Dеfendants Gregory Lynn Cummins and Timothy Akins appeal the denial by the District Court 1 of their motions to suppress evidence seized during searches of automobiles in two separate traffic incidents. Both defendants entered a conditional plea of guilty to drug trafficking and firearm offenses rеserving the right to appeal the denial of their motions to suppress. We affirm.
I.
The first traffic incident in question involved both Cummins and Akins. On November 10, 1988, at approximately 11:40 p.m., the unusual behavior of occupants of a 1974 green Volkswagen caught the attention of Officer Dan Bernal, a seven-year veteran of the Little Rock Police Department. Bernal, who was patrolling east on Sixth Street, was stopped for a red light at the intersection of Bond and Sixth in Little Rock, Arkansas. The Volkswagen, northbound on Bond Street, remained at a standstill despite the green light signalling it to рroceed. Rather than proceeding, the driver (Cummins), along with his passenger (Akins), kept glancing at Bernal. Not until the signal changed to red for the Bond Street traffic did Cummins finally proceed by turning right onto Sixth Street. These actions aroused Bernal’s suspicions and he began to follow the car. Fоr several blocks along Sixth Street, Cummins and Akins continued glancing over their shoulders at Officer Bernal, who was maintaining a distance of approximately four car-lengths behind them. This surveillance-in-motion came to a momentary halt when the Volkswagen turned off Sixth Street into a closed сar wash. Cummins and Akins then continued to watch Bernal, who had pulled into a service station across the street. When the Volkswagen left the car wash and continued east on Sixth Street, Bernal followed it. At the intersection of Sixth and Corning, Cummins made a right turn without giving a signal. Observing this traffic violation, Bernal immediately turned on his bluelights. Cummins stopped, got out of the Volkswagen, and approached Bernal as he was getting out of the police car.
After explaining the reason for the stop and obtaining Cummins’ license, Bernal asked Cummins to explain his unusual behavior. Cummins replied that he had bеen distracted by his passenger’s conversation *500 about “girlfriend problems” and said the passenger’s name was “Tim.” Cummins appeared very nervous throughout this exchange. After calling the police department for a license and vehicle check, Ber-nal walked over to thе Volkswagen and asked the passenger for his name. Akins identified himself as “Michael Mayfield.” This inconsistency further aroused Bernal’s suspicions. He returned to his car and radioed for a back-up. Within five minutes, Officer Jim McDaniels arrived. Cum-mins stayed with McDaniels while Bernal returned to the Volkswagen tо ask Akins for proof of identification. The name on the driver’s license he produced was “Timothy Akins.” Bernal escorted Akins to the patrol unit and placed him in the back seat. Akins was evasive and appeared ready to flee if given the opportunity.
Bernal returned to the Volkswagen and looked inside with his flashlight. He saw a clear plastic bag containing what appeared to be marijuana on the floor behind the passenger’s seat. As a result of this discovery, Bernal placed Cummins and Akins under arrest and called for a tow truck to remove the Volkswagen. Pursuant to police department procedures, Bernal began an inventory search of the Volkswagen in preparation for its impoundment. Inside the passenger compartment, Bernal found two beepers, a black shaving kit containing U.S. currency, a duffel bag containing marijuana and cocaine, a “Crown Royal” bag containing more drugs, and a loaded “Tech 9” semi-automatic pistol.
The second traffic incident involved only Akins. On January 26, 1989, Officers James Dickson and John Gourtney of the Little Rock Police Department were called to the sсene of a single-car accident. A Chevrolet Chevette had crashed into the front-yard fence of a residence. Although no one was in the car when the officers arrived, witnesses identified Akins, who was standing nearby, as the driver. When the officers tried to question Akins, they realized that he was either too drunk or too drugged to provide any coherent answers. The officers arrested Akins for driving while influenced by alcohol or drugs. After calling for a tow truck to remove Akins’ car, the officers began an inventory search of the vehicle. In the passenger compаrtment, they found a loaded sawed-off shotgun, marijuana, and a sack containing crack, cocaine, and U.S. currency.
Cummins and Akins moved to suppress the evidence seized by the Little Rock police officers during the two separate traffic incidents. At the suppression heаring, Officer Bernal testified that he probably would not have stopped the green Volkswagen on November 10, 1988 for the traffic violation if the defendants had not behaved so suspiciously. Pointing to the officer’s underlying motivation, the defendants argued that the initial stop was pretextual and any evidence seized in its wake should be suppressed. The magistrate 2 disagreed, finding that Bernal had a reasonable and objective basis for making the initial stop and that the resulting searches were proper. The magistrate also concluded that the motion to supprеss evidence seized during the inventory search of Akins’ car on January 26, 1989 should be denied. The district court adopted the magistrate’s recommendations and denied the motions to suppress. For reversal, defendants reassert the arguments made during the proceedings below.
II.
A.
Defendants argue that Officer Bernal’s initial stop of the green Volkswagen was pretextual, because his real reason for making the stop was based on his suspicions aroused by their strange behavior rather than on Cummins’ failure to signal a right turn. The defendants conclude that the stop was unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment. We disagree. When an officer observes a traffic offense — however minor — he has probable cause to stop the driver of the vehicle.
See Pennsylvania v. Mimms,
Although our circuit has declared in dictum “that pretextual stops are unreasonable under the fourth amendment,”
United States v. Portwood,
We reject the argument of Cummins and Akins that the applicable tеst is “not whether the officer
could
validly have made the stop but whether under the same circumstances a reasonable officer
would
have made the stop in the absence of the invalid purpose.”
United States v. Smith,
B.
Our determination that a valid stop occurred does not end our inquiry, because
*502
Cummins and Akins argue that the fruits of the search were fruits of an unreasonable detention. We disagree. Under
Terry v. Ohio,
C.
Cummins and Akins also argue that Officer Bernal’s discovery of the marijuana on the rear floor of the car was invalid under the plain-view doctrine. There is no reason for us to address this particular argument because Bernal’s actions were justified by the limited protective search doctrine. In
Michigan v. Long,
Officer Bernal’s аction of looking into the passenger compartment of the Volkswagen with a flashlight did not exceed the limitations of a Terry search. As we apply an objective standard of reasonableness to this determination, our conclusion is not changed by Bernal’s testimony that he had nо subjective fear that either Cummins or Akins were armed. We therefore hold that the marijuana discovered by Officer Bernal in the passenger compartment of the Volkswagen was not subject to suppression under the exclusionary rule.
D.
Defendants’ next argument that the search of thе remainder of the car was without probable cause requires little discussion. Upon discovering the marijuana, Officer Bernal had probable cause to place defendants Cummins and Akins under arrest. The search of the Volkswagen which followed was permissible both as a seаrch incident to arrest,
United States v. Robinson,
*503 III.
Akins challenges the seizure of evidence in connection with his January 26, 1989 arrest. He claims that the inventory search of his car in which the officers discovered controlled substances and a loaded shotgun was invalid. He does not dispute the validity of his arrest for DWI.
An inventory search will be upheld unless there is a showing that the police failed to follow standard procedures, acted in bad faith, or conducted the search for the sole purpose of investigation.
See Bertine,
IV.
Finding no reason for reversal, we affirm the decision of the District Court denying defendants’ motions to suppress.
Notes
. The Honorable Elsijane T. Roy, Senior United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Arkansas.
. The Honorable H. David Young, United States Magistrate, for the Eastern District of Arkansas.
. The officer’s motive becomes relevant only after a determination is made that the Fourth Amendment аctually was violated. When this threshold issue is resolved in the affirmative, the officer’s state of mind may be relevant in determining whether the exclusionary rule should be applied.
Scott,
.
United States v. Guzman,
