IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO
Docket No. 48008
STATE OF IDAHO, )
)
Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Boise, May 2021 Term
)
v. ) Opinion filed: September 23, 2021
)
JENNIFER ANNE WARREN, ) Melanie Gagnepain, Clerk
)
Defendant-Respondent. )
Appeal from the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District of the State of
Idaho, Ada County. Peter G. Barton, District Judge.
The judgment of the district court is reversed.
Lawrence G. Wasden, Idaho Attorney General, Boise, for Appellant. Ken
Jorgensen argued.
Eric Don Fredericksen, State Appellate Public Defender, Boise, for Respondent.
Jason Pintler argued.
_______________________________________________
MOELLER, Justice.
The State appeals from the district court’s order granting Jennifer Anne Warren’s
(“Jennifer”) motion to suppress evidence. The district court concluded that the officers had no
lawful basis to continue detaining Jennifer, a passenger in a vehicle, after officers abandoned the
original purpose of the traffic stop in order to investigate whether the driver was in violation of a
criminal no contact order barring him from being with Jennifer. On appeal, the State argued that
reasonable suspicion a driver is engaged in criminal conduct not only allows officers to extend a
traffic stop and detain the driver, but it also includes the continued lawful detention of all
passengers. For the reasons stated below, we reverse the decision of the district court.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
A. Factual Background
Boise Police Department Officer Matthew Lane (“Officer Lane”) stopped a GMC Yukon
for a canceled and expired registration. The vehicle was driven by Steven Warren (“Steven”),
1
and Jennifer was in the passenger seat. Steven told officers that Jennifer was his wife. Officer
Lane ran the identification information supplied by both parties, and the data system flashed red,
signaling an alert that there was a civil protection order and a criminal no-contact order in place
preventing Steven from having contact with Jennifer. Additionally, there were three civil
protection orders against Jennifer, with various third parties listed as the protected persons. 1 At
this point, the officer abandoned the original purpose of the traffic stop in order to investigate
whether Steven was in violation of either order by being with Jennifer in the car.
To separate Jennifer from Steven, a second officer, Andrew Morlock (“Officer
Morlock”), asked Jennifer to step out of the vehicle. Dispatch had yet to confirm whether any of
the orders were active, or whether they may have contained an exception that allowed Steven and
Jennifer to be together for limited purposes. While the officers waited for that information,
Officer Morlock asked Jennifer about some bulges in her pockets, and she pulled out a lighter,
some money, and two syringes wrapped in tissue.
Officer Lane ran his drug-detection dog around the vehicle, and the dog alerted. A search
of the car turned up a suspected marijuana joint and a tin holding small containers of a waxy
substance, one of which later tested presumptively positive for marijuana. Jennifer’s purse was
also in the vehicle and contained pills later identified as hydrocodone. During the car search,
dispatch confirmed that the criminal no-contact order against Steven was active. Steven was
taken into custody.
Jennifer was arrested for possession of drug paraphernalia, and a subsequent search of her
person revealed another syringe and a baggie of methamphetamine hidden in her bra. The State
charged Jennifer with possession of methamphetamine, possession of hydrocodone, possession
of marijuana, and possession of drug paraphernalia, as well as a persistent violator enhancement.
B. Procedural Background
Jennifer moved to suppress the evidence from the search of the vehicle and her person,
arguing it was discovered only after an unlawful extension of the traffic stop. 2 Following a
hearing, the district court allowed the parties to present additional briefing on the question of
whether the stop as related to Jennifer was unlawfully extended. Subsequently, the district court
1
The State does not contend that Jennifer was suspected of criminal activity associated with any of these orders.
2
Additionally, Jennifer asserted that (1) the drug dog’s alert did not provide probable cause to search the vehicle; (2)
the officers unlawfully searched Jennifer’s person; (3) officers violated Jennifer’s Miranda rights; and (4) Jennifer
was arrested for a misdemeanor that did not occur in the arresting officer’s presence. The district court did not rule
on these issues and we have not been asked to consider them on appeal.
2
entered an order granting Jennifer’s motion to suppress the evidence on the grounds that the
officer lacked reasonable suspicion to detain Jennifer as related to the protection orders. 3 The
district court concluded the investigation of Jennifer subsequent to the officers abandoning the
traffic stop was unlawful because she was detained after the original purpose of the stop was
abandoned, and the officers had no reasonable suspicion she was committing a crime related to
the protection orders. Further, the district court determined that Jennifer had not handed over the
contents of her pockets voluntarily but as part of the unlawful detention. The State timely
appealed the issue of whether Jennifer was lawfully detained as a passenger in the vehicle.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
“The proper standard of review applied to the ruling of a trial court suppressing evidence
on constitutional grounds is one of deference to factual findings unless they are clearly
erroneous. However, we exercise free review over whether, based upon the trial court’s findings,
the evidence should have been suppressed.” State v. Lira-Lara, 132 Idaho 465, 466, 974 P.2d
1094, 1095 (1999) (internal citations omitted).
In the present case, inasmuch as the State accepts the district court’s factual findings and
only challenges the constitutionality of Jennifer’s detention, this is purely a matter of law.
III. ANALYSIS
A. The district court erred when it determined that an officer cannot continue to detain
a vehicle’s passenger upon reasonable suspicion that a stopped driver may have
committed another crime.
The parties agree that Jennifer was lawfully detained as a passenger in a stopped vehicle
while police initially investigated Steven’s expired registration. The question presented here is
whether it was lawful for police to continue detaining Jennifer when the focus of the
investigation evolved to a more pressing and potentially dangerous crime in progress: whether
Steven was violating protection orders making it unlawful for him to have contact with Jennifer.
According to the State, reasonable suspicion that Steven was violating the civil protection order
and the criminal no-contact order allowed officers to extend the traffic stop and to continue to
3
At the hearing on Jennifer’s motion to suppress, the State noted that Jennifer’s briefing on the issue related to the
lawfulness of her detention in general. However, during oral argument, Jennifer argued specifically that she could
not be detained as a passenger related to the protection orders. The district court allowed the State to submit
supplemental briefing on that discrete question. The district court then focused its written ruling on this narrow
issue, concluding: “Evidence obtained after the officers discovered that [Jennifer] was not violating an NCO
(including the methamphetamine, balm containing THC, syringes, and [Jennifer’s] statements to the officers) are
suppressed.”
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detain Jennifer, as well. However, Jennifer counters that when the traffic stop’s original
purpose—investigating a possible expired and canceled registration—was abandoned by the
officers, the traffic stop was complete. Thus, she asserts that the subsequent investigation into the
protection orders was not a traffic investigation. Because the officers had no independent
reasonable suspicion that Jennifer was engaged in the new criminal activity, she claims that her
continued detention became unlawful when the stop shifted to focus on the protection orders.
Thus, she maintains that any evidence obtained due to her illegal detention was correctly
suppressed by the district court.
The Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution guarantees that “[t]he right of
the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable
searches and seizures, shall not be violated.” When an officer stops a vehicle, it constitutes a
seizure by law enforcement to which the Fourth Amendment applies. Delaware v. Prouse, 440
U.S. 648, 653 (1979). This type of seizure made to investigate a traffic violation is valid under
the Fourth Amendment so long as the seizing officer has reasonable suspicion that a traffic
violation actually occurred. See Rodriguez v. United States, 575 U.S. 348 (2015). It is well-
established that the seizure also extends to every person in the vehicle for the duration of the
traffic stop. Brendlin v. California, 551 U.S. 249, 255 (2007).
The United States Supreme Court explained the constitutional basis for permitting
passengers in an automobile to be seized during a traffic stop in Arizona v. Johnson, 555 U.S.
323 (2009). The Court noted that threats against officer safety are amplified during traffic stops,
not due to the relatively benign nature of traffic infractions, “but from the fact that evidence of a
more serious crime might be uncovered during the stop.” Id. at 331 (internal citation omitted).
Because passengers are already physically stopped when the vehicle is stopped, the Supreme
Court observed that, if the passenger is legally detained as well, “the additional intrusion on the
passenger is minimal.” Id. at 332 (internal citation omitted).
Jennifer asks this Court to consider what a traffic stop is—when does it end, and by
extension, when does law enforcement no longer have the right to detain a person simply
because they are a passenger in a stopped vehicle? The Supreme Court’s decision in Johnson is
instructive:
The temporary seizure of driver and passengers ordinarily continues, and remains
reasonable, for the duration of the stop. Normally, the stop ends when the police
have no further need to control the scene, and inform the driver and passengers
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they are free to leave. An officer’s inquiries into matters unrelated to the
justification for the traffic stop, this Court has made plain, do not convert the
encounter into something other than a lawful seizure, so long as those inquiries do
not measurably extend the duration of the stop.
Johnson, 555 U.S. at 333 (emphasis added; internal citations omitted). Thus, Johnson
emphasized that the length of the stop, and law enforcement’s ability to seize the vehicle’s
occupants, is measured by how long officers need to control the scene. At the same time, officers
may not pursue investigations without reasonable suspicion if those investigations extend the
stop unlawfully. If such an investigation unlawfully extends the duration of the traffic stop, then
the Fourth Amendment rights of the vehicle’s occupants have been violated.
We view the present facts as fitting squarely within the circumstances described in
Johnson, which justify the detention of a vehicle’s passengers. The Johnson Court articulated
that officers need to control all parties in a traffic stop because of the potential for exposing other
criminal activity, which might lead to danger. That precise scenario occurred here. A simple
traffic stop led to the initial discovery that Steven was potentially in violation of a civil
protection order and criminal no-contact order involving Jennifer—the passenger in the car.
They also learned that Jennifer had multiple protection orders entered against her with several
third parties listed as the protected persons. It was reasonable for law enforcement to initially
infer that the orders issued against Steven might have stemmed from past violence or threats of
violence between Steven and Jennifer, and that the orders could have been mutual. Regardless of
whether the officers were investigating the expired vehicle registration or if they shifted focus to
the more urgent protection orders, the physical risk to the officers remained the same or actually
increased as reasonable suspicion of a more serious crime arose during the lawful traffic stop.
This justified officers in continuing to control the scene—including detaining Jennifer—as they
investigated further.
The State concedes that the officers abandoned any investigation of the vehicle’s
registration as soon as they discovered the civil protection order and criminal no-contact order in
place against Steven. Due to this pivot in the purpose of the stop, the district court determined
that the civil protection order investigation could not be considered an extension of the traffic
stop because the traffic-related investigation had concluded. Thus, it ruled that there could be no
Fourth Amendment exception that allowed for Jennifer’s detention. In other words, the district
court read “traffic stop” rigidly as a stop that only applies to motor vehicle code violations. By
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extension, this means that any other investigation based on reasonable suspicion that evolves
from the original traffic stop would not qualify as a traffic stop, notwithstanding the fact that it
occurred in and around the vehicle while it was stopped on a roadside.
On appeal, Jennifer attempts to find support for this position by citing from two factually
dissimilar dog-sniff cases—one from the United States Supreme Court, Rodriguez v. United
States, and the other from this Court, State v. Linze, 161 Idaho 605, 389 P.3d 150 (2016). In
Rodriguez, an officer issued a warning ticket for a traffic infraction and then, without reasonable
suspicion of another crime, ran a narcotics dog around the vehicle for the purpose of detecting
illicit substances. Rodriguez, 575 U.S. at 352. The Supreme Court held the extension of the stop
for further investigation and a dog sniff was not reasonable under the Fourth Amendment,
stating,
a police stop exceeding the time needed to handle the matter for which the stop
was made violates the Constitution’s shield against unreasonable seizures. A
seizure justified only by a police-observed traffic violation, therefore, “become[s]
unlawful if it is prolonged beyond the time reasonably required to complete th[e]
mission” of issuing a ticket for the violation.
Rodriguez, 575 U.S. at 350–51 (quoting Illinois v. Caballes, 543 U.S. 405, 407 (2005). In
explaining how the dog sniff exceeded the mission of the traffic stop, the Rodriguez Court cited
Johnson for the proposition that an officer cannot conduct an investigation that prolongs a traffic
stop, “absent the reasonable suspicion ordinarily demanded to justify detaining an individual.”
Id. at 355. The officer in Rodriguez did not have reasonable suspicion for the dog sniff, and the
dog sniff took an additional seven or eight minutes; thus, the stop was unlawfully extended. Id. at
357. The Supreme Court observed that the justification for intruding upon Fourth Amendment
rights was specific to the traffic stop and did not, in this situation, extend to the dog sniff:
Traffic stops are “especially fraught with danger to police officers,” so an officer
may need to take certain negligibly burdensome precautions in order to complete
his mission safely. On-scene investigation into other crimes, however, detours
from that mission. So too do safety precautions taken in order to facilitate such
detours. . . . Highway and officer safety are interests different in kind from the
Government’s endeavor to detect crime in general or drug trafficking in
particular.
Id. at 356–57 (internal citations omitted).
We cited Rodriguez for our conclusion in Linze that a traffic stop had been unlawfully
extended in order to conduct a dog sniff. In that case, an officer stopped a vehicle for a cracked
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windshield but also called for a K-9 unit to respond. Linze, 161 Idaho at 606, 389 P.3d at 151.
When the K-9 unit arrived, the first officer stopped writing the traffic citation in order to serve as
back up while the second officer led the dog around the vehicle. Id. at 607, 389 P.3d 152. About
two and a half minutes later, the dog alerted, and both officers searched the vehicle, discovering
a glass pipe with white crystal residue, which Linze admitted he used to smoke
methamphetamine. Id. Guided by the Supreme Court’s holding in Rodriguez, we determined
Linze’s Fourth Amendment rights had been violated because the officer who initiated the traffic
stop abandoned the traffic stop in order to pursue an investigation not based on reasonable
suspicion. Id. at 609, 389 P.3d 154. We observed:
The stop remains a reasonable seizure while the officer diligently pursues the
purpose of the stop, to which that reasonable suspicion is related. However,
should the officer abandon the purpose of the stop, the officer no longer has that
original reasonable suspicion supporting his actions. Indeed, when an officer
abandons his or her original purpose, the officer has for all intents and purposes
initiated a new seizure with a new purpose; one which requires its own
reasonableness under the Fourth Amendment. This new seizure cannot piggy-
back on the reasonableness of the original seizure. In other words, unless some
new reasonable suspicion or probable cause arises to justify the seizure’s new
purpose, a seized party’s Fourth Amendment rights are violated when the original
purpose of the stop is abandoned (unless that abandonment falls within some
established exception).
Id. (emphasis added). Thus, any extension of the traffic stop made to pursue an investigation not
grounded in reasonable suspicion would violate the Fourth Amendment. Id.
Jennifer would have us read Rodriguez and Linze as meaning that only stops related to
motor vehicle code investigations allow for the detention of a vehicle’s passengers. However, we
do not agree that such a sweeping inference can be drawn from the facts of either case. In
Rodriguez, police completed the traffic citation and then extended the stop to permit a drug dog
sniff around the vehicle—without any reasonable suspicion of drug activity. Thus, when the
Supreme Court described how the traffic stop had been different from the “[o]n-scene
investigation into other crimes,” 575 U.S. at 356, we read this as referring only to what
occurred—first, a traffic stop, and then an additional investigation made without reasonable
suspicion, which extended the duration of the stop. Nothing in Rodriguez states that a traffic stop
which gives rise to reasonable suspicion of another crime then transforms the subsequent
investigation into a non-traffic stop with a slate of different rules.
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Similarly, in Linze the officer abandoned the traffic stop to pursue a drug dog sniff
investigation—again, absent any reasonable suspicion. We relied on Rodriguez for our
conclusion that the stop had been extended unlawfully, and we made no comment about
circumstances like the present where a traffic stop gives rise to reasonable suspicion of another
crime. In sum, the district court reads Linze as meaning that only stops related to motor vehicle
code violations allow for the detention of passengers. However, it failed to recognize that Linze
never addressed what would happen if the traffic stop led to reasonable suspicion that the driver
was engaged in another crime—the key factual dissimilarity between Linze and the case at hand.
In Johnson, the Supreme Court observed that a passenger may be every bit as motivated
as the driver to use violence in order to prevent the detection of another crime. Johnson, 555 U.S.
332–33. Moreover, a passenger is just as likely as the driver to be armed and dangerous. Id. at
333. Thus, the Supreme Court has stated that it is “too plain for argument” that the interest in
officer safety during a roadside stop is “both legitimate and weighty.” Maryland v. Wilson, 519
U.S. 408, 412 (1997) (quoting Pennsylvania v. Mimms, 434 U.S. 106, 110 (1977). Further, even
the safety risk associated with standing beside a vehicle, near the path of oncoming traffic, is
considerable. Id. Simply put, these justifications for allowing the officer to maintain control of
the scene by detaining passengers do not disappear merely because an officer conducting a traffic
stop develops reasonable suspicion of another crime. The officer safety rationale for allowing the
detention of passengers throughout the search is not unlike the rationale for detaining occupants
in a home during a lawful parole search, which we held was constitutional in State v. Phipps, 166
Idaho 1, 8, 454 P.3d 1084, 1091 (2019), cert. denied, 141 S. Ct. 242 (2020).
Therefore, we do not read Rodriguez or Linze as creating a distinction in the ability of
law enforcement to control the scene based on whether it is an initial traffic stop or a subsequent
criminal investigation for which the officers have reasonable suspicion. We find it especially
troubling that doing so would mean affording greater protection to an officer who stops a vehicle
and writes a traffic citation, than for an officer who stops a vehicle and later discovers evidence
of a more serious crime. There is simply nothing in the reasoning of Rodriguez or Linze that
would require us to compromise officer safety in this manner.
We acknowledge the importance of the Fourth Amendment in preventing police from
unlawfully detaining individuals—especially passengers unassociated with the original traffic
violation—without reasonable suspicion of criminal activity. However, Jennifer’s view asks us
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to create a standard for detaining passengers that is not only at odds with the dangerous reality of
police investigations that arise daily during traffic stops, but inconsistent with United States
Supreme Court precedent. Johnson, 555 U.S. at 332-33. Therefore, we hold that the district court
erred in granting the motion to suppress.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, this Court reverses the district court’s order granting Jennifer’s
motion to suppress evidence.
Chief Justice BEVAN, and Justices BRODY and BURDICK CONCUR.
STEGNER, J., concurring.
I concur in the majority’s conclusion that Jennifer was lawfully detained during the
investigation of Steven. However, I find it necessary to add a written concurrence because an
important constitutional issue has not been addressed in the way this case was argued and
resolved. Left unanswered by this case is the question of whether a vehicle’s passenger may be
subjected to a criminal investigation when no reasonable suspicion exists to suspect her of
criminal activity. I believe that, in order to lawfully search a passenger during an extended traffic
stop, law enforcement must have reasonable suspicion of criminal activity specific to that
passenger to subject her to a search. However, because Jennifer did not preserve this issue by
raising this argument in her brief on appeal (as she did in the district court), I nevertheless am
constrained to agree with the majority’s decision.
Here, officers lawfully stopped Steven, as the driver, to investigate a canceled
registration. When this purpose was abandoned to investigate Steven’s potential violation of a
civil protection order and a criminal no contact order prohibiting him from having contact with
Jennifer, officers possessed no reasonable suspicion specific to Jennifer which allowed them to
eventually search both her person and her belongings. 1 Although it is clear that Jennifer was
detained lawfully as the passenger of a vehicle stopped for a traffic violation, had Jennifer raised
this argument on appeal, I would conclude that the officers’ subsequent search of Jennifer’s
person and belongings during their investigation of Steven was unreasonable because it was not
1
The State did not contend that Jennifer was suspected of any criminal activity associated with protection orders
between her and unrelated third parties.
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based on particularized suspicion and therefore violated her Fourth Amendment rights. See
Arizona v. Johnson, 555 U.S. 323, 333 (2009) (“The temporary seizure of driver and passengers
ordinarily continues, and remains reasonable, for the duration of the stop.”).
The majority places great weight on the United States Supreme Court’s decision in
Arizona v. Johnson, finding that the present case’s facts “fit[] squarely within the circumstances
described in Johnson, which justify the detention of a vehicle’s passengers.” I respectfully
disagree with the majority’s reliance on Johnson; Johnson is not only unnecessary dicta, but it is
also factually distinguishable from this case. In Johnson, the passenger who was ultimately
arrested during the traffic stop had a police scanner on his person, and he was also wearing
clothing affiliated with a local gang which was being investigated by the officers performing the
stop. Given these facts, the officers had reasonable suspicion that the passenger was armed and
dangerous. See id. at 328. Here, officers had no reasonable basis to suspect that Jennifer was
either armed and dangerous or that she was suspected of any other criminal activity. Rather,
Steven was the focus of the officers’ legitimate investigation because of his potential violation of
both civil and criminal no contact orders prohibiting him from having contact with Jennifer.
Therefore, Johnson is readily distinguishable from the facts presented in this case.
The majority also emphasizes the importance of officer safety during traffic stops,
describing it as “legitimate and weighty.” (Citing Maryland v. Wilson, 519 U.S. 408, 412
(1997).) While I agree that officer safety is an important factor during routine traffic stops that
evolve into more serious criminal investigations, officer safety cannot trump the Fourth
Amendment rights of passengers not independently suspected of criminal activity.
Johnson teaches that during a traffic stop,
[t]he police need not have [] cause to believe any occupant of the vehicle is
involved in criminal activity. To justify a patdown of the driver or a passenger
during a traffic stop, however, just as in the case of a pedestrian reasonably
suspected of criminal activity, the police must harbor reasonable suspicion that
the person subjected to the frisk is armed and dangerous.
Johnson, 555 U.S. at 327 (italics added). Johnson therefore stands for the proposition that an
officer needs independent reasonable suspicion particularized to the passenger in order to frisk
that passenger. Id. The majority reasons that no matter the officers’ reason for extending the
lawful traffic stop, “the physical risk to the officers remained the same or actually increased as
reasonable suspicion of a more serious crime arose.” It was this physical risk, the majority
contends, that “justified officers in continuing to control the scene—including detaining
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Jennifer—as they investigated further.” (Italics added.) To be clear, I agree with the majority that
the officers were justified in detaining Jennifer for the duration of the stop and investigation of
Steven because officer safety remained a legitimate interest until the stop had been completed.
However, it is the officers’ eventual investigation of Jennifer that was unreasonable. There is no
evidence of any wrongdoing by Jennifer, she was simply a passenger caught in the net of the
traffic stop and subsequent investigation of the driver.
The key distinction between the passenger in Johnson and Jennifer is that the officers in
Johnson had individualized reasonable suspicion that the passenger was potentially armed and
dangerous (as shown by his possessing a police scanner and his wearing gang-affiliated
clothing), while in Jennifer’s case the officers performing the stop of Steven’s vehicle did not
have independent reasonable suspicion that Jennifer herself had committed any crime or was
armed and dangerous.
The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has indicated that particularized reasonable suspicion
that a vehicle’s passenger has committed a crime is necessary in order for officers to prolong a
traffic stop past its original purpose. United States v. Landeros, 913 F.3d 862, 864 (9th Cir.
2019). In Landeros, a vehicle was stopped for speeding. Id. The vehicle’s front seat passenger,
Landeros, refused to give his identification to law enforcement. Id. at 865. Due to Landeros’
refusal, the officer extended the stop past its initial purpose by calling for backup in order to
obtain Landeros’ compliance. Id.
The court in Landeros held that “the several minutes of additional questioning to
ascertain Landeros’ identity was permissible only if it was (1) part of the stop’s ‘mission’ or (2)
supported by independent reasonable suspicion.” Id. at 867–68 (italics added). The court
concluded that obtaining the identity of a passenger in this instance was not part of the stop’s
mission, and therefore, “[t]he officers’ extension of the stop [] violated the Fourth Amendment
unless supported by independent reasonable suspicion.” Id. at 868 (italics added). In Landeros,
officers had no reasonable suspicion that Landeros had engaged in any unlawful behavior. Id.
(“[T]he record does not demonstrate that Officer Baker had a reasonable suspicion that Landeros
was out past his curfew or drinking underage. Any extension of the traffic stop to investigate
those matters was an unlawful seizure.”).
As Landeros instructs, officers need independent reasonable suspicion that a passenger
has engaged in criminal activity in order to justify a search of that individual. See id. Here,
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officers did not possess reasonable suspicion that Jennifer had committed a crime. The majority
attempts to reason that officers had reasonable suspicion specific to both Steven and Jennifer
because of Jennifer’s protection orders relating to third parties. The majority claims “it was
reasonable for law enforcement to initially infer that the orders issued against Steven might have
stemmed from past violence or threats of violence between Steven and Jennifer, and that the
orders could have been mutual.” This reasoning is unsupported by the underlying facts in that the
State has never contended that Jennifer was suspected of any criminal activity regarding her
unrelated protection orders, not to mention the fact that Jennifer did not have a mutual no contact
order in place preventing her from having contact with Steven. Consequently, this conclusion is
also dicta in that it is unnecessary for the majority’s conclusion. The officers only had reasonable
suspicion that Steven was presently in violation of a no contact order. In order for a traffic stop
to include the search of a passenger in a vehicle, there must be independent reasonable suspicion
to justify searching that passenger in order to pass constitutional muster. A traffic stop is not a
license for the police to subject a passenger to interrogation and search that is unrelated to the
basis for the original stop.
Accordingly, I concur in the majority’s decision because Jennifer failed to argue on
appeal that the subsequent search of her person and belongings violated her constitutional rights.
However, the issue of whether law enforcement must have reasonable suspicion specific to a
particular passenger must await resolution in a future case.
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