Section 968.24, Stats., our codification of the Terry 1 stop, allows the detention and temporary questioning of a suspect without arrest for investigative purposes. The last sentence of the statute says: "Such detention and temporary questioning shall be conducted in the vicinity where the person was stopped." In this case involving an investigation of a one-car accident, Theodore A. Quartana was initially questioned at his home and was then transported by police to the accident scene. Quartana argues that this police action violates § 968.24. Therefore, his refusal to take a chemical test following an arrest for operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated cannot be held to be improper. By this opinion, we determine the analysis to be conducted when a person under a Terry investigation is removed from one place to another and ultimately affirm the trial court's determination that Quartana improperly refused to take the test.
Sometime after 2:00 a.m. on January 7, 1996, Quartana lost control of his car and drove into a ditch. Immediately afterwards, Quartana left the accident *444 scene and walked home to his parents' house, approximately one mile away.
A Wisconsin State Patrol trooper arrived first on the scene of the accident and took control as the investigating officer. After determining that Quartana owned the car and lived nearby, a city of Brookfield Police officer was dispatched to Quartana's residence.
The officer found Quartana at home and asked to see his driver's license and asked him about the accident. Quartana admitted he had been driving at the time of the accident. At this point, the officer observed that Quartana's eyes were "sort of' bloodshot and glassy and that his breath smelled of intoxicants. When the officer informed Quartana that he would have to return to the accident scene to talk with the trooper investigating the accident, Quartana asked if he could ride with his parents. The officer testified that he told Quartana "he would have to come with [him], because [he] needed to keep an observation on him, and that he was temporarily being detained in reference to the accident investigation." The officer kept Quartana's driver's license and drove him in the rear of the squad car to the accident scene.
At the accident scene, the officer turned Quartana and his driver's license over to the trooper. The trooper immediately interviewed Quartana and then had him perform several field sobriety tests. Quartana failed all of the tests and afterwards refused to take a preliminary breathalyzer test. The trooper then placed him under arrest and took him to the police station for further testing. At the station, the trooper read Quartana the Informing the Accused form, but Quartana refused to submit to any chemical testing.
At the refusal hearing, Quartana challenged the refusal by arguing that he had been placed under *445 arrest without probable cause when the officer kept his driver's license and transported him against his will from his residence to the accident scene. Therefore, the request to submit to chemical testing came after he had been arrested without probable cause in violation of his Fourth Amendment rights. The trial court found that although the officer did not have probable cause to arrest Quartana, he acted within the scope of a temporary investigative detention when he transported Quartana to the accident scene. Quartana appeals.
Because we assume without deciding that there was no probable cause to arrest, the officer's temporary investigative stop of Quartana was a "seizure" subject to Fourth Amendment protection. It is the State which bears the burden of proving that a warrantless search or seizure was reasonable and in conformity with the Fourth Amendment.
See State v. Washington,
Pursuant to
Terry v. Ohio,
During the course of a
Terry
stop, officers may try to obtain information confirming or dispelling their suspicions.
See Berkemer v. McCarty,
"Vicinity" is commonly understood to mean "a surrounding area or district" or "locality."
See
Webster's Third New International Dictionary: Unabridged 2550 (1976). We may use recognized dictionary definitions to ascertain the meaning of ordinary,
*447
nontechnical words in a statute.
See State v. Lopez,
In
United States v. Vanichromanee,
*448
However, detentions may be reasonable for investigative purposes, yet violative of the Fourth Amendment.
See Florida v. Royer,
We conclude that it was reasonable for the police to detain and transport Quartana to the scene of the accident in order to continue their investigation. Quartana had bloodshot, glassy eyes, smelled of intoxicants and had admitted to driving at the time of the accident. Therefore, the officer had reasonable grounds to investigate further in order to determine if Quartana's intoxication contributed to the accident.
*449 Further, the officer went to Quartana's residence only to assist the state trooper in locating Quartana after he left the scene of the accident. The officer was not at Quartana's residence to investigate the cause of the accident or interview Quartana. The state trooper, not the police officer, was in charge of the accident scene and the investigation. It was the trooper's responsibility to interview Quartana and complete the investigation. But the trooper was at the scene of the accident, and it would be unreasonable to expect the trooper to leave the scene unattended or require the assistance of yet another trooper to preserve the scene while she was away. Therefore, it was far more reasonable for the officer to transport Quartana the short distance to the accident scene in order to continue the investigative effort. Given the fact that the trooper was in charge of the investigation, transporting Quartana to the accident scene was the quickest way for the police to confirm or dispel their suspicions.
Quartana argues that the conditions of his transportation amounted to an arrest. Quartana argues that the restraint of his liberty proves he was under arrest. He is wrong. A restraint of liberty does not ipso facto prove that an arrest has taken place.
See, e.g., State v. Goebel,
We conclude that a reasonable person in Quartana's position would not have believed he or she was under arrest. Quartana was not transported to a more institutional setting, such as a police station or interrogation room.
Cf. Royer,
Moreover, Quartana had to be aware that the detention was only temporary and limited in scope. The officer told him that he was being temporarily detained for purposes of the investigation and that he was being transported to the accident scene, not a police station, to talk with the state trooper investigating the accident. At no time prior to taking the field sobriety test did any police officer communicate to Quartana, through either words or actions, that he was under
*451
arrest, or that the restraint of his liberty would be accompanied by some future interference with his freedom of movement.
See generally Terry,
By the Court. —Order affirmed.
Notes
See Terry v. Ohio,
968.24 Temporary questioning without arrest. After having identified himself or herself as a law enforcement officer, a law enforcement officer may stop a person in a public place for a reasonable period of time when the officer reasonably suspects *446 that such person is committing, is about to commit, or has committed a crime, and may demand the name and address of the person and an explanation of the person's conduct. Such detention and temporary questioning shall be conducted in the vicinity where the person was stopped.
For example, courts have held that the police may move a suspect for reasons of security and safety,
see Florida v. Royer,
We observe that the statute requires the stop of the person to be in a public place. An argument could be made that Quartana was first confronted and detained at his private residence and not a public place. This issue, however, was neither raised nor briefed. Further, we are unable to find any Wisconsin case discussing the applicability of § 968.24, Stats., when the detainee is in a private residence. The issue is reserved for some future case.
