Affirmеd by published opinion. Judge LUTTIG wrote the opinion, in which Judges HAMILTON and WILLIAMS joined.
OPINION
Law enforcement officials literally risk their lives each time they approach occupied vehicles during the course of investigative traffic stops. As the Supreme Court has repeatedly observed, “a significant percentage of murders of police officers occurs when officers are making traffic stops.”
United States v. Robinson,
The advent of tinted automobile windows, however, has threatened to bring to naught these essential law enforcement proteсtions. Confronted with the grave risk that tinted windows pose to the safety of law enforcement personnel, we address herein whether the government’s substantial interest in officer safety during a lawful traffic stop outweighs the intrusion on the privacy interests of the vehicle’s occupants which results when, because of heavily tinted windows that prevent the interior compartment from being viewed, an officer opens a door of the vehicle in order to ensure that the vehicle’s driver is unarmed and that there are no other occupants who might threaten his safety during the investigatory stop. We conclude that, perhaps generally, but at least under the circumstances of this case, the substantial government interest in officer safety which exists when law enforcement officers must approach vehicles with heavily tinted windows far outweighs any minimal privacy interest the suspect retains in the otherwise visible interior compartment of his vehicle.
I.
At approximately 9:00 a.m. on the morning of April 29, 1996, three officers from the Baltimore City Police Department — Officers Mackel, Buie and Hamel — were patrolling a high crime area in West Baltimore known for its open narcotics trafficking when they saw a late model, black Nissan Pathfinder with heavily tinted windows illegally parked in the middle of the street, effectively blocking traffic.
See
Md. Transportation Code Ann. §§ 21-1003(r), 27-101(a) & (b) (Michie 1996). The officers, who were armed and wearing bullet-proof vests over their uniforms because of the dangerousness of their assignment,
see United States v. Stanfield,
The officers approached Stanfield’s Pathfinder from both the driver and passenger sides, and, as they did so, they noticed that the front driver’s side window was down, but that the front passenger side window was raised.
See Stanfield,
Prior to trial, Stanfield moved to suppress the cocaine seized from the back seat of his Pathfinder, contending that the search affected by Officer Mackel’s opening of the front passenger door was unconstitutional under the Fourth Amendment and, therefore, that the cocaine discovered as a consequence of that search must be suppressed. Following an evidentiary hearing, the district court denied the motion, upholding the search on two independent grounds. First, citing Texas
v. Brown,
Following the district court’s denial of Stanfield’s suppression motion, Stanfield pled guilty to one count of possession, reserving the right to appeal the district court’s suppression ruling that is now before us. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
II.
“[T]he ‘touchstone of the Fourth Amendment is reasonableness.’ ”
Ohio v. Robinette,
— U.S. -, -,
Thus, for example, in
Terry v. Ohio,
Fifteen years later, in
Long,
the Court authorized what are essentially “frisks” of automobile interiors during traffic stops,
see Maryland v. Buie,
In
Mimms
and
Maryland v. Wilson,
— U.S. -,
The Court in
Mimms
held that the “inordinate risk” that exists every time “an officer ... approaches a person seated in an automobile,”
Finally, repeating its oft-repeated observation that the government has a “legitimate” and “weighty” interest in officer safety, the Court in
Wilson
recently expanded the
Mimms per se
rule to allow officers to order not only drivers, but all occupants, to exit vehicles and move off onto the shoulder of the road during routine traffic stops.
*981
See
— U.S. at -,
A.
1.
Notwithstаnding that the Court “generally eschew[s] bright-line rules in the Fourth Amendment context,”
id.
at-n. 1,
Even where the interiors of vehicles are fully visible, “roadside encounters between police and suspects are especially hazardous,”
Long,
When, during already dangerous traffic stops, officers must approach vehicles whose occupants and interiors are blocked from view by tinted windows, the potential harm to which the officers are exposed increases exponentially, to the point, we believe, of unconscionability.
Indeed, we can conceive of almost nothing more dangerous to a law enforcement officer in the context of a traffic stop than approaching an automobile whose passenger compartment is entirely hidden from the officer’s view by darkly tinted windows.
As the officer exits his cruiser and proceeds toward the tinted-windowed vehicle, he has no way of knowing whether the vehicle’s driver is fumbling for his driver’s license or reaching for a gun; he does not know whether he is about to encounter a single law-abiding citizen or to be ambushed by a car-full of armed assailants. He literally does not even know whether a weapon has been trained on him from the moment the stop was initiated. As one officer put the obvious; “If the suspect has a weapon, I might not see it until he rolls down the window. He may just shoot me through the window.”
3
If, as the Court has noted, offi
*982
cers face an “inordinate risk” every time they approach even a vehicle whose interior and passengers are fully visible to the officers,
Mimms,
In contrast to the indisputably substantial government interest in protecting its law enforcement officials from the danger that inheres in the lawful stop of a vehicle with heavily tinted windows, the privacy and liberty interests implicated by the opening of such a vehicle’s door for the limited purpose of determining whether the vehicle is occupied by one or several persons and whether the vehicle’s occupants are armed or have access to weapons, are, although not unimportant, comparatively minor, and will always be so.
It is axiomatic, of course, that “[o]ne has a lesser expectation of privacy in a motor vehicle,” in part because “its function is transportation and it seldom serves as one’s residence or as the repository of personal effects.”
United States v. Chadwick,
But, apart from the fact that there is a considerably reduced privacy interest in a vehicle’s interior passenger compartment as a matter of law, the driver and other occupants of a lawfully stopped vehicle have already had their liberty curtailed. Moreover, because the driver must comply with routine requests for identification and registration, he will be required at some point during the brief detention to expose the interior compartment of his vehicle to view through at least one window, if for no other reason than to interact with the officer. Of course, when the driver lowers the window, then much if not all of the car’s interior will be visible to the officer. The additional interference with the occupants’ privacy interests affected by the opening of one of the vehicle’s doors would seem minimal when measured against the enormous danger law enforcement officers face when they approach a vehicle with heavily tinted windows. Such an intrusion would seem considerably less than the intrusions affected by ordering the driver and passengers to exit the vehicle and to proceed to the shoulder of the road, which were held in Mimms and Wilson, respectively, to be “de minimis” in comparison to the states’ interests in protecting their law enforcement personnel under circumstances far less inherently dangerous than those existing when the *983 stopped vehicle has heavily tinted -windows. Not only does the person subjected to the limited search entailed in the opening of the vehicle door not have his entire body еxposed to the view of the officers and public, he also retains his liberty interest in remaining seated in his automobile during the duration of the detention. Indeed, the actual invasion of privacy entailed in an officer’s opening of the vehicle door is indistinguishable from, if not precisely the same as, that which occurs when an occupant is required to open a door to exit a vehicle pursuant to an order given under the authority of Mimms or Wilson.
2.
Even if there were reasonable alternatives to allowing officers to open the door of a vehicle with heavily tinted windows in order to ascertain whether the driver is armed and whether there are other occupants in the vehicle, we would hesitate to impose them on the law enforcement community as a matter of constitutional law. As the Supreme Court has been at pains to observe, during Terry-type stops, officers “must make ... ‘quick decisions] as to how to protect [themselves] and others from possible danger’ ” at times when they are “particularly vulnerable,” and thus it has “not required that officers adopt alternate means to ensure their safety in order to avoid the intrusion involved in [such an] encounter.”
Long,
With that said, however, we are at a loss to identify an acceptable alternative to a rule such as that we suggest would be justified. Upon a moment’s reflection, it becomes apparent that neither requiring officers (while in their cruisers or as they proceed toward the stopped vehicle) instead to order occupants to exit the vehicle nor requiring that they order that all of the vehicle’s doors be opened, represents an acceptable, or even a reasonable, alternative. To require officers to order the vehicle’s occupants to exit аs the officers approach the stopped vehicle exposes the officers to the very danger to which we believe it is unconscionable to subject them, namely, that they might be fired upon as they approach the vehicle. As the Court observed in
Terry,
it is by definition “unreasonable to require that police officers take unnecessary risks in the performance of their duties.”
Therefore, in the end, we believe, it will be impractical, if not impossible, for law enforcement officers to neutralize the dangers to which they are exposed by virtue of heavily tinted windows. There simply do not appear to be any alternatives to the bright-line rule we suggest, which would infringe less on the residual privacy interests that drivers and passengers retain in the interior compartment of a lawfully stopped vehicle, yet still allow law enforcement officers to take that control of the situation that enables them to minimize the risk of harm to themselves and to the vehicle’s occupants.
Cf. Wilson,
— U.S. at -,
*984 B.
Even absent a Mimms Wilson-type per se rule that officers may, in the circum- ' stances we have described, open a vehicle’s door to deter mine the number of occupants within and whether any of those occupants are armed or have access to weapons, however, Officer Mackel’s opening of Stanfield’s passenger door was fully authorized under the principles, if not by the direct holdings, of Terry, Long and Buie. Officer Mackel’s belief that he was potentially in danger as he approached Stanfield’s Pathfinder was imminently reasonable; it would be folly to suggest otherwise. Under Terry, Long and Buie, therefore, it is clear thаt Officer Mackel could have conducted a protective search of the entire interior compartment of Stan-field’s vehicle to ensure his safety and that of his partners. It follows a fortiori that Officer Maekel’s much more limited search of merely opening the Pathfinder’s door was reasonable under the Fourth Amendment.
As our previous discussion suggests, we are convinced that the presence of windows so tinted that the vehicle’s interior compartment is not .visible is, in itself, a circumstance that would cause an officer reasonably to believe that his safety might be in danger— as the district court held. When the fact of the tinted windows on Stanfield’s Pathfinder is considered together with the other circumstances informing Officer Mackel’s judgment as he approached Stanfield’s vehicle on the morning of April 29, 1996, we are satisfied that no reasonable officer would have failed to appreciate the potential danger confronting Officer Mackel and his partners.
First, Stanfield was, at the time of the stop, in violation of the state’s traffic laws, having parked his Pathfinder in the middle of a two-way street, which was not passable by two ears simultaneously.
See Stanfield,
There was more reason for Officer Mackel to believe that his safety might be in danger than there was in
Long
for Deputies Howell and Lewis to believe that their safety might be in danger. The Supreme Court there held that Howell and Lewis were “clearly justified” in their conclusion that Long might pose a danger to them were he allowed to reenter his vehicle because (1) “[t]he hour was late and the area rural,” (2) Long had been speeding and had swerved into a ditch, (3) Long had appearеd to be under the influence of an intoxicant, and (4) the officers had seen a hunting knife on the floorboard of Long’s car.
6
In contrast, here, Officers Mackel, Buie and Hamel had just initiated their encounter with Stanfield, who was driving a vehicle not uncommonly associated with drug activity; they were in a high crime area known for its оpen drug trafficking; they had, only moments earlier, seen Stanfield talking with a known drug dealer; they did not know whether Stanfield was alone or accompanied by others; they were unable, because of the tinting of the windows, to determine whether Stanfield, or any other occupants of the vehicle, were presently armed or had ready access to weapons; and they had no reason to think Stanfield might be incapacitated in such a way as actually to reduce any threat he might pose to them.
If there was less reason for Officer Mackel to believe that he might be in danger than
*986
there was in
Terry
for Officer McFadden to believe he might be in danger, we are satisfied that the difference is not significant enough to warrant a different conclusion as to the reasonableness of Officer Mackel’s perception of possible danger, especially given the greater vulnerability of the officers here because of the heavy tinting of the Pathfinder’s windows. Officer McFadden had observed conduct by Matthew Terry and his companions that was entirely innocent in itself, although suspicious to McFadden, a trained officer, who recognized the conduct as “consistent with [an] hypothesis that the[ ] men were contemplating a daylight robbery.”
Terry,
392 U.S at 28,
Although the Court in
Buie
did not itself resolve the ultimate issue of whether the protective sweep undertaken by the officers was justified under the
Terry
and
Long
standard, which the Court there held was applicable to the officers’ sweep of Buie’s home, the Court specifically analogized law enforcement’s interest “in taking steps to assure themselves that the house in which a suspect is being, or has just been, arrested is not harboring, other persons who are dangerous and who could unexpectedly launch an attack,” to the “immediate interest of the police officers [in
Terry
and
Long
] in taking steps to assure themselves that the persons with whom they were dealing were not armed with, or аble to gain immediate control of, a weapon that could unexpectedly and fatally be used against them.”
Buie,
*987 First, and most significantly, any difference between the inherent risk existing during an in-home arrest and a lawful investigatory traffic stop due to the officers’ lack of familiarity with the surroundings, was minimized, if not entirely eliminated, in this ease, because the interior of Stanfield’s vehicle was not visible to the officers. Through the use of heavy tinting, the driver and occupants of a vehicle effectively secure for themselves, as Stanfield did in this case, a “confined setting of unknown configuration,” forcing law enforcement authorities to confront them on their own “turf” — not unlike if they were hiding in their home. Second, some six or seven officers were present at Buie’s residence to affect the arrest, whereas only three officers, were investigating Stanfield. Third, the officers in Buie had proceeded to Buie’s house for the specific purpose of arresting Buie and were fully prepared for anything that might develop in connection with that assignment; unlike Officers Mackel, Buie, and Hamel, they had not simply come upon Buie unеxpectedly in circumstances requiring a quick, on-the-street judgment. Fourth, the officers had already arrested Buie and had only to depart the residence and premises; at the time of their search of Buie’s basement, the officers were not merely beginning their investigatory detention, as in the case sub judice, when a confrontation is more likely. Fifth, two days had lapsed since the robbery in Buie, and, although it was certainly not unreasonable to think someone (in particular, Buie’s accomplice) might be hiding in the house with Buie, the officers had nothing specific to support such an inference. As the dissenting judge on the Maryland Court of Appeals said in his opinion on the remand from the Supreme Court:
From the information elicited at the suppression hearing, we do not know whether Allen [Buie’s accomplice] had been arrested or was still at large. The testimony at the hearing does not give any indication that Allen was seen entering or leaving Buie’s home during the threе day surveillance period. In fact, there was no testimony that placed Allen at Buie’s home at any time prior to Buie’s arrest. Neither is there information as to what type of relationship Buie and Allen had; that is, we do not know whether they were longtime friends who spent a great deal of time together or whether the only time they were ever together was the night of the alleged robbery.
The inconclusive surveillance ... does not help the State. It surely does not permit the inference that the police thought Allen was at Buie’s house, for if they had believed that they would have brought along his arrest warrant as well as Buie’s.
Buie v. Maryland,
In contrast to the substantiаl state interest in having the investigatory detention necessitated by Stanfield’s traffic infraction conclude without harm to its law enforcement officials, the liberty and privacy interests which Stanfield attempts to protect are, for the reasons previously discussed, notably insubstantial. Additionally, because, even according to Stanfield, the driver’s side window was down when the officers approached the Pathfinder, the interior of Stanfield’s ear, as well as contents lying exposed on the back seat, were fully open to the view of the officers and passersby.
7
Even had all of the Pathfinder’s windows been raised, the undisputed evidence in the record before us is that Stanfield’s tinted windows would not have
*988
prevented passersby from viewing the Pathfinder’s interior under all lighting conditions.
See
J.A. at 88. Hence, it was only because of the mere happenstance of cloud cover that the back seat of Stanfield’s car was not visible, just as in
Texas v. Brown,
Assuming that Stanfield did have some residual privacy interest in the interior compartment of his car, the additional intrusion on that interest that resulted from the mere opening of the passenger door was inconsequential. There is, of course, no comparison between the “severe,” “surely ... annoying, frightening, and perhaps humiliating” pat-down of the person authorized by the Court in
Terry,
We even believe, as explained supra, that the intrusion affected by Officer Mackel’s mere opening of the passenger door of Stan-field’s Pathfinder was considerably less than those intrusions authorized as a matter of course by the Court in Mimms and Wilson. The opening of the door of the Pathfinder exposed to view little more of Stanfield’s body than was already exposed to view through the open driver side window and little more of the interior compartment than was visible through that same window. And, in contrast to the action that may be ordered under Mimms and Wilson, the mere opening of the door did not require Stanfield (nor would it have required any other occupants of the vehicle) to move at all.
In sum, when the state’s substantial interest in ensuring that its investigatory detention of Stanfield occurred without incident to its law enforcement agents is weighed in the balance with Stanfield’s privacy interests implicated by Officer Mackel’s search, there can be no doubt but that the search was reasonable under the circumstances and appropriately limited in scope. What was said of Officer McFadden’s actions in Terry is no less true of Officer Mackel’s actions here:
We cannot say his decision [to open the passenger door to Stanfield’s Pathfinder in order to determine whether there were other passengers in the vehicle or whether the driver or other had access to weapons] was the product of a volatile or inventive imagination, or was undertaken simply as an act of harassment; the record evidences the tempered act of a policeman who in the course of an investigation had to make a quick decision as to how to protect himself and others from possible danger, and took limited steps to do so.
*989 III.
Because Officer Mackel was engaged in a reasonable protective search when he opened Stanfield’s passenger door for the limited purpose of determining whether Stanfield was armed and whether there were any other occupаnts within the vehicle who might pose a danger to him or his partners, and because the cocaine that Stanfield seeks to suppress was seen by Officer Mackel in plain view during the conduct of this reasonable search, the district court’s denial of Stan-field’s motion to suppress is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The recited facts are those as found by the district court. A number of the material facts were vigorously disputed at the suppression hearing and, ultimately, the district court did not fully credit the testimony of either the officers or Stanfield, a fact which brings the case to us in a somewhat awkward posture. For example, the officers testified that
both
the front driver and passenger side windows were open, and that the cocaine was seen through the open passenger window.
See Stanfield,
. The Court expressly extendedJejry and
Long
in
Buie,
authorizing, "in conjunction with ... in-home arrest[s],"
. Leef Smith, "They're Dark No More,” The Washington Post, Dec. 4, 1996, at V04 (explaining that suspected gang members often drive around "in cars whose windows are all but blacked out,” using the cover created by the tinting to "hide illegal activities”) (statement of Officer Linda Hudson); see also, e.g., Norman Peckham, “Phoenix Now Enforcing Window Tint Law,” The Tucson Citizen, March 17, 1995, at 9E (“Heavy tint may conceal the fact that the occupant may have a weapon.”) (statement of Officer Eugene Mejia); Caroline Lemke, "In the Dark: Tinted Windows Give Cars A Cool Look, But Some Are Illegal,” The Los Angeles Times, February 13, 1992, at 2 (When a car has tinted windows “[i]t is hard for an officer to see into [that] car. A gun could be pointed at you. It puts you *982 in a vulnerable position.”) (statement of Officer John Marinez).
. See Alabama Code § 32-5-215(e) (Michie 1996); Arkansas Code of 1987 Ann. § 27-37-306 (1987-95); Connecticut Gen.Stat. Ann. § 14-99g(b) (West 1996); Delaware Code. Ann. Title 21 § 4313 (1975-95); Code of Georgia § 40-8-73.1 (1982-96); Idaho Code § 49-944(1) (Michie 1948-96); West’s Smith-Hurd Illinois Comp. Stat. Ann. § 5/12-503 (West 1996); West’s Ann. Indiana Code § 9-19-19-4(c) (West 1996); Baldwin’s Kentucky Rev. Stat. Ann. § 189.110(3) (Banks-Baldwin 1996); West’s Louisiana Stat. Ann. R.S. 32:361.1 (West 1996); Maine Revised Stat. Ann. Title 29 § 1916(3) (1996); Maryland Transportation Code § 22-406 (Michie 1957-96); Michigan Comp. Laws Ann. § 257.709 (1996); Mississippi Code 1972 Ann. § 63-7-59 (1995); Montana Code Ann. § 61-9-405 (1978-95); Nebraska Rev. Stat. of 1943 § 60-6, 257 (1995); Nevada Rev. Stat. § 484.6195 (1995); New Hampshire Stat. Ann. § 265:95 (1995); Gen Stat. of North Carolina § 20-127(b) (Michie 1944-96); North Dakota Century Code § 39-21-39 (Michie 1995); Baldwin's Ohio Rev.Code Arm. § 4513.241 (Baldwin-Banks 1996); 1995 Oregon Rev. Stat. § 815.221 (1995); Code of Laws of South Carolina 1976 Ann. § 56-5-5015 (1995); Tennessee Code Ann. § 55-9-107 (1955-96); Utah Code, 1953 § 41-6-149 (Michie 1987-96); Code of Virginia § 46.2-1052(C)(1) (Michie 1982-96); Wyoming Stat. 1977 § 31-5-962(b) (1977-96); West’s Revised Code of Washington Ann. § 46.37.430(5) (1996). The District of Columbia and Puerto Rico have done so as well. See District of Columbia Code 1981 § 40-718.1 (1981-96); Laws of Puerto Rico Ann. Title 9 § 1134’(1994).
. Although the government opposed Stanfield's suppression motion, see. Government's Memorandum of Law in Response to Defendant’s Motion to Suppress Evidence, J.A. at 18-40, on appeal it inexplicably conceded error and then went to quite unusual lengths to have the case decided on the briefs and without oral argument. Unwilling to reverse the district court's judgment summarily, we ordered the reluctant Assistant United States Attorney, Philip S. Jackson, to appear and argue the case. When confronted by the court with the Supreme Court authorities described above, and questioned why he was unable even to advance good-faith arguments before this court in support of the district court's judgment, Mr. Jackson represented to the court that he had confessed error solely because, in his view, there was no basis for the district court's finding that Staten was a known drug dealer, a view that was nowhere mentioned in the government's three and one-half page brief. Mr. Jackson thereafter, however, conceded that neither he nor the United States had any basis at all for challenging the district court's finding as clearly erroneous, ultimately acknowledging that if that finding were sustained, the United States had improperly confessed constitutional error.
We find the district court's finding to be amply supported by the record, especially the testimony of Officer Mackel, in response to questions from Stanfield's counsel:
*985 Q: What really happened here was that you were on routine patrol, in your bullet proof vests, and you saw Mr. Stanfield talking to someone who you knew, isn't that correct?
A: Once I pulled into the block, that is correct. I recognized who it was.
Q: ... Now, when you saw Mr. Stanfield talking to someone, isn't it true that that is why you really stopped your vehicle and got out of the car and started investigating Mr. Stanfield?
A: No.
Q: Isn't it true that that person [Staten] you had known through previous, I guess through some previous dealings, that he might be or was a law breaker?
A: Yes, I had dealings with Mr. Staten before.
Q: And the real reason you got out of the car, all three of you, had nothing to do with being double parked, but you wanted to see what was up, isn’t that correct?
A: No, that is not true.
Q: And you really, all you really had was a hunch and you just wanted to go in and see what was up?
J.A. at 152.
It is plain from this exchange between defendant’s own counsel and Officer Mackel that defense counsel himself understood that Officer Mackel had previously had "dealings” with Staten in connection with drug transactions. Stan-field even contended to the district court that, as the officers exited their cruiser, “one of the officers then shouted up to William [Staten] and asked [Staten] whether he had stopped dealing drugs.” See J.A. at 238.
It is plain that defense counsel's strategy was to develop a case that the officers had relied upon the pretext of Stanfield’s traffic offense to investigate their "hunch” that, because Stanfield was talking to a knоwn drug dealer, he might be engaged in a drug transaction, and, in fact, this was the very argument defendant advanced before the district court, see J.A. at 238 (opinion of district court) (“Stanfield argues that the officers were not attracted to him because of any traffic violation but because they were investigating drug trafficking.”). Indeed, although Stanfield (for obvious reasons) does not mention the officers' previous dealings with Staten in his submissions to this court, one of Stanfield's two assignments of error from the district court's denial of his suppression motion was that the officers acted only on this hunch. See Appellant’s Br. at 2-9.
It is evident, therefore, that the district court's finding that Stanfield was talking with a man known by the officers to be a drug dealer is unassailable. The Assistant United States Attorney himself, albeit in direct contradiction of his own representations before us, even represented to the district court that "[a]n officer recognized th[e] individual [to whom Stanfield was talking] as William Staten, an individual about whom [the officer] had reсeived information indicating Staten’s involvement in the distribution of controlled substances.” See Government’s Memorandum of Law in Response to Defendant’s Motion to Suppress Evidence, J.A. at 18, 19.
. When listing the circumstances supporting the reasonableness of the officers’ belief that they
*986
might be in danger if Long were allowed to reenter his vehicle, the Court did, as noted, mention that the officers had earlier seen the hunting knife on the floorboard of Long's automobile. It is relatively clear, however, that the knife was mentioned more in support of the court’s alternative holding that the search of Long’s person was also reasonable, and that the presence of the knife played little, if any, role in the Court’s determination that Officers Howell and Lewis were reasonable in their belief that their safety might be at risk if Long were allowed to reenter his car,
see
. This fact, of course, suggests that the district court's denial of Stanfield's suppression motion might well be sustainable on the alternative ground that the cocaine would inevitably have been discovered by Officer Buie or Officer Hamel, even had it not been discovered by Officer Mackel. Where the preponderance of evidence establishes that the information would "ultimatеly or inevitably” have "been discovered by means wholly independent of any constitutional violation,” the inevitable discovery exception to the exclusionary rule allows the prosecution to admit the evidence obtained through an illegal search.
Nix v. Williams,
. Stanfield also argues that the initial seizure of his vehicle was illegal because the officers stopped his vehicle in order to investigate possible drug trafficking, not, as the officers contend
*989
ed, because he was in violation of the state's traffic laws.
See supra
note 5. Because, as the Supreme Court has recently held, an officer's subjective state of mind in stopping a vehicle is irrelevant to the constitutionality of the stop,
see Robinette,
- U.S. at -,
