In this expedited interlocutory appeal, the government challenges the trial court’s suppression of evidence the police obtained from Turner after stopping him and a second man based on a lookout for one suspect that generally described them both. Because we decide, after examining the totality of the circumstances, that the police had the requisite particularity for a reasonable articulable suspicion that Turner had engaged in a drug sale, we revеrse the trial court’s order and remand for further proceedings.
I.
On February 17,1996, three officers of the Metropolitan Police Department were working undercover in an unmarked car as part of a narcotics investigation. Just before 8:00 p.m., Turner was sеen standing alone in front of 1408 Girard Street in Northwest Washington, D.C. Officer McClinton left the car, met with Turner, and purchased a ziplock con- *1127 tabling marijuana with a ten dollar bill. Officer MeClinton then saw another man, Gordon, whom he knew and who knew him as a police officer, walking toward them. Officer MeClinton “immediately got in the car” and “had to get along pretty quick.” The circumstances left him unable to radio Turner’s description to the arrest team, as was his usual procedure. Instead, the second undercover officer broadcast the lookout while the third undercover officer drove their car out of sight.
A member of the arrest team, Officer Alvarado, “heard over the radio ... the look-out for a Black male in the 1400 block of Girard Street, near 1408 Girard Street, Northwest that was standing there wearing a black jacket and blue jeans.” The arrest team arrived at the location “within a minute.” Officer Alvarado stopped Turner, who was “wearing the black jacket and blue jeans and was standing in the close proximity the lookout gаve.”
Other members of the arrest team stopped Gordon. The trial court concluded that “to an arrest team in our case, I think, these two people would look essentially the same” because the lookout “wasn’t specific enough to distinguish bеtween the two people the arrest team found.” Officer MeClinton returned and positively identified Turner as the man who had sold him the drugs. The police arrested Turner and recovered the ten dollar bill.
Turner was charged with distribution of marijuana in violation of D.C.Cоde § 33-541(a)(1) & (2)(D) (1993 Repl.). Turner filed a pre-trial motion to suppress evidence, arguing that the seizure of both men showed that the police lacked a reasonable articulable suspicion of Turner. The trial court granted the motion and ordered the еvidence suppressed.
1
The government brought this interlocutory appeal.
See
D.C.Code § 11-721(a)(3) (1995 Repl.); D.C.Code § 23-104(a)(1) (1996 Repl.);
United States v. Harris,
II.
We review the trial court’s order granting the motion to suppress to determine whether the police obtained the evidence in violation of Turner’s Fourth Amendment rights.
2
The trial court’s factual findings аbout the circumstances surrounding Turner’s encounter with the police are entitled to deference.
Giles v. United States,
The Supreme Court established in
Terry v. Ohio,
To justify a
Terry
stop, “such a suspicion must be ‘particularized’ as to the individual stopped.”
In re A.S.,
The analytical importance of particularity is not to be confused with the strength of the showing necessary to establish it. “Although the term eludes precise definition, ‘articulable suspicion’ is ... substantially less than probablе cause [and] ... ‘considerably less than proof of wrongdoing by a preponderance of the evidence.’”
Brown, supra,
Courts have used a variety of terms to capture the elusive concept of what cause is sufficient to authorize police to stop a person.... But the essence of all that has been written is that the totality of the circumstances — the whole picture — must be taken into account. Based upon that whole picture the detaining officers must have a particularized and objective basis for suspecting the pаrticular* person stopped of criminal activity.
Cortez, supra,
Analogizing to
In re A.S., supra,
As this court has made clear,
“Terry
compels us to evaluate the totality of the circumstances constituting articulable suspicion.”
Smith v. United States,
In this case, Officer Alvarado responded to the location on Girard Street “within a minute” and saw Turner. The description for a black male wearing a black jacket and blue jeans had no additional detail but matched Turner’s clothing. The fact that the police encountered a second man who also fit the description is a countervailing consideration, but did not necessarily dispel the reasonable suspicion focused on Turner.
See, e.g., Gomez, supra,
While a description apрlicable to large numbers of people will not suffice to
*1129
justify the seizure of an individual,
see Brown, supra,
Several important features distinguish
In re AS.
from this case. First, in
A.S.
the undercover officer’s broadcast acknowledged that she had seen “five subjects standing on the corner, [and] all of them seemed to be dressed alike.” Her lookout to stop
one
of the yоung black males described only by his clothing thus subjected four presumably innocent youths, and a “potentially much greater number of youths in the area,”
4
to unwarranted seizure.
Furthermore, an important factor for the
A.S.
court was that the radio broadcast itself alerted the arrest team to the need to request additional description.
See id.
at 541-42 (distinguishing prior cases where “there was nothing in the radio broadcast ... to suggest to the police officer thаt many people in the immediate area would fit the ‘lookout’ description,” in contrast to
A.S.
where the lookout referred expressly to “five subjects standing on the corner ... all of them seem[ing] to be dressed alike”). Sometimes the police can radio for further descriptive details before making a stop,
see Brown, supra,
We hold that the police had the requisite particularized, individualized suspicion of Turner to effect a Terry stop. Because the stop of Turner was permissible under the Fourth Amendment, the trial court erred by granting the motion to suppress. Accordingly, we reverse the order granting the motion to suppress the evidence, and remand the ease for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. The trial court suppressed the ten dollar bill and Officer McClinton’s show-up identification of Turner. As the trial court recognized, whether any in-court identification of Turner by McClinton would survive suppression was subject to the analysis in
United States v. Crews,
. Gordon’s Fourth Amendment rights are not at issue because "Fourth Amendment rights are personal rights which, like some other constitutional rights, may not be vicariously asserted.”
Moore v. United States,
. See 4 Wayne R. LaFave, Search and Seizure, § 9.4(g) (3d ed. 1996) ("Quite obviously, the more the description provided ... can be said to be particularized, in the sense that it could apply to only a few persons in the relevant universe, the better the chance of having at least sufficient grounds to make a stop.”), LaFave, supra, at n. 297 ("This universe will be determined primarily by the size of the area within which the offender might now be found (as indicated primarily by the amount of time which has passed since the offense) and the number of people about in that area ... ”).
. In A.S., there was testimony that besides the five men in question, "there were other people in the area” and "a playground nearby, likely to attract young men to the area.”
