An officer on routine patrol in Ft. Wayne, Indiana, at 2:30 A.M. saw a car driving unusually slowly on a residential street. Out of curiosity he checked its license plate using a computer terminal in the patrol car and learned that it matched a different auto. That violation of the vehicular code justified a stop, independent of any suspicion that a valid plate had been attached to a stolen car to avoid detection. The driver claimed not to be carrying a license or any other identification; he gave his name as Hector Bazan. After smelling alcohol on the driver’s breath, the officer administered a breathalyzer test; the results implied that the driver was intoxicated. A quick check on the patrol car’s terminal showed that no “Hector Bazan” was licensed to drive in Indiana. At this point the officer had probable cause to believe that “Bazan” had committed at least one traffic infraction (driving a car that that lacked proper license plates) and two crimes (driving without a license and driving under the influence of alcohol).
Fort Wayne’s police department discourages “John Doe” bookings, so the officer was anxious to pin down the driver’s name. He told the driver that if he could prove his identity, then he would receive citations and summonses; otherwise he would be fingerprinted and booked at the station-house. “Bazan” said that he had identification at home and offered to show the officer where he lived. The officer handcuffed “Bazan” and put him in the back of the squad car for the drive. Once at home, “Bazan,” still in handcuffs, unlocked the front door and entered; the officer followed. (By then a second officer had joined the first; we ignore this detail.) The district court found that the driver “did not tell the officers to stay outside, nor did he invite them in.” “Bazan” walked through several rooms, trying in vain to find the identification he was seeking. Tagging along, the officer saw evidence that the house was a bogus-ID mill. Instead of allowing “Bazan” to keep searching, the officer told him to sit down while the police obtained a search warrant — which they did, by telephone. Executing the warrant, the police seized evi *650 dence that the occupants of the house were making fraudulent documents. They also discovered who the driver really is. Apparently he lacked enough confidence in his handiwork to carry one of the-fakes himself, but he had strong reason not to tote anything bearing his real name. An open shoebox contained court papers with the name Ricardo Garcia in the caption. Using the squad car’s terminal a third time, the police found that Garcia was evading two warrants for his arrest. The crime: forgery.
A federal indictment charged Garcia with possessing document-making implements with the intent to produce false identification. See 18 U.S.C. § 1028(a)(5). The district court granted his motion to suppress the evidence seized from his home, ruling that the warrant depends on information that the fourth amendment barred the police from learning. As the district judge understood the situation, Garcia had not been arrested but instead had been detained on reasonable suspicion. See
Terry v. Ohio,
The district court’s premise is false, and the bad premise spoiled the conclusion. Garcia had been arrested. His traffic stop was itself an arrest on probable cause. See
Whren v. United States,
To call particular custody an “arrest” does not necessarily mean that a given search or seizure is reasonable. No matter how much custody may be permissible - Atwater
v. Lago Vista,
Garcia was not among those covered by a catch-and-release regimen, however. He could not produce a driver’s license, and Gustafson holds that a driver who lacks a license is subject to full custodial arrest and thorough search. Moreover,- Garcia *651 was inebriated; the police could not let him drive away and endanger others on the road. So they took him into custody. Both in the squad car and during the tour of his home Garcia was in handcuffs. It would have been folly for the police to let him enter the home and root about unobserved. What if Garcia set out to look for weapons rather than identification? So it was reasonable to go with him if he entered at all — no less reasonable than in Chrisman itself. A police officer stopped Overdahl, a university student, carrying a bottle of gin. As Overdahl was under 21 and not entitled to possess or drink liquor, he had committed an offense. The officer asked for identification; Overdahl volunteered to retrieve it from his dormitory room. Standing in the door and observing while Overdahl searched for ID, the officer saw Chrisman, Overdahl’s roommate, committing a drug offense. The Court held that the officer had acted reasonably, so Chrisman could be prosecuted based on what the officer had seen. If it was reasonable for the officer to keep Overdahl in view, it was no less reasonable to keep Garcia in view — for Garcia’s offenses were more serious, and the risk that he would retrieve a weapon or take an opportunity to flee was appreciably greater. (Note, too, that the Court treated Overdahl as under arrest, not as the target of a Terry stop. The police had probable cause to think that Overdahl had committed a crime; just so with Garcia.)
That leaves only the question whether it was unreasonable to give Garcia the choice of looking for identification. Yet increasing a suspect’s options cannot harm him; additional options provide benefits, and as long as suspects are free to refuse they cannot be made better off by a rule forbidding the offer. Many persons situated similarly to Garcia (but not having evidence of crime in plain view at home) welcome the opportunity to find their drivers’ licenses and thus avoid full custodial arrests. Perhaps drink prevented Garcia from appreciating that the police would keep their eyes open, and that his situation would go from bad to worse, but when making the offer and tagging along the police did not know this; a suspect’s poor choice does not render unconstitutional an officer’s objectively reasonable offer.
The district judge was led astray by the language the police used at the hearing. Officer Bonar, who stopped Garcia’s car, testified that he did not plan to arrest the driver unless he was unable to provide positive identification, and that even while in handcuffs Garcia was “detained” rather than “under arrest.” From this the district judge concluded that it must have been a
Terry
stop; there is no other alternative to “arrest.” Fourth amendment jurisprudence, however, is objective. See
Whren, supra,
Reversed
