delivered the opinion of the Court.
The police properly stopped a motor vehicle after confirming that its driver did not have a valid license. They later ran a check on the passenger in the National Crime Information Center (NCIC) database, which resulted in his arrest on outstanding warrants. Police found crack cocaine on him during a search incident to arrest.
We hold that at the time of the stop, the passenger, like the driver, was seized under the federal and state constitutions. We also hold that police do not need reasonable suspicion before they may access the NCIC database. Because the decision to check the NCIC database was within the scope of the traffic stop and did not unreasonably prolong the stop, there was no basis to suppress the evidence found.
We therefore reverse the judgment of the Appellate Division and reinstate defendant’s conviction and sentence.
I.
Around midnight on November 11, 2003, Sherma Moore was driving a car registered to Therron Carmichael. Defendant Sulai-man Anwar Sloane, who is Carmichael’s nephew, was a passenger in the car. Officer Muzyka of the Carteret Police Department spotted Moore driving. From a prior incident, the officer thought Moore’s license was suspended. The officer positively identified Moore from his patrol car, called headquarters to confirm her license was suspended, and then activated his overhead lights.
Moore pulled into a parking spot across from Carmichael’s residence. According to Officer Muzyka, both Moore and Sloane quickly jumped out of the car and approached the officer. Out of a concern for his own safety, the officer ordered Moore
According to the officer, as he led Moore away from the vehicle, Sloane asked for the car keys to take to his uncle. The officer recalled that Moore said she did not want Sloane to have the keys. Before surrendering the keys to Sloane, the officer wanted to confirm that he was a licensed driver, in case he chose to drive away. In response to questioning, Sloane advised he did not have his driver’s license with him but offered his name, date of birth, and social security number. Officer Muzyka entered this informa tion into the motor vehicle database and learned that Sloane had a suspended license.
Either Officer Muzyka or Officer Simback — who was also at the scene and heard Sloane identify himself — ran Sloane’s name through the NCIC database. (The record is unclear about who actually performed the check, but that factual issue is not significant.) There is no evidence that the NCIC check materially prolonged the length of the stop. The database revealed a parole violation and two outstanding warrants. Based on that information, Officer Muzyka arrested Sloane. In a search incident to arrest at police headquarters, police found crack cocaine in Sloane’s shoe.
Sloane’s account of events differed from the officer’s in certain respects. The motion judge credited Officer Muzyka’s testimony after a suppression hearing, and we accordingly rely on that testimony in reciting the applicable facts.
A Middlesex County grand jury indicted Sloane for third-degree possession of a controlled dangerous substance (CDS) (N.J.S.A. 2C:35-10a(l)), third-degree possession of CDS with intent to distribute (.N.J.S.A. 2C:35-5a(l), -5b(3)), third-degree possession of CDS with intent to distribute on or near school property (N.J.S.A. 2C:35-7), and second-degree possession of CDS with intent to distribute on or near a public park (N.J.S.A. 2C:35-7.1).
Sloane filed a motion to suppress the drugs found on him. After a pre-trial hearing at which Officer Muzyka and Sloane testified, the court denied the motion. The court ruled that the initial stop of the vehicle was valid and that Officer Muzyka had the right to order Sloane back into the car for the officer’s safety. Once Sloane asked for the keys, the court concluded, the police had an obligation to inquire further to insure it would be appropriate to give Sloane the keys.
Sloane pled guilty to third-degree possession of CDS, pursuant to a plea agreement. The court sentenced him to three years’ imprisonment with no period of parole ineligibility, to run concurrently with a sentence for a violation of parole.
Sloane appealed. In an unpublished opinion, the Appellate Division reversed the denial of his motion to suppress, vacated the judgment of conviction, and remanded for further proceedings. First, the panel ruled that Sloane was seized under the Fourth Amendment when the police validly stopped Moore. The panel reasoned that passengers usually have no means of leaving the scene and are thus subject to the same temporary detention as the driver of a detained vehicle. Next, the panel found no error in the officer ordering Sloane back into the car as a safety precaution and then verifying whether Sloane had a valid driver’s license before handing him the car keys.
However, the panel concluded that “once defendant gave his name, along with his correct birth date and social security number,
This Court granted the State’s petition for certification. 188
N.J.
490,
II.
The State contends that the Appellate Division committed two errors in suppressing the crack cocaine found on Sloane. First, the State asserts that Sloane, as a passenger, was not seized when police stopped the car and investigated Moore, the driver. The State submits that Sloane was free to leave during the car stop. Second, the State argues that accessing public records maintained in the NCIC database does not implicate the Fourth Amendment unless that check unreasonably prolongs a stop. As a result, police do not need reasonable and articulable suspicion to access the NCIC database.
Sloane maintains that the Appellate Division properly suppressed the evidence. He argues that he was seized because a reasonable person in his position would not have felt free to walk away from the police encounter, particularly once the officer ordered him back to the car. Sloane also submits that his detention should have ended when the police discovered that he had a suspended license. According to Sloane, the police needed (and lacked) reasonable and articulable suspicion to expand their inquiry and conduct an NCIC check.
We turn first to whether Sloane was seized by virtue of being a passenger in a car stopped by the police.
III.
The Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article 1, paragraph 7 of the New Jersey Constitution protect against unreasonable searches and seizures. A seizure occurs if, “in view of all of the circumstances surrounding the incident, a reasonable person would have believed that he [or she] was not free to leave.”
State v. Stovall,
170
N.J.
346, 355,
Temporary detention during an investigatory traffic stop, even if brief and limited, constitutes a “seizure” of “persons.”
State v. Dickey,
152
N.J.
468, 475,
The United States Supreme Court recently addressed this precise issue under
Defendant Brendlin was a passenger in a car stopped by the police.
Id.
at -, 127
S.Ct.
at 2404,
As the starting point for its analysis, the United States Supreme Court asked “whether a reasonable person in Brendlin’s position when the car stopped would have believed himself free ‘to terminate the encounter’ between the police and himself.”
Id.
at -, 127
S.Ct.
at 2406,
In addition, as a practical matter, passengers in a car stopped for a traffic violation usually have no alternative means of transportation and are thus subject to the same temporary stop.
State v. Hickman,
335
N.J.Super.
623, 634,
All of those reasons lead to the conclusion that when a police officer conducts a traffic stop of a private vehicle, the passenger as well as the driver are seized under both the federal and state constitutions. That holding is consistent with the majority of state court rulings on the issue.
See State v. Bowers,
334
Ark.
447, 976
S.W.2d
379, 380-82 (1998);
State v. Haworth,
106
Idaho
405,
That determination does not end our inquiry because the ultimate standard in evaluating a seizure is “reasonableness.”
See Cady v. Dombrowski,
413
U.S.
433, 439, 93
S.Ct.
2523,
Sloane concedes that the traffic stop of Moore was reasonable. Officer Muzyka stopped Moore’s car after confirming that she was driving on a suspended license. Because the car stop was lawful, detaining Sloane at that moment was also valid.
When Sloane and Moore jumped out of the car and approached the officer, he ordered them back into the car. The officer’s concerns for his own safety justified that reasonable command.
See State v. Diloreto,
180
N.J.
264, 276,
Likewise, after Sloane asked for the keys to the car, it was reasonable for the officer to ask Sloane for identification to insure that the car would be driven by a properly licensed driver.
See State v. Pegeese,
351
N.J.Super.
25, 31-32,
Up to this point, we find nothing inappropriate in the conduct of the police. We turn next to whether the check of the NCIC database violated Sloane’s constitutional rights. We start with a review of the NCIC system.
IV.
A.
The National Crime Information Center is a computerized database of criminal justice information available to law enforcement agencies nationwide. It was designed to help law enforcement locate fugitives and stolen property. As such, the national index includes records on wanted persons and information on stolen property, including vehicles. Today it also contains information on missing persons, unidentified persons, people believed to pose a threat to the President, foreign fugitives, and related areas. Crim. Justice Info. Servs. Div., U.S. Dep’t of Justice, National Crime Information Center: An Overview (2005), http:// www.fbi.gov/filelink.html?file=/hq/ejisd/ncie_brochure.pdf. The network also includes electronic transmission of mugshots, photographs, and fingerprints. CJIS Division Homepage, NCIC, http:// www.fbi.gov/hq/cjisd/ncie.htm (last visited Jan. 25, 2008).
Congress first authorized the Attorney General to collect that information in 1966.
See
28
U.S.C. A.
§ 534. By 2003, NCIC contained more than fifty-two million records.
The FBI’s National Crime Information Center: Hearing before the Subcomm. on Immigration, Border Security, and Citizenship of the S. Comm, on the Judiciary,
108th Cong. (2003) (statement
NCIC is available to more than 90,000 local law enforcement and criminal justice agencies twenty-four hours a day, 365 days a year. FBI, NCIC Turns 40: FBI Technology Saving Lives (Jan. 29, 2007), http://www.fbi.gov/page2/jan07/ncie012907.htm. Those agencies regularly access the database. In 2007, there were more than 1.8 billion NCIC queries, with an average of more than five million each day. See 40 Years of NCIC (Jan. 24, 2007), http:// www.fbi.gov/pressrel/pressrel07/ncic0121f07.htm.
Underlying those transactions is a concern for the safety of police officers, who are at risk when they approach individuals during a traffic stop.
See United States v. Finke,
85
F.
3d 1275, 1280-81 (7th Cir.1996) (finding that concerns for officer safety supported criminal history check during traffic stop). The tragic reality is that “a significant percentage of murders of police officers occurs when the officers are making traffic stops.”
Pennsylvania v. Mimms,
434
U.S.
106, 110, 98
S.Ct.
330, 333,
B.
To what extent does accessing the NCIC database implicate federal and state constitutional concerns? As the Supreme Court has explained, “[t]he touchstone of Fourth Amendment analysis is whether a person has ‘a constitutionally protected reasonable expectation of privacy.’ ”
California v. Ciraolo,
476
U.S.
207, 211, 106
S.Ct.
1809, 1811,
While an individual may wish to conceal an outstanding warrant, society takes a very different view. As this Court previously stated in
Doe v. Poritz,
142
N.J.
1, 28 n. 8,
In a related context, this Court has held that law enforcement may conduct random checks of a car’s license plate number using a mobile data terminal (MDT).
1
In
Donis,
the Court found that “[t]he State has a vital and compelling interest in maintaining highway safety by ensuring that only qualified drivers operate motor vehicles and that motor vehicles are in a safe condition” and that “[e]very operator of a motor vehicle must expect that the State, in enforcing its regulations, will intrude to some extent upon that operator’s privacy.” 157
N.J.
at 51-52,
Applying those principles, we conclude that an NCIC check is not a search under the federal or state constitutions. Critical to our analysis is the fact that the NCIC database is comprised of matters of public record.
See Willan v. Columbia County,
C.
Are there other constitutional concerns when police access the NCIC database during a traffic stop? That question turns on the reasonableness of the detention following a lawful traffic stop in two interconnected respects. First, was the detention “reasonably related in scope to the circumstances which justified the interference in the first place”? See
Dickey, supra,
152
N.J.
at 476,
There is no “ ‘litmus paper test’ ” for determining whether “ ‘a seizure exceeds the bounds of an investigative stop.’ ”
Dickey, supra,
152
N.J.
at 476,
Many jurisdictions have found that running an NCIC cheek, in addition to a driver’s license check, is within the scope of a traffic stop and is permissible so long as it does not unreasonably extend the time of the stop.
See McRae, supra,
That rule has also been applied to NCIC checks of passengers when there was a basis for police to focus on the passenger.
See State v. Higgins,
In this case, there is no evidence in the record that the check of the NCIC database unreasonably prolonged the detention. It appears that the check was conducted simultaneously or nearly simultaneously with the check of Sloane’s license. That is not unusual in light of advances in technology. What once required
D.
Accordingly, the police did not need reasonable suspicion to check Sloane’s name in the NCIC database. Because accessing the NCIC database was within the scope of the traffic stop and did not unreasonably prolong it, we hold that the police acted within the boundaries of the federal and state constitutions throughout the traffic stop.
V.
For the reasons set forth above, we affirm the Appellate Division’s finding that a passenger is seized when police stop the car’s driver. However, we reverse the judgment of the Appellate Division that defendant’s motion to suppress should have been granted. As a result, we reinstate defendant’s conviction and sentence.
Opposed — None.
Notes
At the time the Court announced that holding, MDTs were linked to the computerized databases of the New Jersey Division of Motor Vehicles (DMV) (now the Motor Vehicle Commission). A random license plate look-up would reveal information including the registration status of the vehicle, the registered owner's license status, whether the vehicle had been reported stolen, the vehicle identification number, the year, make, model and color of the vehicle, and the name, address, social security number, date of birth, weight, height, and eye color of the registered owner.
Donis, supra,
157
N.J.
at 46-47,
The Court based its decision on New Jersey's Right to Know Law,
N.J.S.A.
47:1A-1 to -4 (amended and repealed in part 2001), and clarifications later enacted in
NJ.S.A.
39:2-3.3 and -3.4. Balancing the State’s interests and the desire to protect motorists from unnecessary disclosure of personal information they had to supply to DMV, the Court directed that if the above information disclosed a basis for further police action, the officer could proceed to a second step and access " 'personal information' of the registered owner, including name, address, social security number, and if available, criminal record.”
Donis, supra,
157
NJ.
at 55,
