OPINION
MAY, Judge.The State appeals the grant of Thomas A. Cook’s motion to suppress evidence obtained from his trash. The police seized Cook’s trash because his name was on a list of customers who had purchased products from Worm’s Way, a garden supply company. The presence of Cook’s name on that customer list did not give police “articulable individualized grounds,” State v. Litchfield, 849 N.E.2d 170, 173 (Ind.Ct.App.2006) (“Litchfield II”), for suspecting Cook of illegal activity. We accordingly affirm the grant of Cook’s motion to suppress.1
FACTS
In recent years the federal Drug Enforcement Agency (“DEA”) has subpoenaed records from shipping companies to obtain information about customers of businesses selling equipment that might be used for growing marijuana. One of those businesses is Worm’s Way. Cook received a package from Worm’s Way in February of 2004 and the DEA gave Cook’s address to the Indiana State Police. In May of 2005 police went to Cook’s home at about 4 a.m. and took a trashcan he had set out for collection. They searched Cook’s trash and found some burnt rolling papers that contained marijuana. The police returned two days later and again took Cook’s trash. They found four cut marijuana stalks and some leaves. The police then sought and obtained a search warrant for Cook’s home. They executed the warrant and seized evidence Cook was growing marijuana.
Cook was charged with cultivation and possession of marijuana, both Class D felonies. He moved to suppress the evidence *485on the ground the searches of his trash were unreasonable. The trial court granted his motion, finding there was not “sufficient reasonable suspicion [Cook] was involved in criminal conduct.” (App. at 43.)
DISCUSSION AND DECISION
On appeal from the grant of a motion to suppress, the State appeals a negative judgment and must show the trial court’s ruling on the suppression motion was contrary to law. Litchfield II, 849 N.E.2d at 173. We will reverse a negative judgment only when the evidence is without conflict and all reasonable inferences lead to a conclusion opposite that reached by the trial court. Id. We do not reweigh the evidence or judge the credibility of the witnesses; rather, we consider only the evidence most favorable to the judgment. Id.
The State asserts the seizure of Cook’s trash was supported by reasonable suspicion because police based their decision to seize it “on a list that had proved extremely reliable2 in locating people who were cultivating marijuana.” (Br. of Appellant at 4) (footnote supplied). It was not.
We recently resolved this issue in Litch-field II, a case with facts almost identical to those in the case before us.3 There, as here, the State appealed the trial court’s grant of a motion to suppress evidence obtained in a trash pull. We determined the fact the Litchfields were on a list of people who had received shipments from Worm’s Way did not provide “articulable individualized grounds” to suspect the Litchfields were engaged in illegal activity and thus to permit the trash pull. 849 N.E.2d at 173.
Our Supreme Court noted in Litchfield I that “Allowing random searches, or searches of those individuals whom the officers hope to find in possession of incriminating evidence gives excessive discretion to engage in fishing expeditions.” We accordingly determined in Litchfield II:
the list alone is not a basis for articula-ble individualized suspicion. Under the *486facts of this case, the list was less like a reliable informant and more akin to an anonymous tip. As we have noted, our analysis of reasonableness is, comparable to that required for a Terry stop.
The United States Supreme Court has held that an anonymous tip is not enough to support the reasonable suspicion necessary for a “Terry” stop. An anonymous tip is considered less reliable than a tip from a known informant. Anonymous tips must be accompanied by specific indicia of reliability or must be corroborated by a police officer’s own observation in order to pass constitutional muster. Reasonable suspicion may be established by the totality of circumstances. Thus, although an anonymous tip alone will be insufficient to establish ■ reasonable suspicion, where significant aspects of the tip are corroborated by the observations of police, a subsequent investigatory stop is likely valid.
Like an anonymous tip, the information relied on in the present case — that the Litchfields had received shipments from Worm’s Way — required corroboration of criminal activity by a police officer’s own observation. Worm’s Way is a garden supply company that sells tools and materials that can be used to grow all kinds of crops — legal and illegal. While the ISP listed the steps it took to make its list of potential growers more reliable, the State failed to assert that any of these steps were taken in connection with the Litchfields’ property.
849 N.E.2d at 174 (citations omitted).
The facts in the ease before us compel the same result we reached in Litchfield II. We accordingly affirm.
Affirmed.
SULLIVAN, J., concurs. BAKER, J., dissents with opinion.. Because we affirm, we need not address Cook's alternative argument the information that led the police to search his trash was stale.
. While the DEA list apparently led to a number of people who were cultivating marijuana, an Indiana State Police trooper testified that in 2004, the year Cook received the package from Worm’s Way, police obtained trash from seventeen people on the list and fewer than half the trash pulls were "positive.” (Tr. at 14.)
The dissent would find reasonable suspicion for the trash seizure: "In sum, Trooper Murphy testified that 92% of the names from the DEA list had illicit substances in their trash.” Slip op. at 8. The specific testimony to which the dissent cites is the trooper's response "Correct" (Tr. at 29) to this question from the prosecutor: "And, out of that collection, as you testified before, 92% and then 47% and then you realize, if I’m not mistaken, you testified that one of those companies wasn’t providing information. So, you stopped using them [sic]. And you’re back up to 100%.” (Id.)
The DEA had provided lists for the years 2001 through 2004, but the trooper’s prior testimony to which the prosecutor was apparently referring was limited to the year 2003. The Trooper testified there were twenty-seven names on the DEA list that year, but only fourteen of those twenty-seven people were subjected to a trash pull. Thirteen of the trash seizures, or 92%, revealed “something positive.” {Id. at 14.) So, for that one year about which the trooper was testifying, only thirteen, or about 48% of "the names from the DEA list,” op. at 487, had illicit substances in their trash.
We decline to adopt the dissent's apparent characterization of the trooper's testimony that "In sum,” op. at 487, thirteen of twenty-seven people on the DEA list for one out of four years the list was provided demonstrates the DEA list was proven correct "92%” of the time. Id.
. Litchfield II is the appeal after the remand our Indiana Supreme Court ordered in Litchfield v. State, 824 N.E.2d 356 (Ind.2005) ("Litchfield I”).