While on routine patrol in midafternoon on a rough dirt road in a sparsely populated rural area of Gwinnett County, an officer observed an automobile with two occupants traveling very slowly. The vehicle had a Fulton County license plate. There had recently been several burglaries in that area. The officer continued to follow and observe the car, and while doing so he called on his police radio for a tag check. As he followed, he noticed the passenger turn around and look directly at him. The passenger then began to work with something in the back seat by reaching over from the front seat, receiving help from the driver who also was reaching over into the rear seat and rear floorboard area. The officer concluded that the occupants were trying to hide or stuff something in the back seat. Becoming somewhat suspicious and at the same time thinking that the two parties might be lost or need some help, the officer stopped the car and approached it. Confronting the driver, he asked him what the problem was and to see his driver’s license. At this point the patrolman detected the odor of burning marijuana. Looking from the outside into the rear seat of the car, the officer saw partially covered grocery bags with plastic bags of suspected marijuana protruding.
The officer reiterated that he stopped the car and the two men to check the driver’s license, and to identify the *341 two parties in this area where there had been burglaries in the past.
As a result of the foregoing, Timothy James Purdy was indicted'for the offense of violating the Georgia Controlled Substances Act. Code Ann. § 79A-802 et seq. His motion to suppress was sustained, the trial court opining that the officer was without authority to stop the accused. We are unable to agree with the learned trial judge, and reverse.
An officer does have the limited right to speak to and temporarily detain a citizen for a routine check of driver’s license or identification.
Anderson v. State,
In this case Purdy and his companion were engaging *342 in an activity similar to Allen, except that Purdy was driving in midafternoon. However, Purdy and his passenger were making some movements on the back seat as if to cover up something which were such as to give the officer articulable grounds for suspicion, particularly in an area in which recent burglaries had occurred, sufficient to justify a stop for license check and identification.
Judgment reversed.
