Following a jury trial, Marvin Taylor was convicted of burglary and giving police a false name. He argues on appeal that the trial court erred by denying his motion to suppress physical and testimonial evidence stemming from the stop of a vehicle in which he was riding as a passenger, which he asserts was unconstitutional. Because we find that the officer had reasonable articulable suspicion to stop the vehicle, we affirm.
While the trial court’s findings as to disputed facts in a ruling on a motion to suppress will be reviewed to determine whether the ruling was clearly erroneous, where the evidence is uncontroverted and no question regarding the credibility of witnesses is presented, the trial court’s application of the law to undisputed facts is subject to de novo appellate review.
Lucas v. State,
As the officer was examining the shoeprint located on the outside of the apartment, he observed a vehicle occupied by two males turn off of the street running adjacent to the apartment complex onto a service road. There were no other persons or vehicles driving in the area. The vehicle drove along the service road, which ran between the burglarized apartment and the loading dock of a closed business, and continued to an unpaved gravel trail leading to a muddy, rutted area where construction equipment was kept. The vehicle passed within 30 feet of the officer, and the officer testified that when the occupants noticed him, they looked surprised — like “deer in headlights.” The driver then accelerated up a hill on the unpaved trail toward the construction area, turned the vehicle around and quickly drove back down the hill.
*482 The officer requested backup and stopped the vehicle. After Taylor, the passenger in the vehicle, gave the officer three false names, the officer requested that he exit the car. The officer noticed a backpack on the front floorboard that had been identified as one of the items taken from the apartment and, after the men denied ownership and consented to its search, the officer found that it contained electronic equipment that had also been taken from the apartment.
Taylor argues that the officer’s stop of the vehicle violated his rights under the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and, therefore, that all evidence obtained as a result of the stop should have been suppressed. We disagree.
An investigative stop that is made based upon a police officer’s reasonable suspicion that a person “is, or is about to be, engaged in criminal activity” does not violate the Fourth Amendment. (Citations and punctuation omitted.)
Rolfe v.
State,
To establish the necessary reasonable suspicion to make an investigative stop, the totality of the circumstances must show that the officer had specific and articulable facts which, taken together with rational inferences from those facts, provided a particularized and objective basis for suspecting the particular person stopped of criminal activity.
(Citation and punctuation omitted.)
Rolfe,
Here, the responding officer was investigating a burglary when he observed the vehicle in which Taylor was riding driving down a service road in the very early morning hours when no one else was in the area. The sole business on the service road was closed at that hour and the gravel path led only to a construction site, the type of which, the officer testified based upon his experience, was routinely subject to theft-related incidents. Both Taylor and the vehicle’s driver appeared startled when they noticed the officer’s presence and they immediately accelerated away and attempted to leave the scene. Finally, the officer testified that in his experience working with approximately 200 burglaries, burglary suspects are frequently discovered near the vicinity of the crime.
Taken together, the above factors were sufficient to give the officer a particularized and objective basis for suspecting that Taylor and the vehicle’s driver were or were about to be engaged in criminal activity. See
Rolfe,
Judgment affirmed.
