Opinion
In this appeal, we hold that a police radio broadcast, indicating that a person in a blue van was suspected of selling vacuum cleaners without a license and being very pushy in trying to gain entrance into persons’ houses, was insufficient to give rise to an articulable and reasonable suspicion that criminal activity was afoot, warranting the officer’s actions in pulling over the appellant’s van for an investigatory stop. Therefore, the evidence obtained during the stop was inadmissible and we reverse Arnold Leon Waugh’s conviction of driving after having been declared an habitual offender.
On June 28, 1989, Officer Nathaniel S. Parker received a radio dispatch that there had been “numerous calls of a suspicious light blue van in the residential area of Christiansburg, possibly selling vacuum cleaners with no permit and being very pushy trying to gain entry into homes.” Approximately four or five minutes after the broadcast, the officer saw a light blue van. He followed the van and radioed the dispatcher to verify its license plate number. Ascertaining that this was the van in question, he pulled the van over. The officer testified that the driver had committed no traffic infraction and was stopped solely to investigate the possibility that he was selling vacuum cleaners without a license. He approached the appellant, who was driving the van, and asked for his solicitor’s permit. The appellant did not have a solicitor’s permit in his possession, although he did in fact have a permit. An inquiry through the Division of Motor Vehicles revealed that the appellant had been adjudicated an habitual offender in 1980.
To stop an automobile and detain its occupants is impermissible “except in those situations in which there is at least an articulable and reasonable suspicion that a motorist . . . is . . . subject to seizure for violation of law.”
Delaware
v.
Prouse,
The Commonwealth draws heavily upon
Jones
v.
Commonwealth,
In the present case, the officer had received a dispatch to be on the lookout for a suspect who was believed to be selling vacuum cleaners without a license. The report, however, did not state that appellant was engaged in criminal activity; it stated only that some unknown person suspected that appellant was selling vacuum cleaners without a license. At the time the officer saw appellant’s van, the description and license number of which matched that given in the bulletin at the time of the stop, the appellant was not engaged in selling vacuum cleaners. The appellant was driving in a lawful manner. The officer observed nothing prior to the stop to corroborate the unknown person’s complaint of possible sales without a license.
*623
Under the circumstances, there was no articulable or reasonable suspicion to believe appellant was engaged in criminal activity. Accordingly, there was no justification for the officer pulling the appellant over and stopping him. As a result of the illegal stop, the officer learned the defendant’s name and was able to determine his status as an habitual offender. “[T]he unlawful stop resulted directly in [the defendant’s] arrest and ultimate conviction.”
Zimmerman
v.
Commonwealth,
Reversed and dismissed.
Koontz, C.J., and Barrow, J., concurred.
