Gregory Kirksey was charged with possession of a firearm by a felon, see 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1), after police stopped the car in which he was riding and discovered a handgun. Mr. Kirksey moved to suppress the gun on the ground that its discovery was the fruit of a prolonged detention that, given the basis for the stop, was unreasonable. The district court denied the motion, and Mr. Kirksey entered a conditional guilty plea allowing him to challenge the ruling on appeal. For the reasons set forth in the following opinion, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I
BACKGROUND
At the evidentiary hearing on Mr. Kirk-sey’s motion, the Government proffered the testimony of the arresting officer, Joseph Roy of the Wauwatosa Police Department, and another officer, Timothy Kast-ner, who had provided backup during the stop. The district court credited their testimony in determining the following facts.
On October 7, 2003, at 2:00 a.m., Officer Roy was on patrol when he spotted a car with a temporary license plate in the back window. The writing on the plate appeared to be smudged or altered; Officer Roy therefore suspected that either the car or the plate had been stolen. He turned on his emergency lights and stopped the car.
Officer Roy approached the car and asked the driver and two passengers to identify themselves. The car’s owner, who was seated in the back, produced identification; the driver also complied. However, the man seated in the front passenger seat did not produce identification; he simply said his name was “Gary White.” While collecting this information, Officer Roy checked the vehicle identification number (“VIN”) on the dash of the car. He compared it to the number on the temporary plate. The numbers matched, but closer inspection confirmed his earlier observation that the numbers on the temporary plate were smudged.
Officer Roy returned to his police cruiser to check the vehicle registration on his onboard computer and to verify that the rear-seat passenger actually was the car’s owner. As he checked the registration on the computer, Officer Roy radioed the dispatcher to determine if any of the occupants had a criminal history or an outstanding warrant. Officer Roy established that the car was not stolen, but he discovered that an arrest warrant had been issued for the owner. The dispatcher reported that there were no state records for a “Gary White” with the date of birth provided.
Officer Roy arrested the owner of the car. He then attempted to gain more information to identify the front-seat passenger. When none of the information provided by “White” could be used to verify his identity, Officer Roy detained him. *957 As the officer led “White” back to the cruiser, “'White” admitted that his real name was Gregory Kirksey, although he persisted in claiming a false date of birth. Officer Roy placed Mr. Kirksey in the cruiser and planned to detain him until his true identity could be ascertained. Officer Roy then searched the car incident to the owner’s arrest and discovered a semiautomatic handgun and a magazine for that handgun stuck between the front seats. He arrested the driver and Mr. Kirksey, and took all three occupants to the police station. At the station, Mr. Kirksey was identified positively on the basis of fingerprints.
In denying Mr. Kirksey’s suppression motion, the district court held that Officer Roy had reasonable suspicion to stop the car,
see Terry v. Ohio,
II
DISCUSSION
On appeal, Mr. Kirksey renews his contention that what started as a legitimate traffic stop evolved into an unlawful detention when Officer Roy checked the occupants’ criminal histories. Mr. Kirksey submits that Officer Roy should have ceased his investigation after he confirmed that the VIN on the car matched the VIN on the temporary license plate because the smudged lettering on the plate was the sole justification for the stop. Thus, Mr. Kirksey concludes, the investigation that led to the discovery of the handgun was overly intrusive and unreasonable under Terry.
Mr. Kirksey relies on
United States v. McSwain,
We first note that the holding of
McSwain
is narrow. The Tenth Circuit has clarified that
McSwain
involved a situation where the suspicion justifying the stop was immediately dispelled and so there was no need for any additional investigation.
See United States v. Ledesma,
We have not held that criminal history checks always are permissible during a
Terry
stop of a vehicle. However, like our colleagues in the Tenth Circuit, we have distinguished
McSwain
from situations in which the officer’s reasonable suspicion is not immediately dispelled. In
United States v. Dumas,
As in
Dumas,
Officer Roy’s stop and ensuing detention of the car and its occupants were supported at each point by reasonable suspicion. As Mr. Kirksey concedes, Officer Roy lawfully stopped the car based on a reasonable suspicion that the smudged temporary plate might have been altered to disguise a stolen car. That suspicion applied equally to every occupant.
See United States v. Hendricks,
Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, the decision of the district court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED
