Court Opinion

ID: 4551317
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-07-27 18:03:37.200597+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:23:51.750999
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO
                                Docket No. 47308

 STATE OF IDAHO,                                      )
                                                      )
      Plaintiff-Appellant,                            )     Boise, December 2019 Term
                                                      )
 v.                                                   )     Opinion Filed: July 27, 2020
                                                      )
 JENNIE LYNN PYLICAN,                                 )     Melanie Gagnepain, Clerk
                                                      )
      Defendant-Respondent.                           )

        Appeal from the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District of the State of Idaho,
        Ada County. Jonathan Medema, District Judge.
        The order of the district court is reversed, and the case is remanded for further
        proceedings.
        Lawrence G. Wasden, Idaho Attorney General, Boise, for appellant State of Idaho.
        Kenneth K. Jorgensen argued.
        Eric D. Fredericksen, State Appellate Public Defender, Boise, for respondent Jennie
        Lynn Pylican. Sally J. Cooley argued.
                                     _____________________

MOELLER, Justice.
        This appeal rises from the district court’s order granting Jennie Pylican’s motion to
suppress evidence that she unlawfully possessed methamphetamine and drug paraphernalia on the
evening of October 12, 2017. An officer observed Pylican enter a storage facility after hours. When
she left, the officer followed and observed her make a turn without signaling. Pylican was initially
stopped for the traffic violation and later questioned about her presence in a storage facility after
hours. The district court granted the motion, holding that the arresting officer unconstitutionally
extended the stop when he questioned Pylican regarding her presence in the storage facility. In the
alternative, the district court ruled that the officer unconstitutionally extended both the scope and
duration of the seizure by requiring Pylican to exit her car. The State timely appealed.
        The Idaho Court of Appeals heard the State’s appeal in State v. Pylican, No. 45999, 2019
WL 2070468 (Ct. App. May 10, 2019). In an unpublished opinion, the appellate court affirmed the
district court’s order granting Pylican’s motion to suppress, holding that the officer did not provide
any evidence of suspicious activity at the storage facility that would justify Pylican’s extended
detention on that basis. Id. at *5. The State filed a petition for review to this Court, which we

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granted. The State argues that the district court erred in granting Pylican’s motion to suppress
because (1) the deputy had reasonable suspicion to question Pylican regarding her presence in the
storage facility, and (2) the deputy’s order to exit the vehicle did not unconstitutionally extend the
duration of the stop. For the reasons set forth below, we reverse the district court’s order and
remand for further proceedings.
                           I.    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
        Late on the evening of October 12, 2017, an Ada County Sheriff’s deputy was patrolling
the area near the Trust Storage Facility on Maple Grove Road in Boise, Idaho. A sign outside the
facility indicated that the hours of operation were 8:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. The storage facility had
a coded gate. On prior occasions, the deputy had witnessed several individuals attempt to enter the
facility after hours, but those individuals had been unable to gain entry. At approximately 11:55
p.m., the deputy observed a Mazda sedan in the parking lot of an apartment complex near where
he had parked his patrol vehicle. He watched the Mazda as it drove toward the storage facility.
Other vehicles on the road obstructed the deputy’s view so that he did not witness the Mazda drive
up to and enter through the facility’s gate; however, he noticed that the storage facility’s gate was
closing and that the Mazda had gained access to the facility.
        Concerned that the Mazda had entered the storage facility after hours, the deputy initiated
a call to dispatch regarding a suspicious vehicle and requested assistance. The area near the storage
facility had had frequent reports of vehicle and residential burglaries. The deputy testified that he
was suspicious that the occupants of the vehicle might “be either breaking into storage units or
doing other type of activity that’s obviously not conducive to the safe neighborhood.”
        The deputy approached the storage facility in his SUV, but waited for other officers to
arrive before approaching on foot. The other officers arrived shortly after his request for assistance.
One of the other officers communicated that there was a second vehicle inside the storage facility.
The deputy, as well as the other officers on the scene, exited their vehicles and approached the
storage facility on foot in order to “make contact with the vehicles inside and see what they were
doing in there.” However, as the officers neared the entrance to the storage facility, they witnessed
several individuals getting into the vehicles. The officers elected to return to their vehicles and
wait until the drivers exited the storage facility before initiating contact. The Mazda left the storage
facility just after 12:30 a.m.

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        Approximately thirty-five minutes had elapsed from the time the Mazda entered the storage
facility to the time that it exited. Although the deputy had watched the vehicle and storage facility
for over forty minutes, he did not observe Pylican engage in any criminal activity inside the storage
facility. The deputy could only see the vehicle parked inside the storage facility and some
movement near the car.
        After the Mazda exited the facility, the deputy followed it. The Mazda turned from the
main road into the same apartment complex from which it had come before it went to the storage
facility. However, because the driver failed to use the turn signal, the deputy initiated a traffic stop.
There were two occupants of the car: the driver, Pylican, and her passenger, Megan O’Reilly. The
deputy informed Pylican that he stopped her because of the traffic violation and “for being in the
storage facility after hours.”
        In response to the statement regarding her presence in the storage facility, Pylican stated
that she and her husband were switching storage units. The deputy asked her about being inside
the facility after hours. In response, Pylican stated that the storage facility allowed people to be
inside after hours as long as they were inside before 10:00 p.m., and that she had entered the storage
facility prior to that time. The deputy believed Pylican had lied because he had witnessed the
Mazda enter the facility after 10:00 p.m.
        After obtaining information from Pylican and her passenger, the deputy told Pylican he
would take a few minutes and then he would “cut [them] loose.” As he walked away from Pylican’s
vehicle, before checking any of Pylican’s information, he noticed that the K-9 officer had arrived.
After quickly conferring with the K-9 officer, the deputy ordered Pylican and her passenger to exit
the vehicle. The proffered reason for Pylican and her passenger to exit the vehicle was for the
safety of the officers while the dog was led around the car. Pylican and the passenger were escorted
to the area in front of the patrol car.
        After Pylican and her passenger were escorted from the car, the K-9 officer ran his dog
around the exterior of the vehicle. While the K-9 officer executed the canine search, the deputy
denied Pylican’s request to call her husband, and instead initiated another conversation with
Pylican regarding her presence in the storage facility. With the K-9 search still in progress, the
deputy contacted dispatch to run a warrant check on both Pylican and her passenger, and to confirm
that Pylican had a valid driver’s license. Approximately two minutes had elapsed from the time
the deputy had ordered Pylican and her passenger from the car to the time that the deputy first

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contacted dispatch. Meanwhile, the dog alerted outside the driver’s side of the vehicle. As a result,
the K-9 officer deployed the dog inside the vehicle, at which time the dog alerted on a backpack
in the back seat. The K-9 officer hand searched the backpack and found drug paraphernalia.
         After the K-9 officer searched the vehicle, he spoke with the deputy about what he had
found. Near that time, dispatch informed the deputy that Pylican’s passenger had an outstanding
warrant. A short time later, Pylican was arrested for the items in the backpack. After the deputy
arrested Pylican, he performed a more extensive search of Pylican’s vehicle. He located a contact
lens case containing methamphetamine underneath the center console.
         Based on these facts, Pylican was charged by information with one count of possession of
a controlled substance (methamphetamine) under Idaho Code section 37-2732(c), and one count
of possession of drug paraphernalia under Idaho Code section 37-2734A. Pylican moved to
suppress the evidence obtained during the search of the vehicle, arguing that the deputy had
unlawfully extended the scope and duration of the traffic stop without reasonable suspicion of
criminal activity regarding Pylican’s presence in the storage facility. The State objected, arguing
that the deputy had reasonable suspicion of criminal activity regarding Pylican’s presence in the
storage facility. Further, the State contended that the outstanding warrant for Pylican’s passenger
would have inevitably extended the stop.
           The district court granted Pylican’s motion to suppress, ruling that the deputy had
probable cause to detain Pylican for the purposes of the traffic violation, but did not have
independent reasonable suspicion that criminal activity had occurred at the storage facility.
Accordingly, the district court ruled that the deputy had unconstitutionally extended the duration
of his justifiable seizure of Pylican by asking her about the storage facility. Alternatively, the
district court concluded that the deputy unconstitutionally extended both the scope and duration of
the stop when he ordered Pylican and her passenger to exit the vehicle. Further, the district court
denied the State’s contention that the passenger’s warrant would have inevitably extended the
duration of the stop beyond the initial traffic stop. 1 The State timely appealed. After the Idaho
Court of Appeals affirmed the district court on appeal, the State filed a petition for review to this
Court.

1
 On appeal, the State has not argued that the district court erred in rejecting the claim that the passenger’s warrant
would have inevitably extended the stop. Accordingly, the issue is waived. State v. Garcia-Rodriguez, 162 Idaho 271,
276, 396 P.3d 700, 705 (2017); see also Bach v. Bagley, 148 Idaho 784, 790, 229 P.3d 1146, 1152 (2010) (quotation
omitted) (“We will not consider an issue not ‘supported by argument and authority in the opening brief.’”)

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                                          II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
        “When reviewing a case on petition for review from the Court of Appeals this Court gives
due consideration to the decision reached by the Court of Appeals, but directly reviews the decision
of the trial court.” State v. Jeske, 164 Idaho 862, 867, 436 P.3d 683, 688 (2019) (quoting State v.
Schmierer, 159 Idaho 768, 770, 367 P.3d 163, 165 (2016)).
        This Court reviews a district court’s order granting or denying a motion to suppress using
a bifurcated standard of review. State v. Cook, 165 Idaho 305, 308, 444 P.3d 877, 880 (2019)
(citation omitted). “This Court will accept the trial court’s findings of fact unless they are clearly
erroneous.” State v. Purdum, 147 Idaho 206, 207, 207 P.3d 182, 183 (2009) (citing State v. Diaz,
144 Idaho 300, 302, 160 P.3d 739, 741 (2007), overruled on other grounds by State v. Wulff, 157
Idaho 416, 423, 337 P.3d 575, 582 (2014)). “However, this Court may freely review the trial
court’s application of constitutional principles in light of the facts found.” Id. (citation omitted).
                                                 III. ANALYSIS
        The Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution provides 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[.]” U.S. Const. amend. IV. 2 “Evidence obtained in violation of the
Fourth Amendment is subject to the exclusionary rule, which requires unlawfully seized evidence
to be excluded.” State v. Lee, 162 Idaho 642, 647, 402 P.3d 1095, 1100 (2017) (citations omitted).
“The exclusionary rule requires the suppression of both ‘primary evidence obtained as a direct
result of an illegal search or seizure, . . . but also evidence later discovered and found to be
derivative of an illegality or “fruit of the poisonous tree.” ’ ” Id. (quoting Segura v. United States,
468 U.S. 796, 804 (1984)).
        The protections of the Fourth Amendment extend to brief investigatory detentions that fall
short of a formal arrest. State v. Perez, 164 Idaho 626, 628, 434 P.3d 801, 803 (2019) (quoting
State v. Bishop, 146 Idaho 804, 811, 203 P.3d 1203, 1210 (2009)); see also Terry v. Ohio, 392
U.S. 1, 19 (1968). “Because a traffic stop is limited in scope and duration, it is analogous to an

2
  Defense counsel below asserted that the State violated Pylican’s Fourth Amendment rights under the U.S.
Constitution as well as her rights under Article I, Section 17 of the Idaho Constitution. However, no argument was
made regarding the Idaho Constitution specifically. Further, on appeal, Pylican’s counsel focused her arguments
entirely on the Fourth Amendment. Any argument of a violation of the Idaho Constitution is waived, unless argued
with specificity. See Garcia-Rodriguez, 162 Idaho at 275, 396 P.3d at 704 (quotations omitted) (“Issues not raised
below will not be considered by this court on appeal, and the parties will be held to the theory upon which the case
was presented to the lower court.”). As a result, our analysis is limited to the U.S. Constitution.

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investigative detention and is analyzed under the principles set forth in Terry v. Ohio[.]” State v.
Danney, 153 Idaho 405, 409, 283 P.3d 722, 726 (2012) (citations omitted).
       “An investigative detention ‘must be temporary and last no longer than necessary to
effectuate the purpose of the stop.’ ” Id. (quoting State v. Henage, 143 Idaho 655, 658, 152 P.3d
16, 19 (2007)); see also Florida v. Royer, 460 U.S. 491, 500 (1983). When a person is detained,
“[t]he scope of the detention must be carefully tailored to its underlying justification.” Royer, 460
U.S. at 500.
       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).
State v. Linze, 161 Idaho 605, 609, 389 P.3d 150, 154 (2016) (relying on Rodriguez v. United
States, 575 U.S. 348, 357 (2015), and United States v. Cortez, 449 U.S. 411, 417 (1981)). The rule
regarding the extension of the stop is “both broad and inflexible. It applies to all extensions of
traffic stops including those that could reasonably be considered de minimis.” Id. at 608, 389 P.3d
at 153 (citation omitted).
       Here, the deputy initiated a traffic stop when Pylican failed to use her turn signal. The
district court properly concluded that the deputy had probable cause to detain Pylican based on
that traffic violation. Neither party disputes this finding on appeal. The district court suppressed
the evidence on two grounds: (1) the deputy lacked reasonable suspicion to question Pylican
regarding her presence in the storage facility after hours, and (2) that the order for Pylican and her
passenger to exit the vehicle unconstitutionally extended the stop. Each of these grounds will be
discussed in turn.
A.     The deputy had reasonable suspicion to stop and question Pylican regarding her
       presence in the storage facility.
       Under the Fourth Amendment, “[r]easonable suspicion must be based on specific,
articulable facts and the rational inferences that can be drawn from those facts.” Perez, 164 Idaho
at 628, 434 P.3d at 803 (quoting Bishop, 146 Idaho at 811, 203 P.3d at 1210); see also Terry, 392
6
U.S. at 19. “The quantity and quality of information necessary to establish reasonable suspicion is
less than that necessary to establish probable cause.” Gonzales, 165 Idaho at 673, 450 P.3d at 321
(quoting Bishop, 146 Idaho at 811, 203 P.3d at 1210). “Still, reasonable suspicion requires more
than a mere hunch or ‘inchoate and unparticularized suspicion.’ ” Id. (quotation omitted); see also
United States v. Sokolow, 490 U.S. 1, 7 (1989). “Whether an officer possessed reasonable
suspicion is evaluated based on the totality of the circumstances known to the officer at or before
the time of the stop.” Gonzales, 165 Idaho at 673, 450 P.3d at 321 (quotation omitted).
       “Not every suspicious or abnormal behavior is sufficient to establish reasonable suspicion.”
Id. (citing State v. Bly, 159 Idaho 708, 711, 366 P.3d 193, 196 (Ct. App. 2016)). For example,
“[a]n individual’s presence in an area of expected criminal activity, standing alone, is not enough
to support a reasonable, particularized suspicion that the person is committing a crime.” Illinois v.
Wardlow, 528 U.S. 119, 124 (2000) (citation omitted). However, while conduct might be
innocently explained, the Supreme Court of the United States has “consistently recognized that
reasonable suspicion ‘need not rule out the possibility of innocent conduct.’ ” Navarette v.
California, 572 U.S. 393, 403 (2014) (quoting Arvizu, 534 U.S. at 277). “Even so, innocent acts,
when considered together, may be suspicious enough to justify an investigative detention if an
officer points to articulable facts that the individual is engaged in criminal activity.” Gonzales, 165
Idaho at 674, 450 P.3d at 322 (citations omitted).
       The district court articulated the facts it relied upon in determining that the deputy did not
have reasonable suspicion regarding criminal activity in the storage facility as follows:
       [The deputy] observed the vehicle enter a storage facility that has a gate. The gate
       can be operated by a code. There was a sign outside the storage facility that
       indicates its hours of operation are 8:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. and [the deputy] saw
       Ms. Pylican in her vehicle enter this facility. He couldn’t quite see how that was
       accomplished, but he did see the gate coming down after her vehicle entered at a
       time that was about five minutes before midnight.
               He concluded that the vehicle was entering the storage unit after hours. He
       indicated that in his experience he has driven by this storage unit after 10:00 p.m.
       on multiple occasions and not observed any other vehicles in there after 10:00. He
       has also on at least one occasion . . . come in contact with people who were trying
       to access the storage facility after 10:00 p.m. who told him that they have codes
       because they are renters of units in that facility and that their codes would not cause
       the gate to operate after 10:00 p.m.
               ....

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               [The deputy] did indicate that this . . . area . . . has had an unusually high
       number of calls initially. . . that . . . were theft related. Later on in his testimony he
       clarified that those were vehicle burglaries and residential thefts. . . .
               ....
                [The deputy] and other officers observe Ms. Pylican’s vehicle parked inside
       the storage facility. They observe a second vehicle parked inside the storage
       facility. [The deputy] offered no testimony about how that second vehicle may have
       come to be in the storage facility or how long it had been there.
The district court noted that there was “no indication that [Pylican] broke into the facility or hopped
over the fence or [jimmied the gate] in order to get it to work.”
       Here, accepting the district court’s findings as true, we respectfully disagree with its legal
conclusion that the deputy lacked reasonable suspicion to stop Pylican and question her regarding
her presence in the storage facility. The following facts known to the deputy were found to be true
by the district court: (1) the deputy observed Pylican enter the storage facility after its posted hours
of operation and exit thirty-five minutes later; (2) the deputy had seen others try, and fail, to gain
access to the storage facility after hours; and (3) the area in which the storage facility was located
had recently experienced an “unusually high number of calls” regarding property crimes..
Additionally, once the deputy made a brief comment about observing her “in the storage facility
after hours,” Pylican volunteered that she had entered the storage facility prior to 10:00 p.m. At
that point, the deputy was justified in further extending the stop because he had a reasonable basis
to believe she was lying to him since he had observed her enter the facility much later.
       It is important to acknowledge that although the deputy testified that he believed Pylican
“lied” to him about being inside the storage facility before 10:00 p.m., the district court concluded
that the deputy misunderstood Pylican’s response. The district court found that Pylican’s statement
was likely referring to the fact that her husband, the driver of the other vehicle, had been inside the
storage facility since before 10:00 p.m. The district court further found that “[h]e’s the one who
let her in.” While we do not take issue with these findings, the deputy’s belief that Pylican was
lying was still a proper basis for his reasonable suspicion because reasonable suspicion must be
based on the “circumstances known to the officer at or before the time of the stop.” Gonzales, 165
Idaho at 673, 450 P.3d at 321 (emphasis added) (quotations omitted). Because the standard for
evaluating the basis for an officer’s actions is an objective one, based on the facts known to the
officer at the time, the deputy’s determination in this case that Pylican had lied to him was
objectively reasonable. See State v. Perez-Jungo, 156 Idaho 609, 614–15, 329 P.3d 391, 396–97

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(Ct. App. 2014) (“[T]he length and scope of the initial investigatory detention may be lawfully
expanded if there exist objective and specific articulable facts that justify reasonable suspicion that
the detained person is, has been, or is about to engage in criminal activity.”).
        These facts, taken together, provided the deputy with more than a mere “hunch” that
Pylican could be engaging in criminal activity within the storage unit, such as burglary or theft.
Indeed, this was the result of an alert deputy carefully observing suspicious activity in an area he
had patrolled “hundreds of times” before and knew to be associated with recent thefts.
Accordingly, we hold that the deputy had reasonable suspicion to question Pylican about her
presence in the storage facility. Consequently, we must now turn to whether the deputy’s order to
exit the vehicle impermissibly extended the stop.
B.      The deputy did not impermissibly extend the duration of the stop by ordering Pylican
        to exit her vehicle.
        In granting Pylican’s motion to suppress, the district court found that the deputy’s order
that Pylican and her passenger exit the vehicle unconstitutionally extended the duration and scope
of what was otherwise a legal search. Relying on Rodriguez, 575 U.S. at 348, the district court
stated that
        [i]t was clear from [the deputy’s] testimony that the safety concern arose solely
        from [the deputies’] decision to undertake a drug investigation by walking the dog
        around the car. I do not believe that officers can decide to undertake an investigation
        for which they had no reasonable articulable suspicion and then use -- and then by
        doing so create a danger to themselves and then use that danger to justify extending
        the scope or the duration of a seizure.
On appeal, the State contends that the order to exit the vehicle did not violate the Fourth
Amendment. Instead, the State argues that the district court reached its conclusion by
misinterpreting Rodriguez. In response, Pylican argues that the district court correctly interpreted
Rodriguez and that the order to exit the vehicle unconstitutionally extended the scope and duration
of the traffic stop.
        In Pennsylvania v. Mimms, the U.S. Supreme Court held, “once a motor vehicle has been
lawfully detained for a traffic violation, the police officers may order the driver to get out of the
vehicle without violating the Fourth Amendment’s proscription of unreasonable searches and
seizures.” 434 U.S. 106, 111 (1977). The Court’s underlying rationale was that the “government’s
‘legitimate and weighty’ interest in officer safety outweighs the ‘de minimis’ additional intrusion
of requiring a driver, already lawfully stopped, to exit the vehicle.” Rodriguez, 575 U.S. at 356

                                                  9
(quoting Mimms, 434 U.S. at 110–11). The Court reasoned that because the order to exit the vehicle
was only a “de minimis” intrusion in relation to the stop as a whole, it would not rise to the level
of a “petty indignity.” Id. at 111 (quoting Terry, 392 U.S. at 17). Further, the interest in police
officer safety was “both legitimate and weighty.” Id. at 110. The Court recognized “the inordinate
risk confronting an officer as he approaches a person seated in an automobile.” Id.
       In Rodriguez, the Court narrowed the Mimms rule by holding “[a]n officer . . . may conduct
certain unrelated checks during an otherwise lawful traffic stop. But . . . he may not do so in a way
that prolongs the stop, absent the reasonable suspicion ordinarily demanded to justify detaining an
individual.” 575 U.S. at 355. There, the Court explained that a dog sniff is not an ordinary inquiry
incident to a traffic stop; rather, “[a] dog sniff, by contrast, is a measure aimed at ‘detect[ing]
evidence of ordinary criminal wrongdoing.’ ” Id. (alteration in original). The Court further
explained:
       Unlike a general interest in criminal enforcement, however, the government’s
       officer safety interest stems from the mission of the stop itself. 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. Thus, even
       assuming that the imposition here was no more intrusive than the exit order in
       Mimms, the dog sniff could not be justified on the same basis. 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).
       The district court relied on the above paragraph to hold that Rodriguez abrogated the
holding in Mimms. However, Rodriguez does not bar officers from ordering occupants of a
lawfully stopped vehicle to exit in order to investigate possible crimes unrelated to a valid traffic
stop. See id. at 355. Instead, Rodriguez stands for the proposition that the underlying safety
concerns which justify exit orders do not extend to general criminal investigations that are
undertaken when the purpose of the lawful stop has been abandoned. See id. at 354. The holding
in Rodriguez was limited to the facts of that case, the most salient being that the officer had
completed the traffic stop by issuing Rodriguez a warning and then ordered Rodriguez out of his
vehicle for a dog sniff to be performed without any reasonable suspicion of criminal activity related
to drugs. See id. at 356–57. Thus, Rodriguez was not a wide-spread repudiation of Mimms; it was
about the timing of the officer’s actions.

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       This case is distinguishable from Rodriguez. Here, the deputy made a lawful traffic stop.
Before he had checked any of Pylican’s information, a K-9 officer arrived. After briefly speaking
with the K-9 officer, but before the traffic stop was completed, the deputy ordered Pylican and the
passenger to exit the vehicle. The K-9 officer conducted the dog sniff while the deputy checked
Pylican’s information and discussed her presence at the storage facility. Because the duration of
the stop was not prolonged and the stop was otherwise lawful, the scope of the stop could be
lawfully expanded to include “an unrelated check” without independent reasonable suspicion. See
Rodriguez, 575 U.S. at 356.
       In Linze, 161 Idaho 605, 389 P.3d 150, this Court considered a similar scenario to the case
at bar. In that case, Linze was stopped for driving with a cracked front windshield. Id. at 606, 389
P.3d at 151. After initiating warrant checks for the driver and her passenger, the officer requested
assistance from a K–9 Unit. Id. While the K–9 Unit was in transit, the officer continued his
investigation. Id. When the K-9 Unit arrived, the officer left his patrol car and provided “cover”
while the dog sniff took place. Id. at 607, 389 P.3d at 152. During a hearing on the defendant’s
motion to suppress, “[t]he State conceded that during those two and a half minutes, Officer Bridges
had stopped pursuing the original purpose of the stop and was instead serving a ‘backup function’
to Deputy Moore.” Id.
       On appeal, this Court overturned the denial of the defendant’s motion to suppress on the
basis that the stop was impermissibly extended under Rodriguez: “[W]e hold that by delaying the
traffic stop for two and a half minutes while performing a back-up function for a drug dog sweep,
[the officer] violated the Fourth Amendment rights of [the driver and the passenger].” Id. at 609,
389 P.3d at 154. We explained our rationale as follows:
       The United States Supreme Court concluded [in Rodriguez] that “the critical
       question, then, is not whether the dog sniff occurs before or after the officer issues
       a ticket . . . but whether conducting the sniff ‘prolongs’—i.e., adds time to—‘the
       stop.’” The United States Supreme Court’s intention in Rodriguez is thus made
       clear. The rule isn’t concerned with when the officer deviates from the original
       purpose of the traffic stop, it is concerned with the fact that the officer deviates from
       the original purpose of the stop at all.
Id. (citing Rodriguez, 575 U.S. at 361). Thus, this Court’s concern in Linze—as was the concern
of the U.S. Supreme Court in Rodriguez—centered around the additional time an extension of the
stop by the officer would take, even if it was “de minimis.” Id. at 609 n.2, 389 P.3d at 154 n.2. By
so holding, we expressly recognized in Linze that it was the extra time required to complete the

                                                  11
dog sniff that offended the Fourth Amendment in Rodriguez. However, neither Rodriguez nor
Linze apply to dog sniffs that do not extend the duration of the stop, as the Linze Court expressly
noted:
         The United States Supreme Court [in Rodriguez] is careful to couch its opinion in
         the “adds time to” framework. It does this in order to allow for dog sniffs that do
         not add time to the stop (i.e., dog sniffs in which one officer continues to pursue
         the original objectives of the stop while a second officer conducts a dog sniff).
161 Idaho at 609 n.1, 389 P.3d at 154 n.1 (emphasis added).
         Thus, we agree with the dissent that the key question is “whether conducting the sniff
‘prolongs’ … ‘the stop[.]’ ” Id. at 609, 389 P.3d at 154 (emphasis added). However, the stop in
Linze is distinguishable from Pylican’s stop because in this case the district court made no findings
that any specific amount of time was added to the stop due to the officer’s actions in permitting a
dog sniff to take place while he simultaneously began his “investigation into the traffic offense.”
As Linze expressly allows, an officer may continue with the “original objectives of the stop while
a second officer conducts a dog sniff.” Id. Importantly, the findings on this point contained in the
district court’s oral ruling from the bench were as follows:
         I also find that [the deputy’s] decision to ask – or command Ms. Pylican to exit the
         car extended the duration of the seizure. When Ms. Pylican is told that she has to
         get out of the car, it generates a conversation between Ms. Pylican and Deputy
         Geisel about why she’s being asked to do so. There is some conversation between
         him and her about what she’s permitted to do, can she use the phone. All of those
         things delay [the deputy] in beginning his investigation into the traffic offense. All
         of this occurs before he starts radioing in Ms. Pylican’s name and the passenger’s
         name to check on her driver’s status and to check for wants and warrants.
This finding demonstrates that any extension to the duration of the stop in this case was not a result
of the dog sniff itself; rather, the extension was caused by Pylican questioning the order to exit the
vehicle and whether she could use a phone. While it is not clear from the record or the district
court’s findings how much time actually elapsed due to Pylican’s questioning of the officer, it is
clear that it was Pylican who extended the duration of the stop.
         It should be axiomatic that a defendant cannot claim that a stop was unconstitutionally
prolonged by the State when any delay was a consequence of her own conduct. Yet, the dissent
argues that “[i]f not for the deputy’s order to exit the vehicle, Pylican would not have asked any
questions about the exit order.” However, such an analysis could result in almost any questioning
of an order from law enforcement—even a lawful order—being deemed an unlawful extension of
the stop. Ultimately, it is the lawfulness of the request that is determinative, not the time spent

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arguing about it. Here, the request for Pylican to step out of the vehicle was clearly lawful. Mimms,
434 U.S. at 110–11. Accordingly, we conclude that the deputy’s exit order did not violate Pylican’s
Fourth Amendment right against unreasonable searches and seizures.
                                          IV. CONCLUSION
        For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the district court’s order granting Pylican’s motion
to suppress, and remand the case for further proceedings.
                Chief Justice BURDICK and Justice BEVAN CONCUR.

STEGNER, J., dissenting.

        I respectfully dissent. I believe that the deputy unconstitutionally extended the stop by
ordering Pylican and her passenger to exit the vehicle. As a result, the district court properly
suppressed the evidence obtained after the stop was extended.
        In granting Pylican’s motion to suppress, the district court found that the deputy’s order
that Pylican and her passenger exit the vehicle unconstitutionally extended the duration and scope
of what was otherwise a legal search. Relying on Rodriguez v. United States, 575 U.S. 348 (2015),
the district court stated that
        [i]t was clear from [the deputy’s] testimony that the safety concern arose solely
        from [the deputies’] decision to undertake a drug investigation by walking the dog
        around the car. I do not believe that officers can decide to undertake an investigation
        for which they had no reasonable articulable suspicion and then use -- and then by
        doing so create a danger to themselves and then use that danger to justify extending
        the scope or the duration of a seizure.
        In Pennsylvania v. Mimms, 434 U.S. 106 (1977), the U.S. Supreme Court held, “once a
motor vehicle has been lawfully detained for a traffic violation, the police officers may order the
driver to get out of the vehicle without violating the Fourth Amendment’s proscription of
unreasonable searches and seizures.” Id. at 111 n.6. That Court reasoned that it was only a “de
minimis” incremental intrusion to require a driver who was already seized to exit the vehicle, and
would not rise to the level of a “petty indignity.” Id. at 111 (quoting Terry, 392 U.S. at 17). Further,
the interest in police officer safety was “both legitimate and weighty.” Id. at 110. The Court
recognized “the inordinate risk confronting an officer as he approaches a person seated in an
automobile.” Id.
        However, the U.S. Supreme Court in Rodriguez cast doubt on the blanket holding in
Mimms. In Rodriguez, the U.S. Supreme Court analyzed whether a police officer impermissibly

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extended a traffic stop by waiting for backup in order to run a drug-detection dog around the
vehicle. Rodriguez, 575 U.S. at 350. The Court stated,
       [u]nlike a general interest in criminal enforcement, however, the government’s
       officer safety interest stems from the mission of the stop itself. 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. Thus, even
       assuming that the imposition here was no more intrusive than the exit order in
       Mimms, the dog sniff could not be justified on the same basis. Highway and officer
       safety are interests different in kind from the [g]overnment’s endeavor to detect
       crime in general or drug trafficking in particular.
Id. at 356–57 (italics added) (internal citations omitted). Here, the district court relied on the
italicized language above to conclude that an extension of the stop to facilitate safety precautions
not based on the traffic stop itself, but based on the use of a drug dog, was an unconstitutional
extension of the stop.
       The Rodriguez Court created a new standard to review a deputy’s order to exit a vehicle.
Pursuant to Rodriguez, a district court would be empowered to review the reasons for the officer’s
safety concerns leading to an order to exit. This review allows the district court to determine the
reasonableness of the officer’s actions based on the totality of the circumstances known to the
officer at the time. The standard set forth in Rodriguez aligns with the ultimate touchstone of
Fourth Amendment jurisprudence, which is “reasonableness.” Brigham City v. Stuart, 547 U.S.
398, 398 (2006). Rodriguez modified the per se rule articulated in Mimms. Under this modified
approach, an exit order would only be reasonable under Mimms, if the order were based on the
inherent safety concerns associated with a traffic stop. However, if the purpose of the stop were
for some reason other than a traffic stop, such as drug enforcement, the officer would need
reasonable suspicion in order to extend the stop to facilitate that purpose, including ordering a
driver or passenger to exit the vehicle.
       In this case, the purpose of the stop was to address a traffic violation and to investigate
Pylican’s presence in the storage facility; the purpose of the stop was not to conduct a drug
investigation. Reasonable suspicion must be based on the “circumstances known to the officer at
or before the time of the stop.” State v. Gonzales, 165 Idaho 667, 673, 450 P.3d 315, 321 (2019)
(italics added) (quotation omitted). The deputy did not articulate any suspicion that Pylican
possessed drugs. There was no suggestion that, at the time the deputy stopped Pylican, he believed

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that he was engaging in a drug investigation. Rather, the deputy’s suspicion had been that Pylican
was engaging in theft. The deputy testified at the suppression hearing that he asked Pylican and
her passenger to exit the vehicle as a safety precaution for the K–9 officer as he walked the dog
around the vehicle. He stated that a safety concern arises while the officer is focusing on the drug
dog because he will not be focusing on the occupants, reasoning that this lack of focus presents a
danger of either weapons being drawn or evidence being concealed or destroyed. However, here
the “safety” concern meriting the exit order was not associated with the traffic stop or related to
the officer’s suspicion of theft. Instead, the safety concern was associated with the use of a drug
dog itself for drug enforcement, for which there was no reasonable suspicion. As the safety
precaution was not to promote the mission of the traffic stop but to ostensibly protect the officer
conducting the K–9 search without reasonable suspicion, the order to exit the vehicle was an
unconstitutional extension of the traffic stop.
        The majority opinion relies on the fact that the officer had not yet completed the traffic
stop to distinguish this case from Rodriguez. The majority states that because the deputy ordered
Pylican and her passenger to exit the vehicle before the traffic stop was completed, and because
the K–9 search took place while the deputy continued the traffic stop, the stop was not
impermissibly extended. However, this conclusion fails to appreciate that “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.” State v. Linze, 161 Idaho 605, 608, 389 P.3d 150, 153 (2016)
(quotation omitted). “This rule is both broad and inflexible.” Id.
        This Court addressed a similar question in Linze. In Linze, this Court held that “delaying
the traffic stop for two and a half minutes while performing a back-up function for a drug dog
sweep” violated the defendant’s Fourth Amendment rights. Id. at 609, 389 P.3d at 154. As we
noted in Linze, “the critical question, then, is not whether the dog sniff occurs before or after the
officer issues a ticket ... but whether conducting the sniff ‘prolongs’—i.e., adds time to—‘the
stop[.]’” Id.
        Accordingly, based on this Court’s decision in Linze, we must look for any time that was
added to the stop that was outside the scope of the stop. The deputy temporarily abandoned the
purpose of the stop to order Pylican to exit the vehicle for a K–9 search. It is axiomatic that the
time to complete the stop was extended by the time it took for the deputy to order Pylican from
her vehicle and escort her to the area near the front of the deputy’s vehicle. During this time, the

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deputy had abandoned both purposes of the stop, i.e., the traffic stop and Pylican’s presence in the
storage facility. While I recognize that the period of time in which the deputy abandoned the
purposes of the stop was minimal, the standard recognized in both Rodriguez and Linze is
inflexible. Any amount of time in which the purpose of the stop is abandoned for “[o]n-scene
investigation into other crimes” impermissibly extends the time needed to complete the original
purpose of the stop, however otherwise valid. See Rodriguez, 575 U.S. at 356.
       Further, I respectfully disagree with the majority’s contention that Pylican herself caused
the stop to be extended. Rather, it was the deputy’s actions that caused the conversation between
the deputy and Pylican. As the district court noted that when Pylican is ordered to get out of the
car, “it generates a conversation between Ms. Pylican and [the deputy] about why she’s being
asked to do so. . . . All of those things delay [the deputy] in beginning his investigation into the
traffic offense.” If not for the deputy’s order to exit the vehicle, Pylican would not have asked any
questions about the exit order.
       Accordingly, the district court did not err in its alternative ruling that the order to exit
impermissibly extended the scope and duration of the traffic stop. Consequently, I would affirm
the district court’s order granting Pylican’s motion to suppress.
       Justice BRODY concurs.

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