May 4, 2014

PRADO NAVARETTE ET AL. v. CALIFORNIA SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES



PRADO NAVARETTE ET ALv. CALIFORNIA SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
Syllabus

CERTIORARI TO THE COURT OF APPEAL OF CALIFORNIA, FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
No. 12–9490. Argued January 21, 2014—Decided April 22, 2014
A California Highway Patrol officer stopped the pickup truck occupiedby petitioners because it matched the description of a vehicle that a 911 caller had recently reported as having run her off the road.  As he and a second officer approached the truck, they smelled marijuana.They searched the truck’s bed, found 30 pounds of marijuana, and ar­rested petitioners.  Petitioners moved to suppress the evidence, argu­ing that the traffic stop violated the Fourth Amendment.  Their mo­tion was denied, and they pleaded guilty to transporting marijuana. The California Court of Appeal affirmed, concluding that the officerhad reasonable suspicion to conduct an investigative stop.
Held: The traffic stop complied with the Fourth Amendment because,under the totality of the circumstances, the officer had reasonablesuspicion that the truck’s driver was intoxicated.  Pp. 3–11.

(a) The Fourth Amendment permits brief investigative stops whenan officer has “a particularized and objective basis for suspecting the particular person stopped of . . . criminal activity.” United States v. Cortez, 449 U. S. 411, 417–418.  Reasonable suspicion takes into ac­count “the totality of the circumstances,” id., at 417, and depends“upon both the content of information possessed by police and its de­gree of reliability,” Alabama v. White, 496 U. S. 325, 330.  An anony­mous tip alone seldom demonstrates sufficient reliability, White, 496

U. S., at 329, but may do so under appropriate circumstances, id., at

327. Pp. 3–5.

(b) The 911 call in this case bore adequate indicia of reliability forthe officer to credit the caller’s account. By reporting that she had been run off the road by a specific vehicle, the caller necessarilyclaimed an eyewitness basis of knowledge.  The apparently short time between the reported incident and the 911 call suggests that the
caller had little time to fabricate the report.  And a reasonable officer could conclude that a false tipster would think twice before using the911 system, which has several technological and regulatory features that safeguard against making false reports with immunity.  Pp. 5–8.
(c) Not only was the tip here reliable, but it also created reasonablesuspicion of drunk driving.  Running another car off the road sug­gests the sort of impairment that characterizes drunk driving.  While that conduct might be explained by another cause such as driver dis­traction, reasonable suspicion “need not rule out the possibility of in­nocent conduct.”  United States v. Arvizu, 534 U. S. 266, 277.  Finally,the officer’s failure to observe additional suspicious conduct during the short period that he followed the truck did not dispel the reason­able suspicion of drunk driving, and the officer was not required tosurveil the truck for a longer period.  Pp. 8–10.

Affirmed.
THOMAS, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which ROBERTS,
C. J., and KENNEDY, BREYER, and ALITO, JJ., joined.  SCALIA, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which GINSBURG, SOTOMAYOR, and KAGAN, JJ., joined.
Opinion of the Court
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in thepreliminary print of the United States Reports. Readers are requested tonotify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Wash­ington, D. C. 20543, of any typographical or other formal errors, in orderthat corrections may be made before the preliminary print goes to press.

SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
No. 12–9490
LORENZO PRADO NAVARETTE AND JOSE PRADO NAVARETTE, PETITIONERS v. CALIFORNIA
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE COURT OF APPEAL OF CALIFORNIA, FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
[April 22, 2014]
JUSTICE THOMAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
After a 911 caller reported that a vehicle had run her off the road, a police officer located the vehicle she identified during the call and executed a traffic stop.  We hold that the stop complied with the Fourth Amendment because, under the totality of the circumstances, the officer hadreasonable suspicion that the driver was intoxicated.
I On August 23, 2008, a Mendocino County 911 dispatchteam for the California Highway Patrol (CHP) received acall from another CHP dispatcher in neighboring Hum­boldt County. The Humboldt County dispatcher relayed atip from a 911 caller, which the Mendocino County teamrecorded as follows: “‘Showing southbound Highway 1 at mile marker 88, Silver Ford 150 pickup.  Plate of 8-David­94925. Ran the reporting party off the roadway and was last seen approximately five [minutes] ago.’ ” App. 36a.The Mendocino County team then broadcast that infor­mation to CHP officers at 3:47 p.m.A CHP officer heading northbound toward the reportedvehicle responded to the broadcast.  At 4:00 p.m., the
Opinion of the Court
officer passed the truck near mile marker 69.  At about
4:05 p.m., after making a U-turn, he pulled the truck over.A second officer, who had separately responded to the broadcast, also arrived on the scene. As the two officers approached the truck, they smelled marijuana.  A search of the truck bed revealed 30 pounds of marijuana.  The officers arrested the driver, petitioner Lorenzo PradoNavarette, and the passenger, petitioner José PradoNavarette.
Petitioners moved to suppress the evidence, arguingthat the traffic stop violated the Fourth Amendment because the officer lacked reasonable suspicion of criminalactivity. Both the magistrate who presided over the sup­pression hearing and the Superior Court disagreed.1 Petitioners pleaded guilty to transporting marijuana and were sentenced to 90 days in jail plus three years of probation.
The California Court of Appeal affirmed, concludingthat the officer had reasonable suspicion to conduct aninvestigative stop. 2012 WL 4842651 (Oct. 12, 2012).  The court reasoned that the content of the tip indicated that itcame from an eyewitness victim of reckless driving, and that the officer’s corroboration of the truck’s description, location, and direction established that the tip was reliable enough to justify a traffic stop.  Id., at *7. Finally, thecourt concluded that the caller reported driving that wassufficiently dangerous to merit an investigative stop with­out waiting for the officer to observe additional reckless driving himself. Id., at *9. The California Supreme Court
—————— 1At the suppression hearing, counsel for petitioners did not disputethat the reporting party identified herself by name in the 911 call recording.  Because neither the caller nor the Humboldt County dis­patcher who received the call was present at the hearing, however, the prosecution did not introduce the recording into evidence.  The prosecu­tion proceeded to treat the tip as anonymous, and the lower courtsfollowed suit.  See 2012 WL 4842651, *6 (Cal. Ct. App., Oct. 12, 2012).
Opinion of the Court
denied review. We granted certiorari, 570 U. S. ___ (2013), and now affirm.
II The Fourth Amendment permits brief investigativestops—such as the traffic stop in this case—when a law enforcement officer has “a particularized and objectivebasis for suspecting the particular person stopped of crim­inal activity.” United States v. Cortez, 449 U. S. 411, 417– 418 (1981); see also Terry v. Ohio, 392 U. S. 1, 21–22 (1968). The “reasonable suspicion” necessary to justify such a stop “is dependent upon both the content of infor­mation possessed by police and its degree of reliability.” Alabama v. White, 496 U. S. 325, 330 (1990).  The stand­ard takes into account “the totality of the circumstances—the whole picture.” Cortez, supra, at 417.  Although a mere “‘hunch’” does not create reasonable suspicion, Terry, supra, at 27, the level of suspicion the standard requires is “considerably less than proof of wrongdoing by a preponderance of the evidence,” and “obviously less” than is necessary for probable cause, United States v. Sokolow, 490 U. S. 1, 7 (1989).
A These principles apply with full force to investigativestops based on information from anonymous tips. We have firmly rejected the argument “that reasonable cause for a[n investigative stop] can only be based on the officer’s personal observation, rather than on information supplied by another person.” Adams v. Williams, 407 U. S. 143, 147 (1972). Of course, “an anonymous tip alone seldom demonstrates the informant’s basis of knowledge or verac­ity.” White, 496 U. S., at 329 (emphasis added).  That is because “ordinary citizens generally do not provide exten­sive recitations of the basis of their everyday observa­tions,” and an anonymous tipster’s veracity is “‘by hypoth­
esis largely unknown, and unknowable.’”  Ibid.  But under appropriate circumstances, an anonymous tip can demon­strate “sufficient indicia of reliability to provide reasona­ble suspicion to make [an] investigatory stop.” Id., at 327.
Our decisions in Alabama v. White, 496 U. S. 325 (1990), and Florida v. J. L., 529 U. S. 266 (2000), are useful guides. In White, an anonymous tipster told the police that a woman would drive from a particular apartment building to a particular motel in a brown Plymouth station wagon with a broken right tail light.  The tipster furtherasserted that the woman would be transporting cocaine.496 U. S., at 327.  After confirming the innocent details,officers stopped the station wagon as it neared the moteland found cocaine in the vehicle.  Id., at 331. We held that the officers’ corroboration of certain details made the anonymous tip sufficiently reliable to create reasonable suspicion of criminal activity.  By accurately predictingfuture behavior, the tipster demonstrated “a special famil­iarity with respondent’s affairs,” which in turn impliedthat the tipster had “access to reliable information aboutthat individual’s illegal activities.”  Id., at 332.  We also recognized that an informant who is proved to tell the truth about some things is more likely to tell the truthabout other things, “including the claim that the object ofthe tip is engaged in criminal activity.” Id., at 331 (citing Illinois v. Gates, 462 U. S. 213, 244 (1983)).
In J. L., by contrast, we determined that no reasonable suspicion arose from a bare-bones tip that a young black male in a plaid shirt standing at a bus stop was carrying a gun. 529 U. S., at 268. The tipster did not explain how heknew about the gun, nor did he suggest that he had any special familiarity with the young man’s affairs. Id., at
271. As a result, police had no basis for believing “that the tipster ha[d] knowledge of concealed criminal activity.” Id., at 272.  Furthermore, the tip included no predictionsof future behavior that could be corroborated to assess the
Opinion of the Court
tipster’s credibility. Id., at 271. We accordingly concluded that the tip was insufficiently reliable to justify a stop and frisk.
B The initial question in this case is whether the 911 callwas sufficiently reliable to credit the allegation that peti­tioners’ truck “ran the [caller] off the roadway.” Even assuming for present purposes that the 911 call was anon­ymous, see n. 1, supra, we conclude that the call bore adequate indicia of reliability for the officer to credit thecaller’s account.  The officer was therefore justified in proceeding from the premise that the truck had, in fact, caused the caller’s car to be dangerously diverted from the highway.By reporting that she had been run off the road by aspecific vehicle—a silver Ford F-150 pickup, license plate 8D94925—the caller necessarily claimed eyewitness knowledge of the alleged dangerous driving.  That basis of knowledge lends significant support to the tip’s reliability.See Gates, supra, at 234 (“[An informant’s] explicit and detailed description of alleged wrongdoing, along with astatement that the event was observed firsthand, entitles his tip to greater weight than might otherwise be thecase”); Spinelli v. United States, 393 U. S. 410, 416 (1969) (a tip of illegal gambling is less reliable when “it is not alleged that the informant personally observed [the de­fendant] at work or that he had ever placed a bet with him”). This is in contrast to J. L., where the tip providedno basis for concluding that the tipster had actually seenthe gun. 529 U. S., at 271.  Even in White, where we upheld the stop, there was scant evidence that the tipsterhad actually observed cocaine in the station wagon. We called White a “‘close case’” because “[k]nowledge about aperson’s future movements indicates some familiarity with that person’s affairs, but having such knowledge does not
6 PRADO NAVARETTE v. CALIFORNIA
Opinion of the Court
necessarily imply that the informant knows, in particular,whether that person is carrying hidden contraband.”  529
U. S., at 271.  A driver’s claim that another vehicle ran her off the road, however, necessarily implies that the inform­ant knows the other car was driven dangerously.
There is also reason to think that the 911 caller in this case was telling the truth.  Police confirmed the truck’s location near mile marker 69 (roughly 19 highway miles south of the location reported in the 911 call) at 4:00 p.m.(roughly 18 minutes after the 911 call). That timeline of events suggests that the caller reported the incident soon after she was run off the road. That sort of contemporane­ous report has long been treated as especially reliable. Inevidence law, we generally credit the proposition thatstatements about an event and made soon after perceivingthat event are especially trustworthy because “substantial contemporaneity of event and statement negate the likeli­hood of deliberate or conscious misrepresentation.”  Advi­sory Committee’s Notes on Fed. Rule Evid. 803(1), 28
U. S. C. App., p. 371 (describing the rationale for thehearsay exception for “present sense impression[s]”). A similar rationale applies to a “statement relating to a startling event”—such as getting run off the road—“madewhile the declarant was under the stress of excitement that it caused.”  Fed. Rule Evid. 803(2) (hearsay exception for “excited utterances”). Unsurprisingly, 911 calls thatwould otherwise be inadmissible hearsay have often beenadmitted on those grounds.  See D. Binder, Hearsay Handbook §8.1, pp. 257–259 (4th ed. 2013–2014) (citing cases admitting 911 calls as present sense impressions); id., §9.1, at 274–275 (911 calls admitted as excited utter­ances). There was no indication that the tip in J. L. (oreven in White) was contemporaneous with the observation of criminal activity or made under the stress of excitementcaused by a startling event, but those considerationsweigh in favor of the caller’s veracity here.
Opinion of the Court
Another indicator of veracity is the caller’s use of the 911 emergency system. See Brief for Respondent 40–41,44; Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae 16–18. A 911 call has some features that allow for identifying and trac­ing callers, and thus provide some safeguards against making false reports with immunity. See J. L., supra, at 276 (KENNEDY, J., concurring). As this case illustrates, see n. 1, supra, 911 calls can be recorded, which provides victims with an opportunity to identify the false tipster’s voice and subject him to prosecution, see, e.g., Cal. Penal Code Ann. §653x (West 2010) (makes “telephon[ing] the 911 emergency line with the intent to annoy or harass”punishable by imprisonment and fine); see also §148.3(2014 West Cum. Supp.) (prohibits falsely reporting “that an ‘emergency’ exists”); §148.5 (prohibits falsely reporting “that a felony or misdemeanor has been committed”).  The 911 system also permits law enforcement to verify im­portant information about the caller.  In 1998, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) began to require cellular carriers to relay the caller’s phone number to 911 dispatchers.  47 CFR §20.18(d)(1) (2013) (FCC’s “Phase Ienhanced 911 services” requirements). Beginning in 2001, carriers have been required to identify the caller’s geo­graphic location with increasing specificity. §§20.18(e)–(h) (“Phase II enhanced 911 service” requirements).  And although callers may ordinarily block call recipients fromobtaining their identifying information, FCC regulationsexempt 911 calls from that privilege. §§64.1601(b),(d)(4)(ii) (“911 emergency services” exemption from rulethat, when a caller so requests, “a carrier may not revealthat caller’s number or name”).  None of this is to suggest that tips in 911 calls are per se reliable. Given the forego­ing technological and regulatory developments, however, a reasonable officer could conclude that a false tipster would think twice before using such a system.  The caller’s use of the 911 system is therefore one of the relevant circum­
Opinion of the Court
stances that, taken together, justified the officer’s reliance on the information reported in the 911 call.
C Even a reliable tip will justify an investigative stop only if it creates reasonable suspicion that “criminal activity may be afoot.” Terry, 392 U. S., at 30.  We must therefore determine whether the 911 caller’s report of being run offthe roadway created reasonable suspicion of an ongoing crime such as drunk driving as opposed to an isolated episode of past recklessness.  See Cortez, 449 U. S., at 417 (“An investigatory stop must be justified by some objective manifestation that the person stopped is, or is about to be, engaged in criminal activity”).  We conclude that the behavior alleged by the 911 caller, “viewed from thestandpoint of an objectively reasonable police officer,amount[s] to reasonable suspicion” of drunk driving. Ornelas v. United States, 517 U. S. 690, 696 (1996).  The stop was therefore proper.2 Reasonable suspicion depends on “‘“the factual and practical considerations of everyday life on which reason- able and prudent men, not legal technicians, act.”’” Id., at
695. Under that commonsense approach, we can appro­priately recognize certain driving behaviors as sound indicia of drunk driving.  See, e.g., People v. Wells, 38 Cal. 4th 1078, 1081, 136 P. 3d 810, 811 (2006) (“‘weav­ing all over the roadway’”); State v. Prendergast, 103 Haw. 451, 452–453, 83 P. 3d 714, 715–716 (2004) (“cross[ing]over the center line” on a highway and “almost caus[ing]several head-on collisions”); State v. Golotta, 178 N. J. 205, 209, 837 A. 2d 359, 361 (2003) (driving “‘all over the road’” and “‘weaving back and forth’”); State v.
—————— 2Because we conclude that the 911 call created reasonable suspicion of an ongoing crime, we need not address under what circumstances a stop is justified by the need to investigate completed criminal activity. Cf. United States v. Hensley, 469 U. S. 221, 229 (1985).
Opinion of the Court
Walshire, 634 N. W. 2d 625, 626 (Iowa 2001) (“driving inthe median”). Indeed, the accumulated experience of thousands of officers suggests that these sorts of erraticbehaviors are strongly correlated with drunk driving.See Nat. Highway Traffic Safety Admin., The Visual Detection of DWI Motorists 4–5 (Mar. 2010), online athttp://nhtsa.gov/staticfiles/nti/pdf/808677.pdf (as visited Apr. 18, 2014, and available in Clerk of Court’s case file).Of course, not all traffic infractions imply intoxication.Unconfirmed reports of driving without a seatbelt orslightly over the speed limit, for example, are so tenuously connected to drunk driving that a stop on those grounds alone would be constitutionally suspect.  But a reliable tipalleging the dangerous behaviors discussed above gener- ally would justify a traffic stop on suspicion of drunk driving.
The 911 caller in this case reported more than a minor traffic infraction and more than a conclusory allegation of drunk or reckless driving.  Instead, she alleged a specificand dangerous result of the driver’s conduct: runninganother car off the highway.  That conduct bears too greata resemblance to paradigmatic manifestations of drunk driving to be dismissed as an isolated example of reckless­ness. Running another vehicle off the road suggests lane­positioning problems, decreased vigilance, impaired judg­ment, or some combination of those recognized drunk driving cues.  See Visual Detection of DWI Motorists 4–5. And the experience of many officers suggests that a driverwho almost strikes a vehicle or another object—the exact scenario that ordinarily causes “running [another vehicle] off the roadway”—is likely intoxicated.  See id., at 5,8. As a result, we cannot say that the officer acted unreason­ably under these circumstances in stopping a driverwhose alleged conduct was a significant indicator of drunk driving.
Petitioners’ attempts to second-guess the officer’s rea­
Opinion of the Court
sonable suspicion of drunk driving are unavailing.  It is true that the reported behavior might also be explained by, for example, a driver responding to “an unruly child orother distraction.”  Brief for Petitioners 21.  But we have consistently recognized that reasonable suspicion “need not rule out the possibility of innocent conduct.” United States v. Arvizu, 534 U. S. 266, 277 (2002).
Nor did the absence of additional suspicious conduct,after the vehicle was first spotted by an officer, dispel the reasonable suspicion of drunk driving.  Brief for Petition­ers 23–24. It is hardly surprising that the appearance of a marked police car would inspire more careful driving for atime. Cf. Arvizu, supra, at 275 (“‘[s]lowing down afterspotting a law enforcement vehicle’” does not dispel rea­sonable suspicion of criminal activity).  Extended observa­tion of an allegedly drunk driver might eventually dispel a reasonable suspicion of intoxication, but the 5-minuteperiod in this case hardly sufficed in that regard.  Of course, an officer who already has such a reasonable sus­picion need not surveil a vehicle at length in order topersonally observe suspicious driving.  See Adams v. Williams, 407 U. S., at 147 (repudiating the argument that “reasonable cause for a[n investigative stop] can only be based on the officer’s personal observation”). Once reasonable suspicion of drunk driving arises, “[t]he rea­sonableness of the officer’s decision to stop a suspect does not turn on the availability of less intrusive investigatory techniques.”  Sokolow, 490 U. S., at 11.  This would be a particularly inappropriate context to depart from thatsettled rule, because allowing a drunk driver a second chance for dangerous conduct could have disastrous consequences.
III Like White, this is a “close case.”  496 U. S., at 332.  As in that case, the indicia of the 911 caller’s reliability here
are stronger than those in J. L., where we held that a bare-bones tip was unreliable.  529 U. S., at 271.  Alt­hough the indicia present here are different from those wefound sufficient in White, there is more than one way todemonstrate “a particularized and objective basis for suspecting the particular person stopped of criminal activ­ity.” Cortez, 449 U. S., at 417–418.  Under the totality of the circumstances, we find the indicia of reliability in this case sufficient to provide the officer with reasonable suspi­cion that the driver of the reported vehicle had run anothervehicle off the road.  That made it reasonable under the circumstances for the officer to execute a traffic stop.  We accordingly affirm.
It is so ordered.
SCALIA, J., dissenting

SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
No. 12–9490
LORENZO PRADO NAVARETTE AND JOSE PRADO NAVARETTE, PETITIONERS v. CALIFORNIA
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE COURT OF APPEAL OF CALIFORNIA, FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
[April 22, 2014]
JUSTICE SCALIA, with whom JUSTICE GINSBURG, JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR, and JUSTICE KAGAN join, dissenting.
The California Court of Appeal in this case relied onjurisprudence from the California Supreme Court (adoptedas well by other courts) to the effect that “an anonymousand uncorroborated tip regarding a possibly intoxicatedhighway driver” provides without more the reasonable suspicion necessary to justify a stop.  People v. Wells, 38 Cal. 4th l078, 1082, 136 P. 3d 810, 812, (2006).  See also, e.g., United States v. Wheat, 278 F. 3d 722, 729–730 (CA8 2001); State v. Walshire, 634 N. W. 2d 625, 626–627, 630 (Iowa 2001).  Today’s opinion does not explicitly adopt such a departure from our normal Fourth Amendmentrequirement that anonymous tips must be corroborated; it purports to adhere to our prior cases, such as Florida v.
J. L., 529 U. S. 266 (2000), and Alabama v. White, 496
U. S. 325 (1990). Be not deceived.
Law enforcement agencies follow closely our judgments on matters such as this, and they will identify at once our new rule: So long as the caller identifies where the car is, anonymous claims of a single instance of possibly carelessor reckless driving, called in to 911, will support a traffic stop. This is not my concept, and I am sure would not bethe Framers’, of a people secure from unreasonablesearches and seizures. I would reverse the judgment of
SCALIA, J., dissenting
the Court of Appeal of California.
I The California Highway Patrol in this case knew noth­ing about the tipster on whose word—and that alone—they seized Lorenzo and José Prado Navarette.  They did not know her name.1  They did not know her phone num­ber or address. They did not even know where she calledfrom (she may have dialed in from a neighboring county,App. 33a–34a). The tipster said the truck had “[run her] off the road­way,” id., at 36a, but the police had no reason to credit that charge and many reasons to doubt it, beginning withthe peculiar fact that the accusation was anonymous. “[E]liminating accountability . . . is ordinarily the very purpose of anonymity.”  McIntyre v. Ohio Elections Comm’n, 514 U. S. 334, 385 (1995) (SCALIA, J., dissenting).The unnamed tipster “can lie with impunity,” J. L., supra, at 275 (KENNEDY, J., concurring).  Anonymity is especiallysuspicious with respect to the call that is the subject of the present case. When does a victim complain to the policeabout an arguably criminal act (running the victim off the road) without giving his identity, so that he can accuse and testify when the culprit is caught?The question before us, the Court agrees, ante, at 8, is whether the “content of information possessed by police and its degree of reliability,” White, 496 U. S., at 330, gave the officers reasonable suspicion that the driver of thetruck (Lorenzo) was committing an ongoing crime.  When the only source of the government’s information is an informant’s tip, we ask whether the tip bears sufficient “‘indicia of reliability,’” id., at 328, to establish “a particu­larized and objective basis for suspecting the particular —————— 1There was some indication below that the tipster was a woman.  See App. 18a. Beyond that detail, we must, as the Court notes, ante, at 2,
n. 1, assume that the identity of the tipster was unknown.
SCALIA, J., dissenting
person stopped of criminal activity,” United States v. Cortez, 449 U. S. 411, 417–418 (1981).
The most extreme case, before this one, in which an anonymous tip was found to meet this standard was White, supra.  There the reliability of the tip was estab­lished by the fact that it predicted the target’s behavior inthe finest detail—a detail that could be known only bysomeone familiar with the target’s business: She would, the tipster said, leave a particular apartment building, getinto a brown Plymouth station wagon with a broken right tail light, and drive immediately to a particular motel. Id., at 327. Very few persons would have such intimate knowledge, and hence knowledge of the unobservable fact that the woman was carrying unlawful drugs was plausi­ble. Id., at 332.  Here the Court makes a big deal of thefact that the tipster was dead right about the fact that a silver Ford F-150 truck (license plate 8D94925) was trav­eling south on Highway 1 somewhere near mile marker
88. But everyone in the world who saw the car would havethat knowledge, and anyone who wanted the car stopped would have to provide that information.  Unlike the situa­tion in White, that generally available knowledge in no way makes it plausible that the tipster saw the car run someone off the road.
The Court says, ante, at 5, that “[b]y reporting that shehad been run off the road by a specific vehicle . . . the caller necessarily claimed eyewitness knowledge.” So what? The issue is not how she claimed to know, but whether what she claimed to know was true.  The claim to “eyewitness knowledge” of being run off the road supports not at all its veracity; nor does the amazing, mystifyingprediction (so far short of what existed in White) that the petitioners’ truck would be heading south on Highway 1.
The Court finds “reason to think” that the informant “was telling the truth” in the fact that police observation confirmed that the truck had been driving near the spot at
which, and at the approximate time at which, the tipsteralleged she had been run off the road. Ante, at 6.  Accord­ing to the Court, the statement therefore qualifies as a “‘present sense impression’” or “‘excited utterance,’” kindsof hearsay that the law deems categorically admissiblegiven their low likelihood of reflecting “‘deliberate orconscious misrepresentation.’” Ibid. (quoting Advisory Committee’s Notes on Fed. Rule Evid. 803(1), 28 U. S. C.App., p. 371). So, the Court says, we can fairly supposethat the accusation was true.
No, we cannot.  To begin with, it is questionable whethereither the “present sense impression” or the “excited ut­terance” exception to the hearsay rule applies here. The classic “present sense impression” is the recounting of anevent that is occurring before the declarant’s eyes, as the declarant is speaking (“I am watching the Hindenburg explode!”).  See 2 K. Broun, McCormick on Evidence 362 (7th ed. 2013) (hereinafter McCormick).  And the classic “excited utterance” is a statement elicited, almost involun­tarily, by the shock of what the declarant is immediatelywitnessing (“My God, those people will be killed!”).  See id., at 368–369. It is the immediacy that gives the state­ment some credibility; the declarant has not had time to dissemble or embellish.  There is no such immediacy here. The declarant had time to observe the license number of the offending vehicle, 8D94925 (a difficult task if she was forced off the road and the vehicle was speeding away), tobring her car to a halt, to copy down the observed license number (presumably), and (if she was using her own cell phone) to dial a call to the police from the stopped car.Plenty of time to dissemble or embellish.
Moreover, even assuming that less than true immediacy will suffice for these hearsay exceptions to apply, the tipster’s statement would run into additional barriers to admissibility and acceptance.  According to the very Advi­sory Committee’s Notes from which the Court quotes,
cases addressing an unidentified declarant’s present sense impression “indicate hesitancy in upholding the statement alone as sufficient” proof of the reported event.  28 U. S. C. App., at 371; see also 7 M. Graham, Handbook of Federal Evidence 19–20 (7th ed. 2012). For excited utterances as well, the “knotty theoretical” question of statement-alone admissibility persists—seemingly even when the declarant is known. 2 McCormick 368. “Some courts . . . have taken the position that an excited utterance is admissible only if other proof is presented which supports a finding of fact that the exciting event did occur.  The issue has not yetbeen resolved under the Federal Rules.”  Id., at 367–368 (footnote omitted). It is even unsettled whether excited utterances of an unknown declarant are ever admissible. A leading treatise reports that “the courts have been reluctant to admit such statements, principally because ofuncertainty that foundational requirements, including theimpact of the event on the declarant, have been satisfied.” Id., at 372.  In sum, it is unlikely that the law of evidencewould deem the mystery caller in this case “especially trustworthy,” ante, at 6.
Finally, and least tenably, the Court says that another“indicator of veracity” is the anonymous tipster’s mere“use of the 911 emergency system,” ante, at 7.  Because, you see, recent “technological and regulatory develop­ments” suggest that the identities of unnamed 911 callers are increasingly less likely to remain unknown.  Ibid. Indeed, the systems are able to identify “the caller’s geo­graphic location with increasing specificity.” Ibid. Amici disagree with this, see Brief for National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers et al. 8–12, and the present case surely suggests that amici are right—since we know neither the identity of the tipster nor even the county fromwhich the call was made. But assuming the Court is rightabout the ease of identifying 911 callers, it proves abso­lutely nothing in the present case unless the anonymous
caller was aware of that fact. “It is the tipster’s belief in anonymity, not its reality, that will control his behavior.” Id., at 10 (emphasis added). There is no reason to believe that your average anonymous 911 tipster is aware that 911 callers are readily identifiable.2
II All that has been said up to now assumes that the anon­ymous caller made, at least in effect, an accusation of drunken driving. But in fact she did not.  She said that the petitioners’ truck “‘[r]an [me] off the roadway.’”  App. 36a. That neither asserts that the driver was drunk nor even raises the likelihood that the driver was drunk.  The most it conveys is that the truck did some apparentlynontypical thing that forced the tipster off the roadway,whether partly or fully, temporarily or permanently.  Who really knows what (if anything) happened?  The truck might have swerved to avoid an animal, a pothole, or a jaywalking pedestrian. But let us assume the worst of the many possibilities: that it was a careless, reckless, or even intentional ma­neuver that forced the tipster off the road.  Lorenzo mighthave been distracted by his use of a hands-free cell phone, see Strayer, Drews, & Crouch, A Comparison of the Cell Phone Driver and the Drunk Driver, 48 Human Factors 381, 388 (2006), or distracted by an intense sports argument withJosé, see D. Strayer et al., AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety, Measuring Cognitive Distraction in the Automobile 28 (June 2013), online at https://www.aaafoundation.org/
sites/default/files/MeasuringCognitiveDistractions.pdf as visitedApr. 17, 2014, and available in Clerk of Court’s case file). ——————
2The Court’s discussion of reliable 911 traceability has so little rele­vance to the present case that one must surmise it has been includedmerely to assure officers in the future that anonymous 911 accusa­tions—even untraced ones—are not as suspect (and hence as unrelia­ble) as other anonymous accusations.  That is unfortunate.
SCALIA, J., dissenting
Or, indeed, he might have intentionally forced the tipsteroff the road because of some personal animus, or hostilityto her “Make Love, Not War” bumper sticker. I fail to see how reasonable suspicion of a discrete instance of irregularor hazardous driving generates a reasonable suspicion of ongoing intoxicated driving. What proportion of the hun­dreds of thousands—perhaps millions—of careless, reck­less, or intentional traffic violations committed each day isattributable to drunken drivers? I say 0.1 percent.  I have no basis for that except my own guesswork.  But unless the Court has some basis in reality to believe that theproportion is many orders of magnitude above that—say 1in 10 or at least 1 in 20—it has no grounds for its unsup­ported assertion that the tipster’s report in this case gave rise to a reasonable suspicion of drunken driving.
Bear in mind that that is the only basis for the stop thathas been asserted in this litigation.3  The stop required suspicion of an ongoing crime, not merely suspicion of having run someone off the road earlier. And drivingwhile being a careless or reckless person, unlike drivingwhile being a drunk person, is not an ongoing crime.  In other words, in order to stop the petitioners the officershere not only had to assume without basis the accuracy ofthe anonymous accusation but also had to posit an unlikely reason (drunkenness) for the accused behavior.
In sum, at the moment the police spotted the truck, itwas more than merely “possib[le]” that the petitionerswere not committing an ongoing traffic crime.  United States v. Arvizu, 534 U. S. 266, 277 (2002) (emphasis
—————— 3The circumstances that may justify a stop under Terry v. Ohio, 392
U. S. 1 (1968), to investigate past criminal activity are far from clear, see United States v. Hensley, 469 U. S. 221, 229 (1985), and have notbeen discussed in this litigation.  Hence, the Court says it “need notaddress” that question.  Ante, at 8, n. 2.  I need not either. This case has been litigated on the assumption that only suspicion of ongoing intoxicated or reckless driving could have supported this stop.
SCALIA, J., dissenting
added). It was overwhelmingly likely that they were not.
III It gets worse.  Not only, it turns out, did the police have no good reason at first to believe that Lorenzo was driving drunk, they had very good reason at last to know that he was not. The Court concludes that the tip, plus confirma­tion of the truck’s location, produced reasonable suspicionthat the truck not only had been but still was barrelingdangerously and drunkenly down Highway 1.  Ante, at 8–
10. In fact, alas, it was not, and the officers knew it.  Theyfollowed the truck for five minutes, presumably to see if itwas being operated recklessly.  And that was good police work.  While the anonymous tip was not enough to sup­port a stop for drunken driving under Terry v. Ohio, 392
U. S. 1 (1968), it was surely enough to counsel observation of the truck to see if it was driven by a drunken driver. But the pesky little detail left out of the Court’s reason- able-suspicion equation is that, for the five minutes that the truck was being followed (five minutes is a long time),Lorenzo’s driving was irreproachable.  Had the officers witnessed the petitioners violate a single traffic law, they would have had cause to stop the truck, Whren v. United States, 517 U. S. 806, 810 (1996), and this case would notbe before us.  And not only was the driving irreproachable, but the State offers no evidence to suggest that the peti­tioners even did anything suspicious, such as suddenly slowing down, pulling off to the side of the road, or turning somewhere to see whether they were being followed.  Cf. Arvizu, supra, at 270–271, 277 (concluding that an officer’ssuspicion of criminality was enhanced when the driver, upon seeing that he was being followed, “slowed dramati­cally,” “appeared stiff,” and “seemed to be trying to pre­tend” that the patrol car was not there).  Consequently,the tip’s suggestion of ongoing drunken driving (if it could be deemed to suggest that) not only went uncorroborated;
it was affirmatively undermined.
A hypothetical variation on the facts of this case illus­trates the point.  Suppose an anonymous tipster reportsthat, while following near mile marker 88 a silver Ford F-150, license plate 8D949925, traveling southbound on Highway 1, she saw in the truck’s open cab several five­foot-tall stacks of what was unmistakably baled cannabis. Two minutes later, a highway patrolman spots the truckexactly where the tip suggested it would be, begins follow­ing it, but sees nothing in the truck’s cab. It is not enoughto say that the officer’s observation merely failed to cor­roborate the tipster’s accusation.  It is more precise to saythat the officer’s observation discredited the informant’s accusation: The crime was supposedly occurring (andwould continue to occur) in plain view, but the police saw nothing. Similarly, here, the crime supposedly suggestedby the tip was ongoing intoxicated driving, the hallmarksof which are many, readily identifiable, and difficult toconceal. That the officers witnessed nary a minor traffic violation nor any other “sound indici[um] of drunk driv­ing,” ante, at 8, strongly suggests that the suspected crime was not occurring after all.  The tip’s implication of con­tinuing criminality, already weak, grew even weaker.
Resisting this line of reasoning, the Court curiouslyasserts that, since drunk drivers who see marked squad cars in their rearview mirrors may evade detection simply by driving “more careful[ly],” the “absence of additional suspicious conduct” is “hardly surprising” and thus largelyirrelevant. Ante, at 10. Whether a drunk driver drives drunkenly, the Court seems to think, is up to him.  That is not how I understand the influence of alcohol.  I subscribe to the more traditional view that the dangers of intoxi- cated driving are the intoxicant’s impairing effects on thebody—effects that no mere act of the will can resist. See, e.g., A. Dasgupta, The Science of Drinking: How Alcohol Affects Your Body and Mind 39 (explaining that the physi­
ological effect of a blood alcohol content between 0.08 and 0.109, for example, is “sever[e] impair[ment]” of “[b]alance,speech, hearing, and reaction time,” as well as one’s gen­eral “ability to drive a motor vehicle”).  Consistent with this view, I take it as a fundamental premise of our intoxi­cated-driving laws that a driver soused enough to swerveonce can be expected to swerve again—and soon.  If he does not, and if the only evidence of his first episode of irregular driving is a mere inference from an uncorrobo­rated, vague, and nameless tip, then the Fourth Amend­ment requires that he be left alone.
* * * The Court’s opinion serves up a freedom-destroying cocktail consisting of two parts patent falsity: (1) thatanonymous 911 reports of traffic violations are reliable so long as they correctly identify a car and its location, and
(2) that a single instance of careless or reckless drivingnecessarily supports a reasonable suspicion of drunken­ness. All the malevolent 911 caller need do is assert a traffic violation, and the targeted car will be stopped, forcibly if necessary, by the police.  If the driver turns out not to be drunk (which will almost always be the case), the caller need fear no consequences, even if 911 knows his identity. After all, he never alleged drunkenness, but merely called in a traffic violation—and on that point hisword is as good as his victim’s.
Drunken driving is a serious matter, but so is the loss ofour freedom to come and go as we please without police interference. To prevent and detect murder we do notallow searches without probable cause or targeted Terry stops without reasonable suspicion. We should not do so for drunken driving either. After today’s opinion all of us on the road, and not just drug dealers, are at risk of hav­ing our freedom of movement curtailed on suspicion of drunkenness, based upon a phone tip, true or false, of a

Cite as: 572 U. S. ____ (2014) SCALIA, J., dissenting single instance of careless driving.  I respectfully dissent.