[¶ 1.] Ryan Eldon Quartier appeals the denial of his motion to suppress evidence obtained in an investigatory stop. We affirm.
I.
[¶ 2.] On a May evening in 2006, Sioux Falls narcotics officers were executing a search warrant to search Jose Navarro, his apartment, an unattached garage, and two vehicles. Detective Michael Walsh had been investigating Navarro for approximately six months. Walsh had substantial information that Navarro was distributing several pounds of crystal methamphetamine in the area.
[¶ 3.] Walsh and fellow narcotics officers requested assistance from Sioux Falls police officers. While waiting for Navarro’s vehicles to arrive at the premises, Walsh observed a red van, which was not listed on the warrant, stop outside Navarro’s residence around 8:00 p.m. The van idled on the street in front of the apartment. Walsh testified that the street was not “much of a through road,” and traffic was minimal that time of night. Walsh observed Navarro leave his apartment building and speak with the occupants of the van. Walsh did not see any physical objects exchanged between Navarro and the occupants. Approximately one half hour to an hour and a half 1 after the van left, however, it returned. Although Walsh did not personally witness the van’s second stop or visit 2 at the apartment, he *887 received the information from other members of the surveillance team at the scene.
[¶ 4.] Based upon the investigation of Navarro’s drug activity, the van’s two visits, and Navarro’s discussion with the occupants, Walsh believed that he had reasonable suspicion to stop the van. He therefore requested (through radio transmission) that the assisting Sioux Falls police officers stop the van. Officer Jeff Garden complied. 3
[¶ 5.] Although Navarro was not in the van, Quartier was a passenger. Garden asked Quartier for identification, and Quartier produced a South Dakota driver’s license. A check of Quartier’s license revealed that it was suspended. Quartier was placed under arrest for possession of a suspended license. A search of Quartier incident to his arrest produced a glass pipe, which tested positive for methamphetamine.
[¶ 6.] Quartier moved to suppress the evidence derived from the stop, asserting it was an unconstitutional search and seizure. Quartier argued that the van’s two visits at Navarro’s apartment did not constitute reasonable suspicion that criminal activity was afoot. The State argued that, under the totality of the circumstances, the two visits at the apartment under surveillance for current drug activity, together with the Navarro conversation on the first visit, created a reasonable suspicion for the stop. The State specifically relied on Walsh’s observation that drug activity happens quickly, and sometimes, in two stages. The State also relied on Walsh’s inference that, based upon his training and experience, the two visits together with the Navarro conversation created reasonable suspicion.
[¶ 7.] Based on the totality of the evidence, including the officer’s observation and inference, the circuit court concluded that Walsh had reasonable suspicion for the stop. The court further concluded that Walsh’s reasonable suspicion was imputed to Garden, therefore justifying his stop of the van. 4
[¶ 8.] At the conclusion of a court trial, Quartier was found guilty of possession of a controlled substance in violation of SDCL 22-42-5 and possession of drug paraphernalia in violation of SDCL 22-42A-3. He was sentenced to five years in the state penitentiary, all of which was suspended. He now appeals.
II.
[¶ 9.] Our standard of reviewing warrantless searches and seizures is settled:
*888 [A]s a general matter determinations of reasonable suspicion ... should be reviewed de novo on appeal. Having said this, we hasten to point out that a reviewing court should take care both to review findings of historical fact only for clear error and to give due weight to inferences drawn from those facts by resident judges and local law enforcement officers.
State v. Hirning,
[¶ 10.] We have noted that “[a]rticulating a precise definition of reasonable suspicion is ‘not possible.’ ”
State v. Aaberg,
[¶ 11.] In finding that reasonable suspicion existed, the circuit court relied on
United States v. Buchannon,
[¶ 12.] Quartier argues, however, that the facts of this case are more similar to
United States v. Crawford,
[¶ 13.] The Crawford court held that the officer did not have reasonable suspicion to stop the car, stating, “[m]erely entering and leaving a multi-unit apartment complex where a known drug trafficker resides is not an objectively suspicious fact absent some link to the trafficker.” Id. at 683. As the court further observed, it could not be determined whether the defendant entered the suspect drug dealer’s apartment. Because there was no connection between the suspected drug dealer and the defendant, and because the defendant did nothing “that might link him to the suspect,” the Eighth Circuit suppressed. Id. at 682.
[¶ 14.] Although reaching different results under different facts,
Crawford
and
Buchannon
are informative because they both illustrate the same central point: some “link” or “connection” between a defendant and the suspected drug dealer is necessary to establish reasonable suspicion.
Crawford,
[¶ 15.] Like the defendant in
Crawford,
Quartier offers an alternative explanation for one of the van’s visits, an explanation lending itself to potential innocent conduct. Quartier postulates that the van’s first stop could have been innocent if “the driver of the van was lost and imposed on Navarro, who was standing outside his apartment, for directions to an address in the area.” Appellant’s Brief, p17. Quartier then argues that “Detective Walsh did not see suspicious activity sufficient to overcome [this] innocent explanation[.]” Id. p20. We rejected this type of individual factor/innocent conduct analysis in
State v. Kenyon,
holding that an officer is not required to consider and discard possible innocent explanations before he or she can reach a determination that reasonable suspicion exists.
[¶ 16.] Instead, the appropriate analysis requires an examination of the “totality of the circumstances” to see whether the officer has a “particularized
*890
and objective basis” for suspecting legal wrongdoing.
Kenyon,
[¶ 17.] In this case Walsh testified that based upon his training and experience, the cumulative information led him to the suspicion of drug activity: “the fact that [the van] showed up a second time ... is what sparked the interest in the van and because of my experience and training and seeing ... the short-term traffic and repeat traffic at a certain house and making contact with a certain person.” The circuit court, as the fact finder, considered Quar-tier’s arguments, but rejected them in favor of Walsh’s inference.
[¶ 18.] We see no reason to overrule this determination because, although “as a general matter determinations of reasonable suspicion ... are reviewed
de novo
on appeal,” a reviewing court “should take care ... to give due weight to inferences drawn from [historical] facts by resident judges and local law enforcement officers.”
Ornelas,
A trial judge views the facts of a particular case in light of the distinctive features and events of the community; likewise, a police officer views the facts through the lens of his [or her] police experience and expertise. The background facts provide a context for the historical facts, and when seen together yield inferences that deserve deference.
Id. See also Arvizu,
[¶ 19.] Giving due weight to the circuit court’s historical findings and to Walsh’s inferences, there is sufficient evidence to conclude that there was reasonable suspicion to stop the van. The police were conducting a surveillance of Navarro’s residence after a lengthy investigation had convinced a judge that probable cause existed to search the residence, garage, Navarro and his vehicles for ongoing drug distribution. Based upon the initial stop of the van at Navarro’s residence, the conversation between the occupants of the van and Navarro, the knowledge that Navarro was a large methamphetamine distributor, and the van’s return visit a short time later, there was a sufficient connection between Navarro and the van providing Walsh the reasonable suspicion necessary to perform an investigatory stop. Once Walsh reached that conclusion based on the totality of the circumstances, he was not required to consider and discard individual, possible innocent explanations for each of the van’s visits. He was entitled to ask Officer Garden to stop the vehicle to either confirm or discount the suspicion.
Herrboldt,
[¶ 20.] Affirmed.
Notes
. Quartier proposed a finding that it was one half hour. See infra, n2. The circuit court found it was an hour and a half.
. At oral argument before this Court, Quartier for the first time argued that the van's return was not a second "stop.” Rather, Quartier argued it was a mere "drive-by.” Quartier's questioning at the suppression hearing, his own proposed findings of fact, and his appellate briefing, however, reflect that neither Quartier nor the circuit court ever considered that the return of the van was a "drive-by” rather than a second stop or visit at Navarro’s apartment.
For example, at the suppression hearing, Quartier's counsel's cross-examination reflects that at that time he believed the return involved a "second stop.” Defense counsel asked Walsh:
Q: What information did you have about the second stop of the van?
A: I don't remember exactly. It either pulled into the driveway or pulled into the street. I don't recall if anybody got out or if anyone came out of the apartment building. The only thing that I recall for sure is that the second surveillance called up the license plate and I said, hey, that’s been here earlier and as for specific details, I don't remember exactly what was said.
Although Quartier's counsel, in argument before this Court, suggested that this answer is ambiguous, Quartier did not pursue what he now contends is an important distinction. Counsel never asked Detective Walsh or Officer Garden further details about the return, such as whether it was a mere "drive-by.” More importantly, in the proceedings before the circuit court, Quartier apparently did not believe this was a mere drive-by (and did not preserve this appellate argument) because he proposed no such finding of fact. On the contrary, in Quartier's proposed findings of fact, he described both encounters at Navarro's residence the same: "two short visits.” In Quartier's proposed finding of fact twelve, he proposed: "[biased upon [Walsh's] knowledge of Jose Navarro's drug activities and his belief that the nature of the red van’s two short visits within about one-half hour indicated the probability that the van’s occupants were engaged in drug purchases, Detective Walsh requested through a radio transmission that uniformed Officers conduct a stop of the red van after it left 4500 E. 16th St. #204." (Emphasis added.)
Thus, it is no surprise that, after hearing the evidence, the circuit court, found that the first and second encounters were the same. The court described them both as "short visits.” Finding of Fact # 5.
We finally note that Quartier has neither challenged this finding of historical fact on appeal nor raised the "drive-by” issue in his appellate briefing. In his brief, Quartier never *887 described the second visit to Navarro's residence a ''drive-by.” In the State's appellate brief, however, it described the return of the van at Navarro's apartment as a second "stop,” and Quartier filed no reply brief taking issue with the State's description. Under the foregoing circumstances, we decline to adopt Quartier's new argument of fact that has never been raised until oral argument before this Court.
. Officer Garden indicated that he believed Walsh told him the reason for the stop was that Navarro was inside the van. Walsh denied this was the reason he requested the stop, stating at no time did he think Navarro was in the van. This dispute is of no consequence because we ultimately agree with the circuit court's conclusion that Walsh had reasonable suspicion to stop the van.
. The State also argued that even if Walsh did not have reasonable suspicion, Garden was justified in stopping the van because he reasonably, although mistakenly, believed that Navarro — the subject of the search warrant— was inside the van. The circuit court agreed, concluding that Garden had an "objective, reasonable, and good faith belief that Navarro was in the van at the time of the stop, and therefore, the stop was valid.” Because we ultimately conclude that Walsh had reasonable suspicion to stop the van, we do not address this issue.
. At the suppression hearing, Quartier's counsel asked Walsh:
Q: Was the fact that the van was there on more than one occasion significant?
A: Yes, sir.
Q: Why would that be significant?
A: Well, it’s a — drug dealers and users will often make more than one short-term stop, especially if they are selling. In my experience, often drug dealers will purchase an amount of narcotics, go and sell it, go back and get more and sell it, and, essentially, that is how the money is made.
