Jeffrey A. Schmutz (“Defendant”) appeals his conviction for driving while intoxicated in violation of § 577.010, RSMo *878 (2000). 1 Defendant alleges the trial court committed reversible error when it overruled his motion to suppress and admitted the evidence at trial over Defendant’s objections. Defendant claims such evidence should have been excluded at trial because the police officer had no reasonable suspicion to stop Defendant’s vehicle. We agree. We reverse.
Because Defendant filed a motion to suppress and properly objected to the admission of the evidence at trial, the appellate court examines the record made at the suppression hearing as well as the trial record.
State v. Deck,
In large measure, the facts of this case are not in dispute. On February 23, 2001, officer David Fajen (“Fajen”) of the Warsaw, Missouri, police department was on patrol around 12:30 a.m. when he witnessed a white, Chevrolet pickup truck pull into the Eastgate Shopping Center. The truck pulled into the east side of the center, “then turned around and backed” into a parking space by the building, and the lights were turned off. Fajen began “watching the truck to see if there was any crime occurring or about to occur.” None of the businesses in the shopping center were open at this time of night, but the front of the center was well illuminated. The illumination of the east side of the center (where the truck was parked) was described by Fajen as “[y]ou can see visible. It’s not dark but it’s not, you know, it’s not — I couldn’t read under it I don’t think.” All of the entrances into the center were located at either the back or the front.
Fajen testified at trial that he watched the vehicle for approximately “two or three minutes,” but at the suppression hearing he claimed he only watched it for “15, 20 seconds.” No one exited the truck. Fajen claimed, “if there was going to be a crime I didn’t know if they’d see me there. So I wanted to kind of get in a less-conspicuous location.” Fajen changed his position which took “[p]robably 15 to 20 seconds.”
From his new location, Fajen could see one person sitting in the driver’s seat of the truck. Fajen continued his surveillance for approximately five minutes. From the time the truck parked by the building until it exited the lot, Fajen saw no one exit the truck, nor did the vehicle move. At this point, “the truck turned its lights on and left the parking lot in a little bit of a hurry.” The truck was not speeding or violating any traffic laws. Fajen admitted that the truck did nothing “unusual” at this time, but claimed the speed “was just a little, I don’t know, excessive, maybe.”
Fajen followed the truck and pulled it over as it turned onto an exit ramp for the highway. Fajen stated his sole reason for the stop was as follows: “I wanted to identify him, find out what he was doing in the parking lot at that hour, and at least to get a name in case a crime had been committed.” 2 Fajen approached the truck and asked for the driver’s license and proof of insurance. Fajen also asked the *879 driver what he was doing in the parking lot, and Defendant responded that he was waiting for his girlfriend. At this point, Fajen “could detect an odor of intoxicants coming from inside” the truck and asked Defendant to submit to a portable breathalyzer test as well as field sobriety tests. Defendant was later placed under arrest for driving while intoxicated.
Defendant alleged Fajen lacked reasonable suspicion to conduct a
Terry
stop of his vehicle on the ramp.
3
As such, prior to trial, Defendant sought to suppress all “statements and evidence” collected as a result of the traffic stop pursuant to the fruits of the poisonous tree doctrine.
See Wong Sun v. United States,
The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution preserves the right of citizens to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures.
Deck,
One such recognized exception is the aforementioned
Terry
stop.
Id.
at 916[9]. “[I]n justifying the particular intrusion the police officer must be able to point to specific and articulable facts which, taken together with rational inferences from those facts, reasonably warrant that intrusion.”
Terry,
The conclusion of whether the facts and reasonable inferences amount to reasonable suspicion is to be determined by reference to the totality of the circumstances.
Deck,
*880
No exact formula exists to define what constitutes reasonable suspicion. Each case must be analyzed on its own facts. Even so, the Supreme Court in
Brown v. Texas,
The Court found that the police officer’s testimony that the activity “looked suspicious” was insufficient because he could point to no facts supporting that conclusion.
Id.,
Fajen testified he was “suspicious” because the vehicle drove onto the lot and parked at 12:30 a.m., but acknowledged he did not “see the truck violate any traffic laws or do anything unusual at that time.” Although all business establishments in the area were closed, the truck was parked on the east side of the building where no entrances were located. Defendant remained in the truck and did nothing to arouse Fajen’s suspicion. The lot was well-illuminated and in full view of northbound traffic on Main Street. There was no evidence that this was a high-crime area, or a location of suspected drug trafficking, or that the area businesses were frequently burglarized. Apparently, Fajen did not observe activity that led him to believe Defendant or any other person was “casing” the stores for a future robbery, as occurred in Terry. We say “apparently,” because Fajen did not articulate that as a reason for stopping Defendant. Fajen testified that as the truck left the parking lot, it did so in a “hurry,” but not in a manner that violated traffic laws or ordinances.
As occurred in
Brown,
the record here shows innocent activity coupled with one “suspicious” factor. In
Brown,
the factor was the presence of individuals in a high crime area, whereas here, the factor was presence in an area where businesses were closed. In so stating, we note that the time of day is only a marginal consideration in the reasonable suspicion analysis.
U.S. v. Cortez, 449 U.S.
411, 420-21,
In sum, Fajen wholly failed to point to any specific and articulable facts giving rise to reasonable suspicion. He conceded he found nothing “suspicious about [the truck] being parked there at that time of night[]” and his sole reason for stopping Defendant was “to get a name in case” a crime had been committed. We can only conclude that Fajen was acting upon the type of inarticulate “hunch” that the
Terry
*881
court specifically rejected as a basis for reasonable suspicion.
Support for this conclusion is found in cases from other jurisdictions with analogous facts.
4
In
Klare v. State,
In
State v. Larson,
In
State v. Epperson,
Based upon the foregoing, we hold that Fajen lacked reasonable suspicion to conduct a
Terry
stop of Defendant. Fajen had a “hunch” that clearly did not justify the
Terry
stop. As such, all evidence obtained in violation thereof must be excluded; consequently, the trial court erred in overruling the motion to suppress and admitting the evidence at trial.
Martin,
The judgment of conviction and sentence is hereby reversed, and Defendant is ordered discharged from any incarceration related to this charge.
Notes
. All statutory references are to RSMo (2000), unless otherwise indicated.
. Fajen received no information that a crime had been committed at the shopping center.
. The term
"Terry
stop" originates from the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in
Terry v. Ohio,
. Although cases from other states are not binding on this court, they are persuasive when they make a Fourth Amendment analysis consistent with federal precedents that Missouri courts follow. See State v. Werner, 9 S.W.3d 590, 595[5] (Mo.banc 2000).
