activity beyond the traffic offense itself arguably exceeds the reasonable scope of a traffic stop. Our decision in Johnson dealt with this question but is not dispositive. In Johnson, a police officer stopped a vehicle with faulty brake lights. The driver produced a driver’s license with a name different from that of the registered owner. In addition, she was unable to produce a valid registration certificate. The officer then asked the defendant, who was a passenger in the vehicle, for her license. She “denied having a driver’s license or any identification, but did give [the officer] her name and date of birth.” Johnson, 805 P.2d *1133 at 762. A warrants check on the driver and the defendant revealed that the defendant had outstanding warrants. The defendant was arrested, and a search of her backpack incident to that arrest uncovered drug paraphernalia, amphetamines, and her Utah identification.
We reversed the defendant’s conviction of possession of a controlled substance, holding that her Fourth Amendment rights had been violated and “the evidence obtained pursuant to the arrest [should have been] suppressed.”
Id.
at 764. We explained that “[w]hile the lack of a registration certificate and the fact that the occupants did not own the car raised the possibility that the car might be stolen, this information, without more, does not rise to the level of an articulable suspicion that the car was stolen.”
Id.
The officer did not inquire about the registered owner, nor did he cheek stolen car records. The “paucity of facts” available to him simply did not justify the detention of the passenger. Thus, we concluded that “the leap from asking for the
passenger’s
name and date of birth to running a warrants cheek on her severed the chain of rational inference from specific artic-ulable facts and degenerated into an attempt to support an as yet ‘inchoate and unparticu-larized suspicion or “hunch.” ’ ”
Id.
(emphasis added) (quoting
Terry,
In defining the scope of Fourth Amendment rights, “there is ‘no ready test for determining reasonableness other than by balancing the need to search [or seize] against the invasion which the search [or seizure] entails.’ ”
Terry,
Accordingly, we hold that running a warrants check during the course of a routine traffic stop does not violate the Fourth Amendment, so long as it does not significantly extend the period of detention beyond that reasonably necessary to request a driver’s license and valid registration and to issue a citation.
See Lopez,
As explained above, the trial court implicitly found that Officer Hamner did not have a reasonable suspicion that defendant was driving without a license. However, the case must be remanded to the trial court to determine whether defendant made a left *1134 turn without signaling. 1 If he did not make an illegal left turn, the stop was not justified at its inception and the evidence derived from it must be suppressed. If he did make the unlawful turn, then probable cause justified the stop. The trial court must then determine whether the detention was reasonably related in scope to the traffic violation. To decide this question, the court must determine whether the warrants check significantly extended the period of detention beyond that reasonably necessary to request defendant’s license and registration and to issue a citation.
THE PRETEXT STOP DOCTRINE AND THE FOURTH AMENDMENT
In deciding the reasonableness of the instant traffic stop under the Fourth Amendment, we have applied the dual inquiry articulated in
Terry v. Ohio,
In Utah, the pretext doctrine applies in cases where an officer claims to have stopped a vehicle for a minor traffic violation, but where the court determines the stop was not made because of the traffic violation but rather due to an unconstitutional motivation and, therefore, the officer has deviated from the normal course of action expected of a reasonable officer. We have articulated the pretext doctrine as whether a “reasonable ... officer, in view of the totality of the circumstances confronting him or her, would have stopped the vehicle.”
State v. Lopez,
From its beginning in
State v. Sierra,
1. The Pretext Stop Doctrine Is Unnecessary To Protect Citizens from Unlawful Searches and Seizures
As explained, the pretext stop doctrine applies “where an officer claims to have stopped a vehicle for a minor traffic violation, but where the court determines the stop was not made because of the traffic violation but rather due to an
unconstitutional motivation.” Lopez,
An officer who observes a traffic violation has probable cause to stop the driver.
Smith,
We recognize that the pretext doctrine is aimed at circumscribing the “standardless and unconstrained discretion ... of the official in the field.”
Delaware v. Prouse,
Finally, in retaining the pretext stop doctrine, the
Lopez
majority relied on the fact that the “Fourth Amendment’s protection from unreasonable searches and seizures is primarily grounded in protecting an individual’s reasonable expectation of privacy.”
Lopez,
*1136 An individual does not have a reasonable expectation that the police will not make a traffic stop when the individual commits a traffic violation the police regularly enforce. Thus, if a driver is stopped for traveling at eighty miles an hour in a school zone or running a red light — traffic offenses all drivers know the police regularly enforce — the driver does not have a reasonable expectation of privacy. In this circumstance, the driver should not be able to avoid a stop simply because the police officer also subjectively believed the driver might be transporting drugs as such a stop is not “unexpected” or “arbitrary.”
Id. Apparently, the court of appeals would find the converse of this reasoning true as well — drivers do have a reasonable expectation not to be stopped for traffic violations that the police do not regularly enforce. We disagree. Drivers do not have a constitutional right to violate any law enacted by the legislature. Any expectation to the contrary is unreasonable and need not be protected by the pretext doctrine.
2. The Pretext Stop Doctrine Erroneously Turns on the Subjective Motivation of the Detaining Police Officer
In
Terry,
While objective on its face, the pretext doctrine is ultimately a subjective standard. The Lopez majority wrote that the pretext doctrine applies where an officer stops a traffic offender, “not ... because of the traffic violation but rather due to an unconstitutional motivation.” Id, To apply this standard, courts must explore the detaining officer’s state of mind and divine his or her true motives for making the stop. In fact, defendant concedes, “[0]ne cannot demonstrate pretextual behavior without considering the subjective intent of the officer,” and therefore urges us to recognize subjective intent as “a relevant factor for courts to consider in assessing ... the reasonableness of [an officer’s] actions.” 5
This subjective focus on the officer’s state of mind at the time of the stop is inconsistent with Fourth Amendment law. In
Maryland v. Macon,
We might wish that policemen would not act with impure plots in mind, but I do not believe that wish a sufficient basis for excluding, in the supposed service of the Fourth Amendment, probative evidence obtained by actions — if not thoughts — entirely in accord with the Fourth Amendment and all other constitutional requirements.
Massachusetts v. Painten,
Accordingly, the majority of federal circuit courts that have addressed the issue and many state courts have held that a stop justified by probable cause or reasonable suspicion that a traffic offense has occurred is not invalid under the Fourth Amendment simply because the detaining officer made the stop for some reason unrelated to the traffic offense.
United States v. Ferguson,
“[A] stop [i]s unreasonable not because the officer secretly hope[s] to find evidence of a greater offense, but because it [i]s clear that an officer would have been uninterested in pursuing the lesser offense absent that hope.” In other words, “the proper basis of concern is not with why the officer deviated from the usual practice in this case but simply that he did deviate.”
Lopez,
We are not convinced that this focus on usual police practice magically transforms the pretext doctrine into an objective assessment of an officer’s conduct. “ ‘[Objective evidence’ of ... general police practice is simply an aggregation of the subjective intentions of officers in the regions.”
Ferguson,
In addition, like the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals, we have difficulty distinguishing between the subjective motivation of the officer and the “ ‘objective evidence’ of the officer’s actual interest in investigating the kind of offense for which he made the stop.”
Ferguson,
Our decision today should not be interpreted to mean that evidence of an officer’s subjective intent or departure from standard police practice is never relevant to the determination of Fourth Amendment claims. We held in
State v. Hygh,
Likewise, an officer’s subjective suspicions unrelated to the traffic violation for which he or she stops a defendant can be used by defense counsel to show that the officer fabricated the violation.
State v. Arroyo,
We have also held that a pretex-tual police purpose is one factor relevant to the question of attenuation.
State v. Thurman,
[I]f the police had no “purpose” in engaging in the misconduct ... suppression would have no deterrent value. At the other extreme, if the purpose of the misconduct was to achieve the consent, suppression of the resulting evidence clearly will have a deterrent effect and further analysis will rarely be required. Similarly, if the misconduct is flagrantly abusive, there is a greater likelihood that the police engaged in the conduct as a pretext for collateral objectives, and suppressing the resulting evidence will have a greater likelihood of deterring similar misconduct in the future.
Id. at 1263-64 (citations omitted). Thus, for purposes of attenuation analysis, an officer’s subjective motivation underlying a Fourth Amendment violation is relevant to decide whether suppression remains an appropriate sanction.
The Pretext Stop Doctrine Discourages Equal Protection of the Law 3.
In the instant case, the court of appeals determined that the pretext doctrine “implicates equal protection concerns and policies.”
Lopez,
We cannot ignore the reality that many pretext stop cases involve minorities and that in some cases one of the articulated reasons for the. stop was that the occupants were Hispanic.... To permit police officers to use any minor traffic violation as a pretext to stop a vehicle encourages the selective enforcement of traffic regulations against minorities or “suspicious” classes, such as those with an unorthodox appearance or out-of-state license plates.
Id. at 1045-46. Based on these equal protection concerns, the court determined that the pretext doctrine was necessary to protect “the privacy of all individuals by requiring that police be consistent in their enforcement of traffic regulations.” Id. (emphasis added).
We are not convinced that the pretext doctrine promotes equal protection and consistent enforcement of the law. As applied, the doctrine may insulate suspicious citizens from liability for violating the traffic laws.
8
The United States Supreme Court disapproved of this unequal enforcement of the law in
United States v. Villamonte-Marquez,
Admittedly, the pretext doctrine permits both the ordinary speeder and the speeder suspected of robbery to be stopped and cited for speeding. Thus, defendant is correct in his assertion that the doctrine “does not immunize anyone from the traffic laws.” Nevertheless, the doctrine still offends the very equal protection policies it is touted to protect, because it permits the ordinary speeder to be successfully prosecuted for robbery based on evidence found in plain view during the stop, while the speeder suspected of robbery with similar evidence in plain view goes free.
At best, this is a misallocation of police resources because we “want officers to maximize their resources (including their activities within the Fourth Amendment) in pursuit of serious offenders.” Haddad at 690. As Justice Brennan wrote, “[I]t would appear a strange test as to whether a search which turns up criminal evidence is unreasonable, that the search is more justifiable the less there was antecedent probable cause to suspect the defendant of crime.”
Abel v. United States,
CONCLUSION
The court of appeals erred in basing its decision in the instant case on whether a “ ‘reasonable ... officer, in view of the totality of the circumstances confronting him or her, would have stopped’ the [defendant] for the traffic violation” absent a desire to search for evidence of a more serious crime.
State v. Lopez,
The court of appeals’ decision is vacated, and its reversal of the suppression order is affirmed on other grounds. The case is remanded for additional findings and conclusions as directed in this opinion.
Notes
. Turning without giving an appropriate signal is a violation of Utah Code Ann. § 41-6-69(l)(a) ("A person may not turn a vehicle ... until the movement can be made with reasonable safety and an appropriate signal has been given.”).
. The State argues that defendant waived any independent analysis under article I, section 14 because he only "nominally alluded” to the provision in his motion to suppress and because he "made no reference to the state search and seizure provision” before the trial court. The court of appeals limited its analysis below to the Fourth Amendment because defendant did not argue that the analysis should differ under article I, section 14.
Lopez,
We need not decide whether defendant’s state constitutional arguments were adequately raised and argued before the trial court because "exceptional circumstances” justify our entertaining them on appeal.
Jolivet v. Cook,
. See, e.g., State v. Delaney,
.
United States v. Guzman,
. Whether an officer’s subjective intent is a relevant factor to be considered by the courts in assessing Fourth Amendment violations has been the subject of intense debate. See John M. Bur-koff, The Pretext Doctrine Returns After Never Leaving, 66 U.Det.L.Rev. 363 (1989); James B. Haddad, Pretextual Fourth Amendment Activity: Another Viewpoint, 18 U.Mich.J.L.Ref. 639, 690 (1985) [hereinafter Haddad]; John M. Burkoff, The Pretext Search Doctrine: Now You See It, Now You Don’t, 17 U.Mich.J.L.Ref. 523 (1984).
. We note that some of these courts have "taken the view, often characterized as the 'could' test, that a stop is valid if the officer 'could' have stopped the car in question for a suspected traffic violation."
Ferguson,
. Admittedly, defense counsel must pursue this course with caution. By arguing that the officer’s suspicions of a more serious crime motivated the detention, defense counsel may not only persuade the court that the officer fabricated the traffic offense, but also convince the court that the officer had reasonable suspicion to stop the defendant for the more serious crime.
. Professor Haddad’s observations on this point illustrate the problem:
Consider how a defense counsel tries to establish an improper police motive.... Suppose, for example, that counsel theorizes that an officer stopped her speeding client not to enforce the traffic code but to investigate a recent robbery. The defense must offer evidence that the officer knew some facts that suggested that a traffic stop might yield evidence of a robbery. The more suspicious data the defense can show that the officer had, the more likely the defense can establish that the true motive for the stop was unrelated to enforcement of the law against speeding.
Picture, then, the officer who observes two speeding vehicles.... [T]he officer can stop the ordinary speeder but not the speeder whom he also has reason to suspect of more serious wrongdoing.
Haddad at 690.
