OPINION
The State of Texas appeals the trial court’s order granting appellee’s motion to suppress. Victor Manuel Vasquez is charged with unlawfully carrying a weapon. The sole point of error urges the trial court erred in granting the motion to suppress evidence derived from appellee’s detention and search.
Officer Mike Tindall testified that he and Officer Grasshoff were working a special “gang member identification” detail. They had information on the names and vehicles of known gang members. While driving through Pine Hollow Shopping Center, they observed a vehicle matching the description of a gang member vehicle pull up to a group of people identified as gang members. They followed the vehicle as it left the parking lot and proceeded southbound on Pine Hollow Drive. The officer candidly admitted they were following the vehicle for the purpose of “[ojbserving it and possibly, you know, stopping to possibly I.D. the two subjects.” Tindall testified: “We received information before we did the special operation that this vehicle was possibly earlier in the day was supposed to have been involved in a drive-by shooting at Washington Junior High.” *843 Tindall observed the driver pass through the intersection without stopping at the stop sign and without signalling the turn. The officers pursued the vehicle, activated the overhead lights, and asked the two occupants to exit the vehicle. Tindall stated that he felt there was a possible danger of guns being in the vehicle, because these were alleged gang members and the vehicle was possibly used in a drive-by shooting that day. A pat-down revealed the loaded .38 Rossi pistol stuck in the waistband of appellee’s pants and a box of bullets in the left front pants’ pocket. Vasquez did not contradict the officer’s version of the facts, but challenged the search on the basis that the officer could not identify the source of the information on the drive-by shooting, other than that “It came down through the P.D.”.
Regardless of their ulterior motives, the officers were justified in stopping the vehicle because they had observed two traffic violations.
See Hamilton v. State,
Appellee suggests that the officers arrested Vasquez by telling him to exit the vehicle. The officer did not testify that Vasquez was under arrest at that time. Vasquez cites no authority for the proposition that ordering a person out of a vehicle constitutes an arrest, and we decline to so hold. An arrest occurs when a person’s liberty of movement is restricted or restrained.
Amores v. State,
Circumstances short of probable cause for arrest may justify a brief detention.
Terry v. Ohio,
An anonymous tip by itself is not a sufficient reason to stop a vehicle.
Ebarb v. State,
“Once the valid traffic stop was made, officers at the scene were entitled to take sufficient measures to guarantee their safety. Police officers are allowed to order drivers out of their cars once they have been lawfully stopped for a traffic offense.”
Goodwin v. State,
While the Fourth Amendment is implicated regardless of the extent of the intrusion, we must consider the relative level of suspicion and the amount of intrusion involved. Just as a “stop” is less intrusive than an arrest, a “frisk” is less intrusive than a search for evidence.
Ebarb,
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
