In this appeal, we are asked to consider once again the question of when an on-the-street inquiry by a police officer becomes a seizure of the inquiree under the Fourth Amend *94 ment to the United States Constitution. Although viewed by some as a quagmire of quibble, this area of the law, with all its niggling distinctions, lies at the heart of maintaining a free, just and ordered society. To that end, we willingly enter the maze of precedent that has developed around this issue in the hope of emerging with our common sense intact and our decisional law enhanced.
Appellant, Donald Glenn Trott, was convicted of second degree burglary after a bench trial on an agreed statement of facts in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County. He was subsequently sentenced to a term of ten years’ imprisonment, five years of which were suspended.
Before trial, appellant unsuccessfully moved to suppress the fruits of his crime and his statements to police on the ground that, when he was initially approached and questioned by a police officer about the equipment in his possession, he was in effect “seized” by that officer who, according to appellant, had no reasonable articulable suspicion that appellant was involved in criminal activity. Therefore, according to appellant, his “seizure” and subsequent arrest were in contravention of the Fourth Amendment. The denial of that motion by the circuit court forms the basis of this appeal.
BACKGROUND 1
At the hearing on appellant’s motion to suppress, testimony was presented that on February 19, 1999, at approximately 3:23 a.m., Anne Arundel County Police Officer Middleton was walking down a residential street, Bellerive Drive, when he ' heard a loud crash. At that time, he was in uniform and on duty.
*95 Moments later, he observed appellant pushing a woman’s bicycle with a “kid’s tote ... attached to the back” up Bellerive Drive. The street was well lit, and, as appellant approached, Officer Middleton could see that the tote contained a weed whacker, a snow blower, a large tire, and a tow hitch. At the suppression hearing, Officer Middleton testified:
I observed a subject walking up [Bellerive] 2 Drive pushing a female bicycle that had a caption [sic] on the back of the bicycle commonly carried two children [sic]. It was a double — they call it a kid’s tote that’s attached to the back of the bicycle. And loaded in the back in the kid’s tote, I observed a snow blower, a weed whacker and a large ... tire and capacity tow hitch[ ] that were loaded in the back of this tote. And there was a white male pushing the bicycle up the hill, and that’s when I first observed him. He was on the street pushing the bicycle with all these items in the back.
“[B]ecause it was 3:30 in the morning ...” and it “looked completely out of place,” Officer Middleton walked over to appellant, who was on the other side of the street. He asked appellant “what he was doing with the items and the bicycle.” In reply, appellant stated that, on the way home, his pick-up truck had broken down, and “he did not want to leave the materials in the back of the pick-up truck.” When he gave his name upon the officer’s request, Middleton immediately recognized it as the name of someone who “ha[d] been involved in numerous break-ins in the past.”
Officer Middleton then radioed for a back-up unit. While on the radio, he was advised by another officer to “be careful” because appellant “was wanted and to hold on to him, because he was going to run.”
As the field interview progressed, the officer, either knowing that appellant had no driver’s license or playing a hunch that he did not have one, commented on that fact. In response, appellant stated that his brother had been driving the *96 truck when it broke down. Worried that appellant might have overheard the radio transmissions and concerned that, appellant was growing more “nervous” and “jittery,” the officer placed appellant in handcuffs for, as he put it, “his and my safety.” Officer Middleton then ran a warrant check and learned that there was an outstanding warrant for appellant’s arrest. The officer placed appellant under arrest at approximately 3:35 a.m., twelve minutes after he had first approached appellant.
Departing from the record of the motion to suppress, 3 we note that the next day the police were contacted by a “Mr. Weber.” He advised the police that very early that morning he and his son had “heard a noise ... out back” but, seeing nothing, had gone back to bed. When they awoke later that day, they discovered that the “storage shed located toward the rear of [their] home” had been broken into and that, among the items stolen, was a woman’s bike, a weed whacker, a snow blower, and a “tot tote.” Upon arriving at the police station, they identified the items taken from appellant as the property that had been stolen from their storage shed.
At the conclusion of the suppression hearing, the circuit court denied appellant’s motion to suppress the items seized, finding that Officer Middleton’s initial stop of appellant was based upon a reasonable articulable suspicion that appellant was engaged in criminal activity. The court also denied appellant’s motion as to the statements he made to the officer, concluding that appellant had voluntarily made those statements to police.
DISCUSSION
I
Appellant contends that his “initial stop” by the police officer constituted a seizure and that the officer seized him *97 without a reasonable articulable suspicion of criminal activity and thereafter arrested him without probable cause. Therefore, appellant claims, the circuit court erred in failing to grant his motion to suppress. We disagree.
When the officer walked over to appellant and asked who he was and what he was doing — an encounter that appellant characterizes as the “initial stop” — no seizure occurred within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment. Even if one did, the officer had a reasonable articulable suspicion to make that “stop.” Moreover, the arrest that followed was supported by probable cause.
In reviewing a denial of a motion to suppress, we accept the findings of fact made by the circuit court, unless they are clearly erroneous.
See Riddick v. State,
The Fourth Amendment proscribes unreasonable searches and seizures, but not every encounter between a citizen and a police officer constitutes a “seizure.” As the Supreme Court observed in
Terry v. Ohio,
*98
Nor does police questioning transform such an encounter into a seizure. “Mere police questioning does not constitute a seizure. This is so even if the police lack any suspicion, reasonable or otherwise, that an individual has committed a crime or is involved in criminal activity, because the Fourth Amendment simply does not apply.”
Ferris v. State,
Such an encounter has been dubbed, for better or worse, an “accosting.” Unfortunately, the term itself, though no doubt intended to be a neutral description of actions taken by a police officer to trigger an encounter, connotes a confrontational and unwelcome act by the investigating officer and thereby begs the question whether the subject of the “accosting” was intimidated by the officer’s conduct. 4 The better and more neutral term, we believe, is “inquiry.” For the purposes of this opinion, however, we will use the terms interchangeably as we fear that the term “accosting” is too well rooted in the case law to be extirpated.
“Typically, an accosting occurs when police officers approach a citizen and ask for information, usually one’s name, address, date of birth, destination, point of origin, and con
*99
tents of luggage or vehicle.”
Reynolds v. State,
Virtually all such interviews conducted during the course of an officer’s duties are done for the purpose of gathering information to ferret out criminal offenses or to elicit from witnesses facts relative to a criminal event or an ongoing investigation. We certainly recognize an officer’s right— indeed, his or her responsibility — to conduct inquiries regarding criminal activity. Simply put, that is what they do.
Id.
Equally important is the role such inquiries play in crime prevention. Undoubtedly, the questions of a curious and street-wise police officer have ended more than one criminal enterprise before it was undertaken. Indeed, such inquiries are the heart and soul of good police work. Without them, “those who were innocent might be falsely accused, those who were guilty might wholly escape prosecution, and many crimes would go unsolved. In short, the security of all would be diminished.”
Schneckloth v. Bustamonte,
As this Court has previously observed, “ ‘[b]ecause an individual is free to leave during such an encounter, he [or she] is not “seized” within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment.’ ”
Reynolds,
We are not unmindful of the fact that few (and perhaps we are being generous with that estimate) ever avail themselves of the opportunity to leave or decline to answer questions. But there are a variety of reasons for that phenomenon, many of which do not necessarily involve fear of arrest or abuse at the hands of the police. In fact, the test reasonably “assumes that the citizen is aware of police duties to keep the peace and prevent crime, and that that ‘awareness, coupled with feelings of civic duty, moral obligation, or simply proper etiquette, will often lead a reasonable person to cooperate.’ ” 4 Wayne R. LaFave, Search and Seizure, A Treatise on the Fourth Amendment, § 9.3(a), at 100 n. 58 (3rd ed., 1996) (quoting
United States v. Tavolacci,
Moreover, “[wjhile most citizens will respond to a police request,” the Supreme Court observed in
Delgado,
“the fact that people do so, and do so without being told they are free not to respond, hardly eliminates the consensual nature of the response.”
Delgado,
In making that determination, we are to consider the totality of the circumstances surrounding the encounter.
See United States v. Mendenhall,
In
Mendenhall,
the Supreme Court gave the following “[ejxamples of circumstances that might indicate a seizure:” “the threatening presence of several [police] officers, the display of a weapon by an officer, some physical touching of the person of the citizen, or the use of language or tone of voice indicating that compliance with the officer’s request might be compelled.”
Mendenhall,
In a later case involving the pursuit by officers in a police car of a suspect on foot, the Court added several other factors for consideration: whether the police had (1) “activated a siren or flashers;” (2) commanded the individual to “halt”; (3) “displayed any weapons;” (4) “operated their car in an aggressive manner to block [the individual’s] course or otherwise
*102
control the direction or speed of his movement.”
Chesternut,
Citing
Mendenhall,
the Court of Appeals in
Ferris
stated that “the test to determine whether a particular encounter constitutes a seizure, or whether the encounter was simply a ‘consensual’ non-constitutional event is whether a reasonable person would have felt free to leave.”
Ferris,
If a reasonable person would have felt free to leave, no seizure occurred. Conversely, if a reasonable person would have felt compelled to stay, a seizure took place. The focus, then, is “whether a reasonable person would feel free to decline the officers’ requests or otherwise terminate the encounter.” [Florida v. Bostick,501 U.S. 429 , 436,111 S.Ct. 2382 ,115 L.Ed.2d 389 (1991) ]. The key inquiry has also been characterized as whether “the police conduct would ‘have communicated to a reasonable person that he was not at liberty to ignore the police presence and go about his business.’ ” Id. at 437[,111 S.Ct. 2382 ] (quoting Michigan v. Chesternut,486 U.S. 567 , 569,108 S.Ct. 1975 ,100 L.Ed.2d 565 (1988)).
Id.
at 375-76,
In support of his contention that Officer Middleton’s initial approach was not an accosting, but a seizure, unsupported by reasonable articulable suspicion, appellant relies principally on
Jones v. State,
In
Jones,
the Court of Appeals “conclude[d] that Jones was seized at the moment the officer commanded him to stop,”
id.
at 285,
The officer’s conduct was tantamount to a formal demand compelling the individual to comply and a reasonable person would not have felt free to ignore the officer’s command to stop. The officer was dressed in uniform and driving a marked patrol car. As Jones approached, the officer pulled his car to the side of the road, exited the vehicle, and stood in the street when he called out to Jones using one of three salutations — “Hey, could you come here” or “Hold on a minute” or “Hey, wait a minute.” It seems reasonable for Jones to feel constrained to stop. He was operating a bicycle on a public highway and it would be an offense under the Maryland Vehicle Law for him willfully to disobey any lawful order or direction of any police officer.
Id.
at 285,
Although appellant was stopped while using a bicycle during the early morning hours, the similarity of the instant case to Jones ends there. Moments before appellant came into view, Officer Middleton, while patrolling on foot, heard a loud crash in a quiet residential neighborhood. He then observed appellant pushing a woman’s bicycle up the street. Attached to the *104 rear of the bicycle was a children's tote that contained an odd and suspicious assortment of equipment — a snow blower, a weed whacker, a large tire and a tow hitch, just the sort of equipment one might find in a garage or storage shed. He later testified: “Well, my hair raised, because it was 3:30 in the morning, and the subject had all these items loaded in the back of the tote. It looked completely out of place.... ”
In contrast to
Jones,
although in uniform, Officer Middleton did not drive up in a police car; he was on foot when he approached appellant. Nor did he summon appellant or order him to stop as the investigating officer did in
Jones,
effectively compelling Jones to get off of his bike. Instead, he walked over to appellant and, without giving any commands or requiring any action from appellant, asked what he was doing and who he was. There is no evidence that his tone of voice was anything but conversational or that his behavior was threatening. Nor were the questions he asked unusual or inherently threatening or intimidating. They were routine questions, typical of any lawful accosting.
See Reynolds,
Moreover, unlike in
Jones,
had appellant chosen to ignore the questions posed by Officer Middleton, he would not have been in violation of a “lawful order or direction of any police officer,”
Jones,
*105
Finally, there was no evidence that Officer Middleton was armed or, if he was, that his weapon was visible. Presumably, the officer had a weapon, but in the early hours of a February morning, it is quite likely that it was not visible. But, even if it were, it is unlikely that the sight of a holstered weapon on a police officer would surprise or intimidate any citizen. We expect and even count on our police officers, in uniform or in plain clothes, to be armed. The more important question is whether, at any time during the encounter, the officer drew or pointed his weapon,
see In the Matter of T.T.C.,
In
Ferris v. State, supra,
as noted earlier, the Court of Appeals provided further guidance for ascertaining when an encounter between a civilian and the police becomes a seizure. In that case, Ferris was pulled over by a Maryland State Trooper for speeding. The trooper had clocked Ferris’s vehicle at ninety-two miles per hour in a sixty-five mile per hour zone. Inside the vehicle were Ferris and one front-seat passenger. When the trooper asked Ferris for his driver’s license and registration, he noticed that “Ferris’s ‘eyes were bloodshot and he did appear a little nervous, a little fidgety.’ ”
Ferris,
Standing behind the vehicle, the trooper asked Ferris if he had been smoking drugs before the traffic stop. He denied it at first, but when asked again by the trooper, Ferris admitted that he and his passenger had smoked a “joint” about three hours earlier. In response to further questioning by the trooper, Ferris admitted that his passenger possessed a small amount of marijuana. After the passenger turned over to the officers a small baggie containing marijuana and a search of the vehicle uncovered more marijuana, Ferris was arrested.
At the beginning of its analysis, the Court noted that the facts presented two distinct police stops: the initial traffic stop, which ended when a citation was issued to Ferris and his license and registration were returned, and the post-traffic stop detention, which began when the trooper subsequently requested that Ferris step behind the car to answer a few questions. The Court explained:
It is without dispute that the stop of Ferris by [the trooper] for exceeding the posted speed limit constituted a seizure for Fourth Amendment purposes, but that such a seizure was justified by the probable cause possessed by the trooper in having witnessed Ferris’s traffic violation. Indeed, Ferris does not contest the initial stop. The real issue lies in the actions taken by the officer after he had issued the speeding citation to [Ferris] and had returned his driver’s license and registration to him.
Id.
at 369,
Acknowledging that “the inquiry is a highly fact-specific one,” the Court summarized the factors that other courts have identified as “probative of whether a reasonable person would have felt free to leave,”
id.
at 377,
the time and place of the encounter, the number of officers present and whether they were uniformed, whether the police removed the person to a different location or isolated *107 him or her from others, whether the person was informed that he or she was free to leave, whether the police indicated that the person was suspected of a crime, whether the police retained the person’s documents, and whether the police exhibited threatening behavior or physical contact that would suggest to a reasonable person that he or she was not free to leave.
Id.
After considering the totality of the circumstances surrounding Ferris’s arrest, the Court concluded “that a reasonable person in Ferris’s position would not have believed that he was free to terminate the encounter with [the trooper] when the trooper asked him ‘if he would mind stepping to the back of his vehicle.’ ”
Id .
Indeed, such a person, the Court concluded, “would have reasonably believed he was neither free to leave the scene nor to ignore and disobey the police officer’s ‘requests.’ ”
Id.
at 378,
A host of factors gives rise to our determination that Trooper Smith’s prolonged encounter with Ferris was a seizure under the Fourth Amendment. First and foremost is the prior existence of the initial traffic seizure of Ferris. This pre-existing seizure enhanced the coercive nature of the situation and the efficacy of the other factors in pointing toward the restriction of Ferris’s liberty. The situation faced by Ferris was markedly different from that of a person passing by or approached by law enforcement officers on the street, in a public place, or inside the terminal of a common carrier. We find significant the following circumstances: the trooper never told Ferris that he was free to leave, the trooper’s “request” of Ferris to exit the vehicle seamlessly followed the pre-existing lawful detention, the trooper removed Ferris from his automobile, the trooper separated Ferris from the passenger, there were two uniformed law enforcement officers present, the police cruiser emergency flashers remained operative throughout the entire encounter, and it was 1:30 a.m. on a dark, rural interstate highway. Given the cumulative effect of these circum *108 stances, a reasonable person would not have felt free to terminate the encounter.
Id.
at 378-79,
In contrast to
Ferris,
no “lawful detention” preceded Officer Middleton’s encounter with appellant. Therefore, unlike
Ferris,
appellant’s cooperation cannot be attributed to a misimpression that the officer’s questions were all part of a lawful detention pursuant to a valid traffic stop. Nor were patrol cars with flashing lights or other uniformed officers present.
5
Officer Middleton was alone and on foot when he approached appellant. There is no evidence that his patrol car was visible or near the scene of the encounter. The encounter, moreover, did not occur on a “desolate, rural interstate highway,” but on a well lighted residential street.
Id.
at 383,
More important, appellant was never asked by Officer Middleton to stop or to change his location as Ferris was. The entire encounter took place at precisely the same spot. In
Ferris,
the Court of Appeals was particularly troubled by that aspect of the Ferris encounter. The Court asserted that the trooper “affirmatively sought to move Ferris from the relative comfort of his vehicle to a more coercive atmosphere,” between his car and the two patrol cars.
Id.
at 382,
Moreover, the failure of Officer Middleton to inform appellant that he was free to leave, plays a far less important role in the instant case than it did in Ferris. By not advising Ferris, at the conclusion of the traffic stop, that he had a right to leave, the police left him with the impression that the questions which followed were part of his continued detention. The Court observed:
The moment at which a traffic stop concludes is often a difficult legal question, not readily discernible by a layperson. It is not sound to categorically impute to all drivers the constructive knowledge as to the precise moment at which, objectively, an initially lawful traffic stop terminates, i.e., the time at which the driver may depart. The trooper’s immediate transition into the inquiry was so seamless that a reasonable motorist would not have believed that the initial, valid seizure had concluded.
Ferris,
Finally, there is no evidence that by word or deed the officer communicated to appellant that he could not leave. And as the Supreme Court stressed in
Ohio v. Robinette,
*110
The most recent case in which this issue was addressed by this Court is
Reynolds v. State,
While acknowledging that “ ‘a mere accosting’ ” provokes no constitutional inquiry, this Court stated in
Reynolds
that it was “persuaded from the totality of the circumstances that the accosting in
[Reynolds
] constituted a show of authority that would indicate to a reasonable person that compliance with the requests of the police was required.”
Id.
at 344,
In reaching that result, this Court relied upon the factors enunciated in
Ferns
and others for determining whether a seizure had occurred. In particular, we relied upon the length of the detention “without any further meaningful interchange between [Reynolds] and the officers,”
id.
at 338,
In the instant case, appellant was not singled out from a crowd, nor was he subjected to a detention “without any interchange” with Officer Middleton. In fact, there was no lapse in the “interchange” between appellant and Officer Middleton during their entire encounter. More important, he was not approached by the officer “without any apparent justification.” In fact, the officer, for reasons we are about to discuss, approached appellant because of a reasonable articulable suspicion that appellant was involved in criminal activity.
Moreover, in
Reynolds,
this Court observed that, “notwithstanding that the encounter occurred in the middle of the afternoon on a public street and sidewalk, that [Reynolds] was in the process of departing from that location is a circumstance which is inconsistent with his voluntary consent to remain there for any period of time.”
Id.
at 343,
As to the failure to advise appellant that he was free to leave, we note that this factor has been cited as a consideration principally in three situations: (1) where police have requested the subject’s consent to a search;
United States v. Washington,
Obviously, none of these circumstances exist in the case
sub judiee.
No request was made by the investigating officer in the instant case to search appellant nor did the officer request that he change his location. Moreover, appellant was not the subject of any pre-existing detention such as a traffic stop. In each of these three instances, a police advisement was arguably warranted. The right to decline a warrantless search of one’s person or property is a fundamental right. A request by police to accompany them to a more isolated or coercive setting is by its very nature suspect, unless of course the subject is advised he or she is free to go. And continued questioning by the police after a traffic stop has ended may warrant such an advisement because of the motorist’s likely confusion, as noted by the Court of Appeals in
Ferris,
over whether the questioning is a continuation of the traffic stop. Moreover, as if to underline why the unique circumstances of a post-traffic stop interrogation warrant a “free to go” advisement, the
Ferris
Court stressed that “[t]he situation faced by Ferris was markedly different from that of a person passing by or approached by law enforcement officers on the street.”
Ferris,
*113 In short, although giving such an advisement in an uncomplicated street encounter may establish its voluntariness, the absence of such an advisement does not cast doubt on the consensual quality of that encounter. Therefore, the failure of Officer Middleton to advise appellant of his right to leave before he asked him who he was and what he was doing with the suspicious assortment of items in his possession is of negligible importance in determining the voluntariness of that short and nonintrusive encounter.
The next consideration is whether Officer Middleton’s suspicion that appellant might be engaged in criminal activity when he approached him should play any role in assessing the voluntariness of that encounter. Suspicion of criminal activity has generally been deemed to be a consideration in cases where “police indicated to the person that she was suspected of a crime or was the specific target of police investigation.”
United States v. McCarthur,
Whatever suspicions Officer Middleton may have harbored, he never expressed them to appellant. As we stated earlier, our focus is not on what the officer thought but on what he did. In that regard, we note that the only action taken by the officer was to ask appellant two questions: who was he and what was he doing. These two nonthreatening questions were ostensibly as consistent with an interest in helping appellant as they were with a suspicion of wrongdoing. We therefore accord whatever suspicions the officer might have harbored at the time he approached appellant no weight or even relevance in our analysis.
*114 In addition, we should approach with caution the notion that the status of an individual, that is, whether he is under suspicion or not, be given significant weight. To do so, would provide those suspected of a crime with Fourth Amendment protection while denying it to those who are not. As at least one legal authority has noted:
[I]t is not correct to say that “Fourth Amendment rights are implicated” whenever “the individual is stopped or detained because the officer suspects he may be personally involved in some criminal activity,” but not when “the officer acts for other proper reasons.” This is certainly in error to the extent that it would remove the protections of the Fourth Amendment from those who do not happen to be suspected of criminal activity.
4 Wayne R. LaFave, Search and Seizure, A Treatise on the Fourth Amendment, § 9.3(a), at 106 (3rd ed.1996) (footnotes omitted).
Moreover, if suspicion is a determinative factor, then we are compelled to conclude that the police may accost someone if they have a reasonable articulable suspicion or if they have no suspicion, but not if they have only a slight suspicion of criminal activity. Such exquisite calibrations are best suited to the tightly controlled conditions of a laboratory, not the often messy realm of human affairs.
In sum, the instant case is clearly distinguishable from Jones, Ferris, and Reynolds. Unlike Jones, it did not involve a “command to stop” which, if disobeyed, constituted an offense under the Maryland Vehicle Law. Unlike Ferris, it did not involve a pre-existing detention, an attempt by police to isolate the subject, the presence of two uniformed 6 police *115 officers and two patrol cars with flashing lights, or a “desolate, rural” setting. Unlike Reynolds, it did not involve a detention “without any further meaningful interchange between” the subject and the police, “the lack of any apparent justification for [the] inquiry,” “the act of ... singling out [the subject],” an intentional interference with the subject’s clear intention to leave the area, or uniformed police officers alighting from a marked patrol car. In short, the case sub judice presents a classic consensual encounter: after hearing a loud noise, a lone police officer approached on foot an individual who was transporting a suspicious and incongruous load of equipment on a residential street at 3:30 a.m., who might or might not have had something to do with that noise. He did not interfere with the individual in any way except to ask him who he was and what he was doing. The individual gave no sign of wishing to avoid or discontinue the encounter and, without hesitation, answered the officer’s questions. Unfortunately for him, the officer was familiar with his name and reputation. The encounter was patently consensual. To rule otherwise simply because the officer was in uniform and may have harbored some suspicions regarding what appellant was up to is to prohibit routine police inquiries in all but a narrow set of circumstances.
Moreover, it would lead to absurd results. Let’s assume that suspicions of a uniformed and presumably armed police officer are aroused when he sees an individual involved in what could be criminal activity in the early hours of a winter’s morning, as we have here. To ask a few clarifying questions of that individual, must he strip off his uniform, toss his gun in the bushes, and approach the individual in his underwear to ensure that his inquiry will not be deemed by a reviewing court an unlawful seizure? A contrary ruling by this Court could leave the officer with the choice of either performing his duty ungarbed and unprotected or not performing it at all.
II
Even if we assume that the initial encounter between Officer Middleton and appellant ripened into a seizure, that
*116
seizure was supported by a reasonable articulable suspicion and therefore was a lawful stop under
Terry v. Ohio,
In
Terry,
the Supreme Court held that police officers may stop persons to investigate possible criminal activity.
Id.
at 22,
In
Alabama v. White,
Reasonable suspicion is a less demanding standard than probable cause not only in the sense that reasonable suspicion can be established with information that is different in quantity or content than that required to establish probable cause, but also in the sense that reasonable suspicion can arise from information that is less reliable than that required to show probable cause.
Id.
at 330,
In the instant case, during the early hours of a February morning, Officer Middleton heard a loud noise and then, moments later, observed appellant pushing a woman’s bicycle along the street. Attached to the rear of that bicycle was a children’s tote loaded with a snow blower, a weed whacker, and a five thousand pound capacity tow hitch. Based upon the loud noise, the time of day, the possession by appellant of a woman’s bicycle with a children’s tote attached, and the incongruous combination of items in the tote, the investigating officer had a reasonable articulable suspicion to stop appellant.
Furthermore, after learning appellant’s identity, noting the changes in appellant’s story and knowing his reputation for criminal activity, the officer had a reasonable articulable suspicion to detain appellant briefly while he continued his investigation. The stop lasted no longer than necessary for the officer to confirm his suspicions. Minutes after initiating the encounter, Officer Middleton, upon learning that there was an outstanding warrant for appellant’s arrest, placed appellant under arrest.
*118 III
Appellant contends that even if the stop was justified, his handcuffing by Officer Middleton transformed that stop into an “arrest.” That arrest was illegal, appellant claims, because the officer did not have, at that time, probable cause to arrest him.
We disagree for three reasons: First, the handcuffing of appellant was justifiable as a protective and flight preventive measure pursuant to a lawful stop and did not necessarily transform that stop into an arrest. Second, even if it did, the officer had probable cause, at that time, to arrest appellant. And third, even if the officer lacked probable cause to arrest appellant at the moment he handcuffed him, he had probable cause to do so a few moments later when he received a teletype confirming that there was an outstanding warrant for appellant’s arrest. Since no evidence was obtained during the very brief interval between the handcuffing and the teletype there is nothing to suppress on the ground that the handcuffing was an unlawful arrest.
In conducting an investigative stop, a police officer may use “physical force” as long as it is reasonable.
Terry,
Indeed, handcuffing does not necessarily transform a “stop” into an “arrest,” as we acknowledged in
Farrow v. State,
*120
And there is considerable support among the state courts for the proposition that handcuffing a suspect does not necessarily transform a
Terry
detention into a full blown arrest.
Hicks v. United States,
We find that, under the circumstances of this case, Officer Middleton’s decision to handcuff appellant was a reasonable exercise of police powers during a lawful investigative stop. After hearing a loud crash in a residential neighborhood at 3:30 in the morning, and shortly thereafter observing appellant in possession of an incongruous and suspicious assortment of equipment, the officer approached appellant. As soon as appellant gave his name, the officer knew he was dealing with someone known to be involved in “break-ins.” When appel *121 lant changed his story and the officer was warned over the radio that he was wanted and would “run,” his suspicions that flight was imminent grew. Fearing that appellant had heard the radio transmission and growing apprehensive as appellant became increasingly “nervous” and “jittery,” the officer, who was alone and on foot, handcuffed appellant. His only other alternative would have been to pull his gun and that might have turned an investigative stop into a lethal encounter. Given the hour, the fact that Officer Middleton was alone, the officer’s suspicions that appellant had just committed a crime (burglary), the presence of potential weapons within appellant’s reach (the equipment in the tote), and the growing risk that appellant might flee, we find Officer Middleton’s conduct was reasonable and a proper part of his investigative stop.
This is not to suggest that every time a police officer handcuffs a suspect that that restraint is not an arrest. In fact, in most instances, placing a suspect in handcuffs does amount to an arrest, which must then be supported by probable cause.
See, e.g., In re David S.,
In any event, at the time Officer Middleton placed appellant in handcuffs, as we stated earlier, he did have probable cause to arrest appellant. Probable cause is defined as the “facts and circumstances within the officer’s knowledge that are sufficient to warrant a prudent person, or one of reasonable caution, in believing, in the circumstances shown,
*122
that the suspect has committed, is committing, or is about to commit an offense.”
Michigan v. DeFillippo,
We need not recite once again, however, the facts and circumstances of appellant’s detention by Officer Middleton in concluding that the officer had probable cause to arrest appellant at .the time he handcuffed him. Suffice it to say that as previously outlined by this opinion there was more than sufficient evidence for a reasonably prudent person to believe that appellant had committed a crime.
Finally, as we previously stated, even if the handcuffing of appellant constituted an unlawful arrest, it did not result in the seizure of any evidence. Moreover, within minutes of the handcuffing, a warrant check performed by the officer confirmed the existence of an outstanding warrant for appellant’s arrest, providing sufficient probable cause to transform the handcuffing into a lawful arrest.
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED.
COSTS TO BE PAID BY APPELLANT.
Notes
. As appellant is only challenging the denial of his motion to suppress, we shall advert only to the testimony taken at the hearing on that motion unless otherwise indicated.
See Trusty v. State,
. Bellerive Drive was mistakenly identified as “Belarey Drive” in the transcript of the suppression hearing.
. The facts contained in this paragraph were taken from the agreed statement of facts read into the record at appellant's trial and were not before the suppression court. We include them only to present a complete picture of the circumstances of this case.
. In Reynolds v. State, this Court used the following dictionary definition to describe “accosting:”
to approach and speak to; speak to without having first been spoken to; to confront, usu[ally] in a somewhat challenging or defensive way; to address abruptly (as in a chance meeting) and usu[ally] with a certain degree of impetuosity or boldness;....
Reynolds v. State,
. In
Mendenhall,
the Supreme Court cited the “threatening” presence of police officers, not the mere presence of such officers, as a factor in determining the coercive nature of the encounter. The difference lies in whether the officers are simply present or being used to intimidate the subject or create a restraint on his freedom of movement.
See United States v. Berry,
. Although the fact that police are in uniform has been mentioned by this Court and others as a factor, we believe that in most instances it should be accorded little weight. There is no evidence that an identifying uniform is more intimidating than an oral identification accompanied by flashing a badge. Furthermore, unless engaged in criminal activity, most members of the public would rather be approached on a vacant street in the middle of the night by an individual wearing a police uniform, as occurred here, than one who is not.
