Azim Chоudhry (“Choudhry”) appeals the district court’s denial of his pre-trial motion to suppress evidence. Upon observing a vehicle parked illegally, two San Francisco police officers performed an investigatory traffic stop of the vehicle, in which Choudhry was a passenger. During a subsequent search of the vehicle, the officers discovered a gun under the front passenger seat. Choudhry was indicted for possession of a firеarm by a felon, a violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g). Alleging that the search and seizure violated the Fourth Amendment, Choudhry filed a motion to suppress the gun.
In challenging the lawfulness of the stop, Choudhry argued that a civil parking offense that is enforced through an administrative process could not, standing alone, justify an investigatory stop. Choudhry also argued that the other circumstances surrounding the stop were insufficient to support a finding of reasonable suspiсion and that the stop therefore violated the Fourth Amendment. Other than noting the parking violation as one fact in its analysis of the events leading up to the stop, the district court did not address the merits of Choudhry’s argument regarding the parking violation. Although we affirm the denial of the motion to suppress, we do so on a narrower ground than the one advanced by the district court. Because parking infractions constitute traffic violations under California’s Vehicle Code and local laws enacted pursuant to the Vehicle Code, and because the officers had the authority to enforce the particular violation at issue, we hold that a civil parking violation under California’s Vehicle Code falls within the scope of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Whren v. United States,
I. Background
Just after midnight on February 7, 2005, San Francisco Police Officers Silver and Chan were patrolling Bernal Heights Boulevard. The officers observed a vehicle *1099 parked illegally near the entrance of Ber-nal Heights Park, an area designated as a no-stopping/tow-аway zone between the hours of 10 PM and 6 AM every day. 1 Because the officers were unable to. determine whether the car was occupied, Officer Silver used the police car’s spotlight to illuminate the vehicle from . behind. In response to the sudden spotlight, the vehicle’s occupants, Sonja Alvarado (“Alvarado”) and Choudhry, made “hurried movements.” According to Officer Silver, these movements led the officers to believe that either a sexual encounter or “some other possibly illegal act” was taking place. In a declaration filed in opposition to the motion, Officer Silver explained that the officers decided to investigate further and turned on their emergency lights “in order to conduct an investigatory stop.” Alvarado, the driver of the vehicle, turned on the vehicle’s engine and began to pull away. After both police officers exitеd their patrol car and commanded her to stop, she did.
While Officer Chan questioned Alvarado, Officer Silver spoke with Choudhry through the passenger side window. Having determined that Alvarado’s license had been suspended and that there were two active warrants outstanding for her arrest, Officer Chan placed Alvarado under arrest. Because Officer Silver recognized the “faint odor of burnt marijuana,” he suspected that Choudhry possеssed marijuana and ordered Choudhry out of the car. As Officer Silver performed a pat-down search, Choudhry admitted that he had marijuana in the pocket of his pants. Officer Silver found marijuana in Chou-dhry’s front pants pocket and placed Chou-dhry in the police car. Choudhry then informed Officer Silver that he had found a gun, which he had placed inside Alvarado’s car. Officer Silver discovered the gun under the passenger seat where Choudhry had been sitting.
The Grand Jury subsequently indicted Choudhry for a violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g), possession of a firearm by a fél-on. Claiming that the detention and search violated the Fourth Amendment, Choudhry filed a motion to suppress the evidence that the officers seized as a result of the stop. As he does in this appeal, Choudhry advanced two central arguments in support of his motion: first, Choudhry argued that because California has decriminalized parking offenses, the police could not perform an investigatory stop on the basis of the parking violation alone; and second, Choudhry asserted that the other circumstances surrounding the stop were insufficient to constitute reasonable suspicion.
The district court denied Choudhry’s motion. In its oral decision, the court declined to determine whether the parking violation was enough, standing alone, to justify the stop. Instead, the court concluded thаt the totality of the circumstances surrounding the stop were sufficient for the officers to have formed an articulable, reasonable suspicion that Alvarado and Choudhry were engaged in criminal activity. The district court relied on the following circumstances: (1) the parking violation, (2) Alvarado’s brief attempted “flight,” (3) the couple’s hurried move *1100 ments after the officers turned on the spotlight, and (4) Officer Silver’s belief that Bernal Heights was a high-crime area.
After the district court denied his suppression motion, Choudhry entered a conditional plea of guilty to the indictment, preserving his right to appeal the denial of his motion. The district court sentenced Choudhry to 57 months and he timely appealed. On appeal, Choudhry re-asserts that the parking violation was insufficient alone to justify an investigatory stop and the totality of the circumstances did not constitute reasonablе suspicion.
II. Jurisdiction and Standards op Review
We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We review
de novo
whether the police had reasonable suspicion to make an investigatory stop, a mixed question of law and fact.
See United States v. Manzo-Jurado,
III. Discussion
A.
The officers’ investigatory stop of Alvarado’s vehicle implicates the Fourth Amendment “because stopping an automobile and detaining its occupants constitute a seizure ... even though the purpose of the stop is limited and the resulting detention quite brief.”
Delaware v. Prouse,
Officers have reasonable suspicion when “specific, articulable facts ... together with objective and reasonable inferences, form the basis for suspecting that the particular person detained is engaged in criminal activity.”
Id.
at 1105 (internal quotation marks omitted). The reasonable suspicion analysis takes intо account the totality of the circumstances.
United States v. Montero-Camargo,
A traffic violation alone is sufficient to establish reasonable suspicion.
Whren,
B.
Whether
Whren
applies to
parking
violations under California’s civil-administrative enforcement scheme is a matter of first impression in this court. We conclude that it does and that, here, the parking violation justified the investigatory stop of Alvarado’s vehicle. In so holding, we note that our conclusion is consistent with the decisions of our sister circuits that have considered
Whren’s
application to parking violations.
See Flores v. City of Palacios,
In 1992, the California Legislature significantly amended the California Vehicle Code (‘Vehicle Code”) to establish a separate civil administrative scheme for enfоrcing parking violations. Section 40200(a) mandates that “any” non-misdemeanor parking violation “is subject to a civil penalty” to be enforced through “the civil administrative procedures set forth in this article.” Cal. Veh.Code § 40200(a). The new enforcement scheme provides for civil penalties for parking violations and delinquent payments, but no criminal sanctions.
See, e.g., id.
§ 40220 (“Collection of unpaid parking penalty ... ”).
3
Legislative intent, California court decisions, and the interpretation of the California Attorney General all confirm that parking violations are “[n]o longer ... treated as infractions within the criminal justice system; instead, they are treated as civil offenses subject to civil penalties and administrative enforcement.”
Tyler v. County of Alameda,
In
Whren,
the Court held that when police have probable cause to believe that a traffic violation has ocсurred, the decision to stop an automobile is reasonable.
Choudhry seeks to distinguish Whren on two related grounds. First, he argues that Whren does not apply because the reasonable suspicion inquiry centers on criminal activity — thаt is, he asserts that Whren is limited to conduct for which the individual may be arrested. Second, he argues that in California, parking laws are distinct from other traffic laws because of California’s separate civil-administrative scheme for enforcing parking penalties. We find neither argument persuasive.
1.
In separating civil parking violations and criminal activity, Choudhry reads
Whren
more narrowly than that decision and our circuit law permit. Although the reasоnable suspicion inquiry
does
center on suspected criminal activity,
Whren
carves out an exception in the context of traffic stops, i.e., a stop is “reasonable” where an officer suspects an individual has committed a traffic violation.
2.
Choudhry’s argument must turn not on the distinction between civil and criminal *1103 traffic violations, but on whether a parking violation, which is enforced through a civil-administrative scheme, should be considered a traffic violation within the scope of Whren. In light of the administrative process used to enforce parking penalties in California, there is some force to Chоu-dhry’s argument that parking violations are distinct from criminal traffic infractions. On balance, however, his argument fails. The structure of the California Vehicle Code, the authority of law enforcement officers to enforce the Vehicle Code, and the specific authority granted to San Francisco City and County police officers to enforce the violation at issue lead us to conclude that Whren controls Choudhry’s case. 6
Although California has enaсted a civil administrative process to enforce parking penalties, it has not removed parking regulation from the division of the Vehicle Code that covers moving traffic violations.
See
Cal. Veh.Code §§ 22500-26. This organizational structure demonstrates that while the legislature intended to decriminalize parking penalties, it still considered parking regulation as part of the general “traffic laws.” A structural analysis of the Code is informative. The general rules governing parking regulation, as well as the provisions granting local authorities the power to establish parking restrictions pursuant to the Vehicle Code, are contained in Division 11, Rules of the Road.
See
Cal. Veh.Code §§ 22500-26. Among other rules, Division 11 covers moving violations, which include laws governing such matters as turns, stop signs, and vehicle speed. Notably, the Vehicle Code has separate divisions entitled Equipment of Vehicles (Div.12, §§ 24000-28150), Safety Regulations (Div.14.8, §§ 84500-20.5), and Drivers’ Licenses (Div.6, §§ 12500-15325). Had the legislature intended to treat parking regulation as entirely distinct from other traffic offenses, it could have separated them in a similar way. Instead, the legislature determined that a separate civil-administrative scheme was the preferred method for processing and enforcing civil penalties for parking violations. To distinguish parking violations from other traffic violations, as Choudhry urges we do, would necessarily require us to rely on logic the Supreme Court considered, but rejected, in
Whren:
that different “types” of traffic violations could be distinguished in justifying a traffic stop.
See Whren,
Nor does California case law suggest a distinction in the authority to enforce parking and traffic violations under the Vehicle Code; rather, decisions by the California Court of Appeal recognize the general authority of police officers to “detain and cite a person for violating the
Vehicle Code.” Hart,
Here, the officers had the express authority to enforce this specific parking violation. Alvarado had parked the vehicle in an area designated by signs as a no parking/tow-away zone between the hours of 10:00 PM and 6:00 AM. California Vehicle Code section 22651 allows “[a]ny peace officer ... engaged in directing traffic or enforcing parking laws and regulations” to remove a vehicle “[w]henever any vehicle is parked or left standing where local authorities, by resolution or ordinance, have prohibited parking and have authоrized removal of vehicles.” Cal. Veh.Code § 22651(n). Section 130 of the San Francisco Traffic Code is such an ordinance: it grants police officers the authority to remove or cause to have removed “any vehicle that is parked or left standing unattended in violation of California Vehicle Code or the San Francisco Traffic Code and where signs are posted giving notice of removal for such a violation.” S.F. Traffic Cоde § 130. Vehicle Code section 22651(n), in combination with the local code provision, confirms that the officers were within their authority to enforce Alvarado’s parking violation. Thus, while California utilizes distinct civil procedures to enforce penalties for parking violations, parking regulation nonetheless falls within the scope of Whren’s holding.
IV. Conclusion
Because the parking violation alone provided the officers with a sufficient basis to conduct an investigatory stop of Alvarado’s vehicle, we need not address the totality of the circumstances analysis on which the district court relied to deny Choudhry’s motion. For the above reasons, we agree with the district court that the stop did not violate the Fourth Amendment. We therefore affirm the denial of Choudhry’s motion to suppress and his conviction.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The car was parked in violation of The City and County of San Francisco Municipаl Code, Traffic Code ("San Francisco Traffic Code” or "S.F. Traffic Code”) § 32. That section requires the Board of Supervisors to pass resolutions designating restricted parking or stopping areas and to erect signs giving notice of those areas. It further states: "Any person violating any of the class of resolutions now or hereinafter in effect, which are referred to in the following subsections of this Section, shall be guilty of an infraction.” Subsection (b) refers to "[r]esolution[s] prohibiting parking on any street or alley.” S.F. Traffic Code § 32(b).
. In
Lopez-Soto,
we considered and rejected the argument that
Whren
altered the standard for traffic stops from "reasonable suspicion” to "probable cause.”
See
. Following the 1992 amendments, parking violations are subject to fines. In instances of delinquent or non-payment, municipalities may assess late payment penalty fines, see id. § 40203.5, or, when unpaid penalties exceed $400, may enforce collection through entering a civil judgment, see id. §§ 40220, 40221. At no point, however, may a municipality impose penal sanctions. In fact, the 1992 amendment to section 40220 deleted subsection (c), which allowed the processing agency to "[fjile a criminal complaint with the court” if fees remained unpaid. See id. § 40220, Notes 1992 Amend. (West 2005).
. Choudhry argues that the Court’s use of the term "civil” is dicta because the Court did not address whether the specific provisions at issue were criminal or civil. We are not persuaded. At the very least, the inclusion, of "civil” at multiple points in
Whren
indicates that the Court viewed the traffic violations as civil offenses and that the Court’s reasoning therefore applies to traffic regulations enforced through civil-administrative procedures.
See Whren,
. The dissent in
Willis
did not dispute the majority’s interpretation of
Whren,
but disagreed with the court's conclusion that the standard had been met in that case.
See
. Our analysis here mirrors the analytical framework employed by the Sixth Circuit in
Copeland.
In
Copeland,
the Sixth Circuit held that
Whren
applied to a traffic stop based on a parking violation because the regulation was "set forth under the general traffic laws of the Michigan Vehicle Code" and "officers may enforce any of the regulations subsumed in [the relevant] section by virtue of a stop."
. In Choudhry’s attempt to distinguish Hart, he misreads the Vehicle Code. First, Chou-dhry argues that, in Hart, the defendant violated a provision found in the "criminal infractions" section of the Vehicle Code (Cal. Veh.Code § 22500(f)), while Alvarado's parking violation fell under section 40200. Alvarado did not violate section 40200 or a similar provision, as Choudhiy’s analysis would suggest. She violated section 32 of the San Francisco Traffic Code. San Francisco derives its authority to restrict "stopping, standing, or parking" on its roads in part from a different provision in the same Vehicle Code chapter at issue in Hart. See Cal. Veh.Code § 22507(a). The parking enforcement scheme covers "any” non-misdemeanor parking violation. See id. § 40200. Section 22500(f) is not a misdemeanor. Accordingly, both the violations at issue here and in Hart are enforced under section 40200.7
Second, during oral argument, Choudhry argued that Hart is distinguishable because Alvarado violated the San Francisco Traffic Code, not the California Vehicle Code. The distinction Choudhry draws, however, is not supported by the structure of the Vehicle Code. As noted above, the San Francisco Traffic Code provision at issue was adopted pursuant to the Vehicle Code. Section 40000.1 of the Vehicle Code treats violations of the code and violations of laws adopted pursuant to the code similarly: "it ... constitutes an infraction for any person to violate, or fail to comply with, any provision of this code, or any local ordinance adopted pursuant to this code." Section 40200 places parking violations under the civil enforcement scheme, but otherwise does not alter section 40000.1.
