Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge GARLAND.
John Q. Wesley was arrested for violating the terms of his pretrial release and then convicted for unlawfully possessing a gun and drugs at the time of his arrest. He challenges his convictions on the ground that the evidence the government used against him at trial was obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment. Finding no constitutional violation, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I
Wesley had the misfortune of being arrested three times at almost the same location, near the intersection of Stanton Road and Trenton Place, S.E., in Washington, D.C. While the only convictions at issue here are those that resulted from the last of the three arrests, we describe the other two as a necessary prologue.
In June 2000, police officers found Wesley near the Stanton-Trenton intersection in possession of fourteen bags of crack cocaine. As a condition of his release pending trial, the District of Columbia Su *544 perior Court ordered him to stay away from a three-block radius of the 1700 block of Trenton Place (the block immediately adjoining Stanton Road). In October 2000, still awaiting trial for his June arrest but apparently undeterred by it, Wesley was again found near the Stanton-Trenton intersection. On that date, Officer Andre Martin — who was unaware of Wesley’s June arrest — discovered Wesley on Trenton Place about thirty feet from Stanton Road, this time in possession of six bags of crack cocaine. Again, Wesley was arrested. Again, the D.C. Superior Court released him pending trial on the condition that he stay away from the Stanton-Trenton intersection. The October stay-away order expressly barred Wesley from the “Intersection of Trenton PI. & Stanton Rd. SE,” but incorporated by reference the terms of the June order. 1
Finally, we come to the arrest that generated the convictions from which Wesley now appeals. A few weeks after arresting Wesley in October 2000, Officer Martin learned (through the police computer) that the court had released Wesley subject to an order to stay away from the “Intersection of Trenton PI. & Stanton Rd. SE.” Martin did not know of the June order’s more specific injunction to stay away from a three-block radius of Trenton Place, or that the October order had incorporated the June injunction by reference. From his frequent patrols in the area, however, Officer Martin did know that Wesley was once again frequenting the intersection. Accordingly, on November 14, 2000, Martin told his colleague, Officer Rodney Daniels, that he thought Wesley was likely to be in the area, and the two officers drove there to investigate.
Martin’s suspicions were well founded: Wesley was sitting in his car on Stanton Road, parked approximately “three to four cars” from the point at which Stanton Road and Trenton Place cross. With him was his cousin, Antonio Hagens. When the two police officers pulled up beside his car, Wesley’s “eyes got real big,” a reaction that both Martin and the district court interpreted as expressing “shock.” Wesley tried to escape by backing out of his parking place, but the officers stopped him. Officer Martin opened the car door and removed Wesley. Martin then placed him under arrest for violating the October stay-away order, handcuffed him, and put him in Martin’s patrol car. Officer Daniels removed Hagens and handcuffed him as well.
After securing Wesley, Martin looked under the driver’s seat where Wesley had been sitting and discovered a loaded, nine-millimeter pistol. In the car’s ashtray, he found two ziplock bags of crack cocaine. Daniels and another officer who had arrived on the scene then searched the car’s trunk and found another quantity of crack and a number of empty ziplocks.
A grand jury indicted Wesley for possession of cocaine base with intent to distribute, 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(l)(B)(iii); using or carrying a firearm during a drug-trafficking offense, 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A); and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, id. § 922(g)(1). In a motion to exclude the government’s use of the gun and drugs as evidence, Wesley charged that his arrest was unlawful, and that even if it were not, the subsequent search exceeded the permissible scope of a search incident to arrest. The district court denied the motion, the jury convicted, and the court *545 sentenced Wesley to fifteen years in prison.
II
Although the police searched Wesley’s car without a warrant, such a search is permissible if it falls within the familiar “search incident to arrest” exception to the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement.
See New York v. Belton,
A
Wesley’s first contention is that his arrest for violating the October stay-away order was unlawful. To have been lawful, the arrest must have been based upon probable cause to believe that a crime was being committed.
See Bookhardt,
Probable cause to arrest “requires the existence of ‘facts and circumstances within the officer’s knowledge that are sufficient to warrant a prudent person in believing that the suspect has committed, is committing, or is about to commit an offense.’ ”
United States v. Dawkins,
*546 At oral argument, counsel for Wesley contended that the only place that qualifies as the “intersection” of Trenton Place and Stanton Road is the spot where the two streets cross. We cannot agree that a reasonable person could not read the word more broadly. See, e.g., Merriam Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary 612 (10th ed. 1996) (defining “intersection” as “a place or area where two or more things (as streets) intersect” (emphasis added)). Indeed, when pressed at oral argument, counsel for Wesley conceded that “intersection” could encompass a place “very close to” the crossing point, and we regard it as splitting hairs to suggest that one car length falls within that description but that three do not. Nor does the district court’s suggestion, that a block in every direction from the crossing would qualify, strike us as unreasonable.
Perhaps more important, what Officer Martin knew at the time of the November arrest included the location of the arrest that had led to the October stay-away order. On October 23, Martin himself had arrested Wesley — not at the spot where Trenton Place and Stanton Road cross, but rather some thirty feet away on Trenton. The district court found that location to be “approximately the same distance” from the intersection as the location at which Martin again arrested Wesley in November. And it was eminently reasonable for the officer to believe that the October order was intended to keep Wesley at least as far from the crossing as he had been at the time of his October arrest. 3
Wesley mounts two further attacks on the legality of the arrest that require no more than a brief mention. First, he contends that Martin made the arrest in bad faith, because Martin admitted that he made a “special trip” to the area with the expectation that he would find the defendant and would then be able to arrest him. There is, however, nothing improper about a police officer going to a location for the express purpose of investigating whether a crime is being committed. There certainly is no rule of law that requires an officer to wait patiently until a lawbreaker happens to cross his field of vision. 4
Second, Wesley argues that it would have been more “prudent” if, before arresting him, Martin had conducted an investigatory stop to determine why he was parked on Stanton Road. Wesley is correct that such a stop would have been permissible under the rule of
Terry v. Ohio,
*547 B
Wesley’s second contention is that, even if his arrest was lawful, Martin’s search of the passenger compartment of Wesley’s car exceeded the permissible scope of a search incident to arrest. 5 It did so, Wesley argues, because by the time of the search, the police had already removed him from the car and placed him in handcuffs. We disagree.
In
Chimel v. California,
the Supreme Court held that, incident to a lawful arrest, the police may properly search the, area within the arrestee’s “immediate control” without a warrant.
The Supreme Court addressed the proper application of
Chimel
to automobile searches in
New York v. Belton.
Noting the difficulty that lower courts had had in applying
Chimel
in the context of the arrest of an occupant of a vehicle, the Court determined to adopt “a straightforward rule, easily applied, and predictably enforced.”
Belton,
In
United States v. Brown,
we noted that the search in
Belton
had taken place after the officer had already removed the defendant from the car, and therefore interpreted
Belton
as establishing the principle that the area under a defendant’s “immediate control” for
Chimel
purposes must be determined as of the time of the arrest rather than of the search.
Brown,
*548
Because Wesley was seated in his automobile at the time Officer Martin arrested him, the holdings in
Belton
and
Brown
dictate that Martin’s search of the car’s passenger compartment was lawful. Wesley, however, contends that another of our opinions,
United States v. Lyons,
We have previously noted that there is “some tension between
Lyons,
which seems to focus on whether the space searched was accessible at the time of the search, and our earlier decision in
Brown
and later decision in
Abdul-Saboor,
both of which focused on the time of the arrest.”
Sealed Case,
Indeed, to take Wesley’s view would largely render
Belton
a dead letter. The search of a passenger compartment incident to arrest would then be permissible
*549
only if the officer left the defendant in the car, in which event the officer would have to crawl over him to effectuate the search, or if the officer removed the defendant but did not (or could not) effectively secure him. As we have previously warned, such a rule “might create a perverse incentive for an arresting officer to prolong the period during which the arrestee is kept in an area where he could pose a danger to the officer.”
Abdul-Saboor,
Accordingly, we read Belton as creating a bright-line rule that, incident to and contemporaneous with a valid custodial arrest of the occupant of a vehicle, the police may search the passenger compartment of the vehicle without regard to whether the occupant was removed and secured at the time of the search. This reading is in accord with that of every other circuit that has considered the question. 8 Applying that rule to Wesley’s case, we conclude that the search of his automobile and the consequent discovery of the gun and drugs were lawful, and that the subsequent use of the evidence at trial was therefore permissible.
Ill
Finding no constitutional infirmity in either Wesley’s arrest or the search of his automobile, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
So ordered.
Notes
. The October order, stating the conditions of Wesley's release and signed by the defendant, provided: "1329 Notice in F3717-00/ Stay Away: Intersection of Trenton Pi. & Stanton Rd. SE.” The phrase "1329 Notice” is a reference to D.C.Code § 23-1329, which prohibits violations of the terms of pretrial release. "F3717-00” is the case number assigned to Wesley’s June appearance in Superior Court.
. We therefore reject Wesley’s suggestion (not quite framed as an argument) that the October order was too ambiguous to put him on notice of the place from which he was barred. We also agree with the district court that Wesley’s look of shock upon seeing the officers, as well as his effort to escape, was *546 further evidence that he knew he was in violation of the stay-away order.
. Wesley also argues that it was unreasonable for Martin to regard the stay-away order as encompassing more than the crossing of the two roads because Martin knew that Wesley lived close by. An expansive reading of the order, Wesley complains, would have. kept him from obtaining access to his home. This argument is answered, however, by the district court's finding that Wesley did not have to pass by the place at which he was arrested to gain access to his residence.
. Martin’s motivations are, in any event, irrelevant to the validity of the arrest. As the Supreme Court held in
Whren v. United States,
"the existence of probable cause must be determined objectively from the facts and circumstances known to the officers at the time of the arrest without regard to the 'actual motivations’ or '[s]ubjective intentions’ of the officers involved.”
Bookhardt,
. Wesley does not dispute that, if the search of the car’s passenger compartment was valid, then the discovery of the gun and drugs in that area justified the subsequent search of the trunk.
See United States v. Turner,
.
See also Northrop
v.
Trippett,
. In
Abdul-Saboor,
we also noted the
Belton
Court's statement of the analogous point that " 'no search or seizure incident to lawful custodial arrest would ever be valid [if] by seizing an article ... an officer may be said to have reduced that article to his exclusive control.’ ”
Abdul-Saboor,
.
See, e.g., United States v. Humphrey,
