OPINION
Craig Tumblin appeals his conviction for carrying a handgun without a license, 1 as a Class A misdemeanor. He raises several issues on review; however, because we find it dispositive, we address only one issue:
Whether the investigatory stop of Tumblin by the police was reasonable under the circumstances.
We reverse.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On December 14, 1994, at approximately 1:28 a.m., Matthew Elam of the Indianapolis Police Department was driving in a marked squad car while on routine patrol. Officer Elam observed Tumblin and an unidentified male walking westbound on the sidewalk of Langley Avenue. When the two men saw Officer Elam's vehicle they turned and walked eastbound on Langley. In response to their actions, Officer Elam pulled up to Tumblin and his companion and asked them to put their hands on his vehicle. Tumblin initially refused to comply but then submitted to a patdown for weapons. During the course of the patdown, Officer Elam removed a .22 caliber handgun from Tumblin's pocket.
Tumblin did not have a license for the weapon and was charged with carrying a handgun without a license. The trial court denied Tumblin's motion to suppress the *784 handgun, and he was convicted in a bench trial.
DISCUSSION AND DECISION
Tumblin asserts that Officer Elam's sel-zure of the handgun was the result of an improper investigatory stop. We agree.
In Terry v. Ohio,
The Supreme Court's resolution in Brown is instructive here. In that case, an El Paso police officer was on routine patrol in a high crime area of the city when he observed Brown and another man walking in opposite directions away from one another in an alley.
The Court reversed Brown's conviction because none of the facts upon which the stop was based supported a reasonable suspicion that Brown was involved in criminal activity. Id. at 52,
Applying those principles to the present case, we hold that the officer did not have before him the specific and articulable facts necessary to form a reasonable suspicion of criminal activity on Tumblin's part. The facts before the officer here reveal that he saw two black males 3 who, while walking on the sidewalk in a high crime area of Indianapolis, saw the approaching squad car and turned to walk in the opposite direction. These facts would not prompt a person of reasonable caution to investigate further. Instead, this stop appears to have been made on the officer's "hunch" that two black males turning away from the police in a "bad neigh-
*785
borhood" signifies the presence of criminal activity. If the Fourth Amendment is to provide any protection against unreasonable governmental intrusion it should prevent the kind of investigatory stop made here. The color of one's skin, the neighborhood one happens to be in, and the fact that one turns away from the police are not sufficient, individually or collectively, to establish a reasonable suspicion of criminal activity. See Williams v. State,
In its brief, the State argues that Tumblin's turning and walking away from police amounted to flight from law enforcement,; and that such flight merited the investigatory stop. Appellee's Brief at 7. We agree that flight from properly identified law enforcement officers is sufficient to justify an investigatory stop. See Platt v. State,
Compared to the actions of the suspects in the cited cases, Tumblin's actions did not amount to flight. He did not increase his speed, run, or dart into an alley. Tumblin did nothing more than turn and walk in the direction that he came from. That does not amount to flight. Therefore, because the State can point to no other facts upon which the officer could form a reasonable suspicion of criminal activity, the police's investigatory stop of Tumblin exceeded constitutional limits.
Reversed.
Notes
. See IC 35-47-2-1.
. Although Tumblin does not make an independent state constitutional argument, the Terry rationale is applicable in determining the legality of investigatory stops under Article I, Sec. 11 of the Indiana Constitution. See Taylor v. State,
. Officer Elam testified that he recognized Tum-blin as someone who he had stopped previously in the same neighborhood for sitting in a parked vehicle with another individual. There is, however, no evidence that any of these "stops" resulted in charges being filed or convictions being rendered. Assuming that Officer Elam had previously arrested Tumblin and that such arrests lead to convictions, it would not have amounted to the reasonable suspicion necessary to stop him in the present case.
