OPINION
Clifford Joseph Warren appeals his conviction for driving while under the influence of alcohol and for driving with an alcohol concentration of .10 or more. We affirm.
FACTS
During the early morning hours of June 29, 1986, Deputy Engum investigated a domestic situation involving Clifford and JoAnn Warren who are currently separated. Shortly after arriving at JoAnn’s house located east of Detroit Lakes, Deputy Engum sent a radio dispatch that Clifford Warren had recently left the house in a Ford Mustang, possibly headed to White Earth where his mother lived. Engum also relayed JoAnn’s report that Clifford was intoxicated and she was worried about the safety of their child who had been taken by Clifford.
Deputy Gordon received the dispatch while southbound on Becker Road #21 from Richwood. Near the intersection of Roads #21 and #32, Gordon spotted a Ford Mustang heading north. He turned around and followed the Mustang for about half a mile. No driving violations were observed. Gordon stopped the vehicle which had an Indiana plate. After stopping the vehicle, Gordon identified the driver as Clifford Warren, whom he had personally known for many years.
Deputy Gordon observed that Clifford was under the influence and arrested him. Following the Minnesota Implied Consent Advisory, Clifford agreed to a breath test which produced a reading of .12.
ISSUE
Did the trial court err in finding the officer had an articulable suspicion for stopping the defendant’s vehicle?
ANALYSIS
In order that an investigatory stop comply with the Fourth Amendment, “the police officer must be able to point to specific and articulable facts which, taken together with rational inferences from those facts, reasonably warrant [the] intrusion.”
Terry v. Ohio,
Applying these rules, the information provided by JoAnn Warren to Deputy En-gum is reliable. Engum saw and spoke to JoAnn Warren and could judge the credibility and reliability of her statements. Deputy Engum then radioed the following information to Deputy Gordon:
*897 1. Clifford and JoAnn Warren had been involved in a domestic dispute.
2. Clifford Warren had taken the couple’s child and left the house in a Ford Mustang.
3. Clifford was possibly headed toward White Earth to his mother’s house.
4. Clifford Warren was reported to be intoxicated.
Gordon observed a Mustang heading north in the direction of White Earth and stopped the vehicle on the basis of the radioed information.
Warren does not dispute the information received by Deputy Gordon. Warren disputes the reasonable inferences gleaned from that information. He argues it is not reasonable to suspect the occupants of the Mustang of criminal activity and it is not reasonable to assume that the Mustang which Gordon observed was the Mustang referred to in the radio dispatch.
In reviewing the validity of investigative stops, the courts have balanced several factors, including: the reliability of the informant, the description of the vehicle, the reported location of the vehicle, the officer’s observation of traffic violations, and the time lag between the report of criminal activity and the stop. The reliability of the informant varies from an anonymous telephone tipster to a known citizen’s face-to-face meeting with police officers. The vehicle description varies from minimal to very detailed. The reported location of the vehicle varies from pinpoint accuracy to a general direction of travel. The observation of traffic violations ranges from none to several. The shorter the time lag, the more likely the stop is valid.
In
State v. Teigen,
In
Marben,
a stop based on an anonymous trucker’s report of a specific tailgating vehicle exiting a highway, in view of both the trucker and the officer, was upheld on the grounds that the proximity of the officer, trucker and exiting vehicle allowed the officer to verify the information’s reliability.
JoAnn Warren was a reliable informant. She had lived with Clifford. She recognized that he was drunk and was worried about the safety of their child. She reported a general description of the vehicle and its probable direction. The general direction indicated rural roads between Detroit Lakes and White Earth. Deputy Gordon spotted a Mustang at the intersection of two rural roads at around 2:30 a.m. A Becker County deputy sheriff for eight years, Gordon would be familiar with the roads between Detroit Lakes and White Earth and with the volume of traffic on rural roads at 2:30 a.m. The totality of the circumstances suggest that a Mustang appearing at this intersection, shortly after Deputy Gordon was alerted that such a vehicle could be in his vicinity, supports Gordon’s suspicion that the Mustang carried Clifford Warren. Based on this reasonable inference, Gordon’s stop of the Mustang was valid.
Warren argues that the totality of the circumstances including the rural setting *898 and traffic at that time of day is not found in the record and claims that the judge impermissibly inferred these facts. Although we believe the judge could have taken judicial notice of these facts, he was also entitled to infer these facts from the testimony of Deputy Gordon.
DECISION
The police officer had specific and articu-lable facts to support the reasonable suspicion necessary for a valid stop.
Affirmed.
