[¶ 1.] Defendant moved to suppress all evidence obtained during a traffic stop in Watertown, South Dakota. Defendant alleged the traffic stop was in violation of his Fourth Amendment rights, as the officer’s stop was based on erroneous information relayed by the Watertown police dispatch alleging Defendant’s license plates were expired. As a consequence of the traffic stop, Defendant was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence and driving under revocation. During the traffic stop, Defendant alleged he had renewed his license plates in Milbank, South Dakota. After a hearing on the motion to suppress, the trial court held that a traffic stop and subsequent arrest are invalid when an arresting officer acts upon information in records, which, though correct when put into records, has been erroneously retained in records through the fault of the State record keeping agency.
[¶ 2.] We reverse.
FACTS AND PROCEDURE
[¶ 3.] On November 22, 2003, at approximately 1:42 a.m., Marty Muller (Defendant) was observed driving a yellow Firebird in Watertown, South Dakota, by city police officer Tim Toomey. Officer Toomey’s attention was drawn to Defendant’s vehicle because of a loud exhaust system and because it was traveling ten miles per hour on snow packed roads. Of- *287 fleer Toomey followed Defendant’s vehicle and observed it make several turns, traveling northbound, then westbound, turning southbound and westbound again. The license plate on Defendant’s vehicle was covered with snow that obscured the lower half of the plate where current registration stickers are normally located. However, Officer Toomey was able to see the numbers on the plate and initiated a license plate check. Officer Toomey was informed by the Watertown police dispatch that the license plate had expired in March 2003.
[¶ 4.] Based on this information, Officer Toomey initiated a traffic stop by engaging the vehicle stop lights on his patrol car. Defendant’s vehicle traveled one block to Third Street, turned northbound and turned into a parking lot before stopping. Once the vehicle stopped, Officer Toomey approached Defendant’s vehicle and wiped the snow off of the license plate and found a registration sticker that appeared to be current and .valid.
[¶ 5.] Officer Toomey then approached Defendant’s driver side window in order to explain why he had initiated the traffic stop. When Officer Toomey made eye contact with Defendant, he immediately noticed Defendant’s eyes were blood shot. As Officer Toomey leaned down to speak with Defendant in his vehicle, he noted an odor of an alcoholic beverage emanating from Defendant’s vehicle.
[¶ 6.] Defendant was asked for his driver’s license, but was able to produce only a South Dakota identification card. Defendant stated he had no other identification with him. Defendant was also unable to produce proof of registration, but was able to produce an expired insurance card. During the conversation, Officer Toomey observed Defendant’s actions were slow, and his speech was slurred.
[¶ 7.] Officer Toomey then asked Defendant to come back to the patrol car in order to determine why Defendant’s plates were coming back as expired. As Defendant walked toward the patrol car, he was staggering. Once in the patrol car, Officer Toomey noted an odor of alcoholic beverage on Defendant’s breath as he spoke. Officer Toomey requested a driver’s license check on Defendant, and was told by dispatch that Defendant’s license was revoked. Defendant alleged he had renewed his plates in Milbank, South Dakota, but was unable to produce a current registration.
[¶ 8.] Based on Officer Toomey’s observations of Defendant’s slurred speech, staggering, and the odor of alcohol on Defendant’s breath, additional officers were called to the scene to assist with field sobriety tests. Defendant was charged with driving under the influence under SDCL 32-23-1, and driving under revocation under SDCL 32-12-65(1). ■ The State gave Defendant notice via a Part II Information that it intended to seek revocation of driving privileges under SDCL 32-23-4 for a third DUI offense.
[¶ 9.] At a motion to suppress hearing, Officer Toomey testified he pulled Defendant over based on the expired plate check, and not because the license plate was partially obscured by snow or because of the loud exhaust. Officer Toomey testified he was still uncertain why Defendant’s license plates had come back as expired when Defendant had what appeared to be a current registration sticker displayed on the plates. Officer Toomey testified that he had never encountered a situation where a license plate check came back as expired and the vehicle had what appeared to be a valid sticker displayed on the license plate. .Officer Toomey also testified he had dispatch run the registration in addition to the plate, and the registration still came back expired. Finally, Officer Toomey testified he did not know whether *288 or not the registration sticker was valid, only that it appeared valid to him and that the dispatch report he obtained after the arrest still indicated expired plates.
[¶ 10.] The trial court found that Officer Toomey’s traffic stop was based on the information provided by police dispatch. In its conclusions of law, the trial court held the Watertown police dispatch office is an agency of the State of South Dakota. The trial court also held the computer inaccuracy, even if unintended, amounted to a capricious disregard for the rights of Defendant. The trial court held a stop and subsequent arrest are invalid when an officer acts upon information in records, which though correct when put into records, no longer applies and which through the fault of the system, has been retained in the records. Finally, the trial court held the stop of Defendant’s vehicle was a violation of Defendant’s constitutional and statutory rights and entered an order suppressing all evidence obtained during the traffic stop.
[¶ 11.] The State’s motion to reconsider was denied by the trial court. The State raises one issue on appeal:
The trial court erred by granting Defendant’s motion to suppress evidence.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[¶ 12.] We traditionally review a trial court’s decision to suppress evidence under an abuse of discretion standard.
State v. Wilson,
ANALYSIS AND DECISION
[¶ 13.] The trial court erred by granting Defendant’s motion to suppress evidence.
[¶ 14.] The text of the Fourth Amendment provides:
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, ■ houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
US Const, amend. IV. The Fourth Amendment’s prohibition against unreasonable searches and seizures applies when a vehicle is stopped by law enforcement.
Vento,
While the stop may not be the product of mere whim, caprice or idle curiosity, it is enough that the stop is based upon “specific and articulable facts which taken together with rational inferences from those facts, reasonably warrant the intrusion.” State v. Herrboldt,1999 SD 55 , ¶ 7,593 N.W.2d 805 , 808 (quoting Spenner v. City of Sioux Falls,1998 SD 56 , ¶ 14,580 N.W.2d 606 , 611). Under these standards, it is well established that a traffic violation, however minor, creates sufficient cause to stop the driver of a vehicle.” Whren v. United States,517 U.S. 806 , 810,116 S.Ct. 1769 , 1772,135 L.Ed.2d 89 , 95-[96] (1996); State v. Kenyon,2002 SD 111 , ¶ 16,651 N.W.2d 269 , 274.
State v. Akuba,
[¶ 15.] We have previously held that an officer’s subjective beliefs about a mistake of law, or his intentions, cannot invalidate a stop, as long as the circumstances of the stop, when viewed objectively, justified the action.
Vento,
[¶ 16.] “[A] reasonable investigation of a traffic stop may include asking for the driver’s license and registration, requesting the driver to sit in the patrol car, and asking the driver about his destination and purpose.”
Akuba,
[¶ 17.] In the instant case, Officer Too-mey relied on the information relayed to him by the Watertown police dispatch, that Defendant’s plates and registration were expired. The question at the motion to suppress became: was it reasonable for a police officer to rely on erroneous information transmitted by police dispatch? 1 The trial court answered this question in the negative, asserting that the inaccurate information maintained in the State’s computerized vehicle registration system could be imputed to Officer Toomey because the Watertown police dispatch is an agency of the State. The trial court further held that “[a] computer inaccuracy, even if *290 unintended, of this nature amounts to a capricious disregard for the rights of the Defendant as a citizen of the United States.”
[¶ 18.] This is an issue of first impression in South Dakota. Other jurisdictions that have addressed the issue include New York, the United States District Court for the District of Nevada, Iowa and Vermont. The issue turns in these jurisdictions on whether law enforcement maintains the computer database from which the erroneous data was retrieved. 2
[¶ 19.] In
People v. Jennings,
[¶20.] In
People v. McElhaney,
[¶ 21.] In
United States v. Mackey,
[¶ 22.] The jurisdictions of Iowa and Vermont have reviewed the issue of whether incorrect information provided by the department of motor vehicles, or some other similar state agency, is chargeable to law enforcement agencies under the “fellow officer” or collective knowledge theory. In
State v. Ewoldt,
*292
[¶23.] Similarly in
State v. Lanoue,
[¶ 24.] Jennings; McElhaney and Mackey are distinguishable from the instant case, in that the database relied upon by Officer Toomey was not maintained and updated by the Watertown Police Department itself, or by another law enforcement agency. Instead, the motor vehicle registration database is maintained by the South Dakota Department of Revenue and Regulation, which is charged with the duty of performing all “functions, duties, and services with respect to the registration and licensing of motor vehicles -” SDCL 32-1-3. The registration application process and collection of fees is conducted by the county treasurer of the vehicle owner’s county of residence, and fees and information are submitted to the Department of Revenue and Regulation. SDCL 32-1-6 and 32-5-2. The South Dakota Department of Revenue and Regulation and the county treasurers are independent of law enforcement agencies.
[¶ 25.] Officer Toomey had a reasonable and objective belief that Defendant might be driving with expired plates upon observing the vehicle and its partially covered license plate. Officer Toomey obtained information through police dispatch from the Department of Revenue and Regulation registration database that indicated Defendant’s plates were expired, which gave him a reasonable and objective belief that Defendant was driving with expired plates. Even after observing what Officer Toomey subjectively believed to be a valid renewal sticker, he was objectively justified in proceeding with the traffic stop based on his observation and the fact that he had never received incorrect vehicle registration information through dispatch from the Department of Revenue and Regulation. It is objectively reasonable for an officer to further investigate the inconsistency between a visual inspection of a registration sticker and information obtained from computerized records maintained by a separate and trustworthy state agency when the officer has never before received incorrect information from that agency. 5
*293 [¶ 26.] Officer Toomey did not exceed the limits of a lawful investigative detention in violation of the Fourth Amendment, as he was conducting a brief investigatory stop to determine if Defendant was driving with expired plates. Officer Toomey was within the scope of the original stop when he asked for Defendant’s driver’s license, registration and insurance coverage information, and when Toomey asked Defendant to accompany him to and sit in the patrol car during the investigation. Evidence of Defendant’s intoxication and driving with a revoked license was obtained during the scope of a proper investigatory stop, and is thus admissible at trial on the charges of driving under the influence and driving under revocation.
[¶ 27.] Reversed.
Notes
. The Codington County State's Attorney did not submit a brief in opposition to the motion to suppress, nor did he object to the trial court’s proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, or submit his own. Therefore, the State is precluded from arguing on appeal that Defendant’s vehicle registration and sticker were not valid.
. The State is precluded from arguing the good faith exception to the reasonable suspicion requirement on appeal, as it failed to present it to the trial court.
State v. Eidahl,
. The New York State Identification and Intelligence System is a database system maintained by the New York Division of Criminal Justice Services, which contains criminal records, personal appearance data, fingerprints, photographs, and handwriting samples collected and submitted by qualified law enforcement agencies and the judicial system. NY Executive Law § 837 (McKinney 2003).
.The National Crime Information Center is under the authority of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and is a collection of identification, criminal identification, crime and other records submitted by and exchanged with authorized officials of federal, state, and municipal law enforcement agencies and penal institutions.
United States v. Mackey,
. We have never had a case before us where foe vehicle registration records maintained by the Department of Revenue and Regulation were alleged to be in error. This is not to say that such an occurrence is impossible. Our holding today should not be interpreted as condoning sloppy record keeping by any state agency charged with maintaining computerized databases, as allowing erroneous information to be used as a basis for traffic stops, or arrests, provides no incentive for state agencies to exercise the level of care necessary to ensure accuracy and trustworthiness.
