OPINION
Opinion by
A jury convicted Theodore Zervos of possession of more than 400 grams of cocaine and set his punishment at life imprisonment. Zervos appeals, contending that the court erred in (1) overruling his motion to suppress evidence of the contraband due to an illegal seizure and search, (2) failing to suppress the evidence because his consent to the search was involuntary, (3) failing to suppress his oral statements because they were not lawfully obtained, and (4) failing to submit the issue of unlawful search to the jury for determination. We overrule these contentions and affirm the judgment.
Officer Moseley saw Zervos, who was driving on Interstate 30 near Sulphur Springs, make a lane change without giving a proper signal. He stopped Zervos and asked him to produce his driver’s license and proof of insurance. Zervos complied. Moseley questioned Zervos about where he had been and where he was going. Because of Zervos’ acts and con *150 tradictory statements, Moseley called for a backup officer. Zervos gave the officers permission to search his automobile, and they found over 100 pounds of powdered cocaine wrapped in duet-taped bundles and hidden in two suitcases. After Zervos was arrested and given his Miranda 1 warnings, he gave a videotaped statement in which he admitted that he was being paid to transport the cocaine for another person.
In his first two points, Zervos contends that evidence of the cocaine should have been suppressed because it was obtained through an illegal detention and subsequent search.
In testing the legality of searches following legitimate traffic stops, we review
de novo
the trial court’s determinations of reasonable suspicion and probable cause.
See Guzman v. State,
Although we review the issue of reasonable suspicion
de novo,
the ruling on a motion to suppress lies within the sound discretion of the trial court.
Villarreal v. State,
At Zervos’ suppression hearing, only the officers testified; Zervos did not. The trial court heard testimony from Officers Moseley and Williams, and evaluated the facts. Affording total deference to the trial court’s conclusions as to the officers’ credibility and to the facts leading up to Zervos’ continued detainment, we must review the evidence to determine whether the factors given by the officers as providing them with reasonable suspicion of drug trafficking were enough to justify their continued detention of Zervos beyond the detention necessary for the traffic violation.
A routine traffic stop closely resembles an investigative detention.
Berkemer v. McCarty,
A search that is reasonable at its inception may violate the Fourth Amendment by virtue of its excessive intensity and scope.
See Davis v. State,
An officer may lawfully stop a motorist who commits a traffic violation.
McVickers v. State,
During the investigation, Moseley had the right to request a driver’s license, insurance papers, information on the ownership of the vehicle, the driver’s destination, and the purpose of the trip.
Mohmed v. State,
Zervos contends that although Officer Moseley may have had a valid reason to make the initial stop, he did not have probable cause to detain him further after the initial traffic violation investigation was completed. Zervos also relies on the proposition that his behavior was as consistent with innocent activity as with criminal activity, so it would not give rise to reasonable suspicion. He also asserts that the officer’s initial stop may have been a pre-textual stop. However, neither of those facts, even if true, would be relevant in determining if Officer Moseley was justified in detaining Zervos and searching his automobile.
See Woods v. State,
We find that the officers had sufficient articulable facts and inferences to justify the initial stop of Zervos, as well as the subsequent detainment and search. The testimony shows without dispute that Officer Moseley saw Zervos change lanes on Interstate 30 without giving a proper signal. Officer Moseley immediately noticed that Zervos was extremely nervous and was shaking. When Zervos got out of his car, he continued to exhibit suspicious behavior. His hands shook, he paced back and forth nervously, constantly crossed and uncrossed his arms, and continually took change out of his pocket and counted it. He refused to look at Officer Moseley when the officer was speaking to him. Moreover, Zervos said he had been in Dallas, but he gave three contradictory statements about how long he stayed there. Zervos told the officer that he had stayed with a friend in Dallas, but he was unable to describe where the friend lived or give his address or his telephone number. Zer-vos said he left Dallas only three hours before he was stopped. Officer Moseley knew that Dallas is only eighty miles from the point where Zervos was stopped, and the speed limit is seventy miles per hour. Zervos also told Officer Moseley that he went to North Dallas by traveling on Interstate 30 and then turning on Interstate 45 to go to North Dallas. The officer knew that Interstate 45 went south rather than north to Dallas, and knew that it ordinarily did not take three hours to drive from Dallas to Sulphur Springs via Interstate 30. Officer Moseley, shortly after stopping Zervos, called for a backup, Officer Williams, who corroborated some of the suspicious behavior on Zervos’ part. Williams arrived at the scene only minutes after Moseley stopped Zervos.
None of the facts about the stop and the activities of Zervos is disputed. No one testified to those facts except the officers, and Zervos’ cross-examination of the officers did not bring out any disputed fact. Zervos contends that because Officer Moseley on cross-examination conceded that he might have momentarily taken his eyes off Zervos’ vehicle when it was changing lanes, there is a disputed fact concerning the legitimacy of the stop. We disagree. Moseley said that he may not have had his eyes on Zervos all of the time, but he emphatically said he saw Zervos make the illegal lane change. Moreover, it is not necessary to show that Zervos actually violated the traffic laws. It is sufficient to show that the officer reasonably believed that a traffic violation was in progress.
See Drago v. State,
All of the facts and circumstances summarized above were known by the officers and were sufficient to show that, during the course of the valid investigative stop and before issuing Zervos a ticket or warning citation, the officers developed a rea *153 sonable, objective suspicion that Zervos was engaged in some other kind of unlawful activity. Thus, the officers had probable cause to search Zervos’ vehicle, where the contraband was found.
Even if the officers did not have probable cause to search Zervos’ car, Zervos consented to the search. Officer Moseley initially asked Zervos if he could search his vehicle. Zervos first said he would rather not. Moseley tried to clarify Zervos’ response, and Zervos then told Moseley he “didn’t have anything in the car, so you can’t look in the car.” Shortly after that exchange, Officer Williams, the backup, arrived at the scene. Officer Moseley briefed Officer Williams on his suspicions about Zervos. Williams told Zervos that he had called for a canine unit, and that if the dog alerted on the car, the car would be searched, but if not, Zervos would be free to leave. Then Zervos said if the officers wanted to look in the car, they could. Officer Williams told Zervos that it was his decision alone whether they could search the car, and that they were not trying to intimidate him by using the dog. Also, Officer Moseley told Zervos that he did not have to consent to the search. Zervos did consent, however, and unlocked the trunk for the officers when they asked him to do so.
The facts that led to Zervos’ consent to search are not disputed. It is undisputed that no officer brandished a gun or made any threatening gestures or used any threatening words. The validity of a consent depends on whether the officers could reasonably conclude that consent had been given.
See Powell v. State,
Zervos also contends that the trial court should have suppressed the videotaped statement in which Zervos admitted his guilt, because it was not voluntarily made and the officers continued to question him after he indicated he wanted an attorney.
The trial court conducted a hearing to determine if the statement was voluntary. Only the officer who took the statement testified. The other evidence relating to the voluntariness of the statement is the videotape itself. Thus, the evidence as to the giving of the Miranda warnings, Zer-vos’ waiver of his rights, the voluntariness of the statement, and whether or not Zer-vos requested an attorney are all matters of interpreting the uncontroverted evidence. After viewing the videotape and hearing arguments of counsel for Zervos and for the State, the trial court excluded all but the first 11-1/2 minutes of the videotape.
It is undisputed that Zervos was given his Miranda warnings at the scene before his arrest and again before he made the videotaped statement. Officer Plaxco testified that before he took the videotaped statement, he was told that Zervos wanted to talk to him about “furthering the investigation.” Plaxco then interviewed Zervos. In addition to Zervos and Plaxco, Officers Beezley and Stidham were in the room at times while the interview was being taped.
In making the interview, Plaxco first asked Zervos if the other officers had read him his rights. Zervos said, “The Miranda? Yeah.” Plaxco then told Zervos he was going to read them again. He then read the warnings from the waiver of rights sheet. Plaxco then asked Zervos to read the rights himself, and it appears from the videotape that Zervos did so from the same waiver of rights sheet. Zervos did not indicate that he was confused about any of his rights. Plaxco told him if they got on something that Zervos did not want to talk about, they did not have to talk about it. When Zervos was signing the waiver sheet, Plaxco told him again that “if you want to terminate the interview, that’s up to you.”
*154 Zervos claims he did not intend to sign the waiver sheet. The tape shows that Zervos initially tried to talk to Plaxco and that Plaxco stopped him and told him he would have to sign the waiver first. Zer-vos then said, “I got to sign?” After this, Plaxco told Zervos that he would like for him to go ahead and sign the waiver so they could have a conversation. At this point, Zervos took the waiver sheet, and it appears from the videotape that he signed it. The actual colloquy between Plaxco and Zervos leading to Zervos’ signing the waiver is as follows:
Zervos: What’s my signature for?
Plaxco: Just to show proof that I read you your rights if I have to sometime down the road.
Zervos: It’s not the signing for the—
Plaxco: No, sir.
Zervos: Waiver of rights, right?
Plaxco: It’s signing that you have read this paper and apparently you’re wanting to waive your rights and talk to me without an attorney present. Is that right? I was told that you wanted to talk to me. That’s why I’m up here.
Zervos: Nah, I just want to know what kind of trouble I’m in, that’s all.
We have reviewed the videotape. Although some of Zervos’ statement may be somewhat ambiguous, we think it is clear that Zervos intended to waive his rights and give the statement. His ambiguous statements appear to indicate that he did not understand that he could not talk to Plaxco without first signing the waiver. That certainly was a reasonable deduction for Plaxco to make. An officer questioning a suspect is not required to stop his questioning unless the suspect’s invocation of his rights is unambiguous, and the officer is not required to clarify ambiguous remarks.
Dowthitt v. State,
The trial court excluded all of the videotaped statement occurring after Zervos claims he asked to consult an attorney, so no error is shown in that regard.
In another point, Zervos contends that the trial court erred in failing to file findings of fact and conclusions of law concerning the voluntariness of the statement, as required by Tex.Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 38.22, § 6 (Vernon 1979). That statute requires the court to file written findings of fact and conclusions of law supporting its conclusion that a statement was voluntarily made. The findings of fact and conclusions of law, however, need be made only when there is a question as to the facts surrounding the taking of the statement, i.e., where the facts are disputed.
Miller v. State,
Finally, Zervos contends that the trial court erred in refusing to give an instruction to the jury concerning the le
*155
gality of his detention and search of his automobile. When the facts as to the circumstances of a detention and search are disputed, such an instruction is necessary. But the facts here are undisputed. The only issue is the interpretation of the facts and whether they raised a reasonable suspicion. That is a question of law, not of fact, so a jury charge on the issue was not required.
See Gaffney v. State,
For the reasons stated, we affirm the judgment.
