People v. Tacardon ( 2022 )


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  •          IN THE SUPREME COURT OF
    CALIFORNIA
    THE PEOPLE,
    Plaintiff and Appellant,
    v.
    LEON WILLIAM TACARDON,
    Defendant and Respondent.
    S264219
    Third Appellate District
    C087681
    San Joaquin County Superior Court
    STK-CR-FER-2018-0003729
    December 29, 2022
    Justice Corrigan authored the opinion of the Court, in which
    Chief Justice Cantil-Sakauye and Justices Kruger, Jenkins,
    and Guerrero concurred.
    Justice Groban filed a concurring and dissenting opinion.
    Justice Liu filed a dissenting opinion.
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    S264219
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    A sheriff’s deputy patrolling after dark saw three people
    sitting in a legally parked car in a residential neighborhood,
    smoking something. He pulled up behind the car, illuminated it
    with a spotlight, and approached on foot. We granted review to
    examine the significance of the deputy’s use of a spotlight in this
    circumstance.     We conclude that shining a spotlight for
    illumination does not ipso facto constitute a detention under the
    Fourth Amendment. Rather, the proper inquiry requires
    consideration of the totality of the circumstances, including the
    use of a spotlight.
    I. BACKGROUND
    Sheriff’s Deputy Joel Grubb testified to the following facts
    at the preliminary hearing, where defendant Leon William
    Tacardon first moved to suppress evidence.
    On a March evening, around 8:45 p.m., in a residential
    Stockton neighborhood, Grubb was on patrol in a marked car.
    The area was known for narcotics sales and weapons possession.
    While patrolling, Grubb had both his headlights and high beams
    on for “extra visibility.” He drove past a BMW legally parked in
    front of a residence, in the vicinity of a streetlight. The car’s
    engine and headlights were off; smoke emanated from slightly
    open windows. He saw three people inside and made eye contact
    with the occupants as he drove past them. Grubb made a U-
    turn, parked about 15 to 20 feet behind the BMW, and turned
    1
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    on his spotlight. He did not activate his siren or emergency
    lights or issue any commands to the car’s occupants. He sat in
    his patrol car for 15 to 20 seconds while he informed dispatch of
    his location. He then approached the BMW at a walking pace.
    He did not draw a weapon.
    As the deputy approached, a woman sitting in the
    backseat “jumped out” of the BMW, closing the door behind her.
    The deputy testified that “[i]t was very quick and kind of abrupt
    the way that she opened the door and quickly stepped out. I felt
    it was unusual.” She walked towards the back of the BMW, and
    Grubb asked her what she was doing. She responded, “I live
    here.” Concerned for his safety, the deputy directed the woman
    to stand near the sidewalk behind the BMW where he could see
    her. He spoke in a calm and moderate voice and did not draw a
    weapon. The woman complied.
    Grubb continued to walk toward the car. As he came
    within a few feet of the BMW, he smelled marijuana smoke
    coming from inside. The car’s rear windows were tinted. Even
    with the spotlight on, Grubb had to use a flashlight to illuminate
    the car’s interior. He could see one large and two smaller clear
    plastic bags on the rear passenger floorboard. They contained a
    green leafy substance.
    Tacardon sat in the driver’s seat. Upon request, both he
    and the front seat passenger identified themselves. Only the
    passenger produced identification. After Grubb saw a partially
    burned, hand-rolled cigarette in the center console, he asked
    Tacardon about that item and the leafy substance in the bags.
    Asked whether he was on probation or parole, Tacardon said he
    was on probation. The discussion lasted two to three minutes.
    2
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    Telling Tacardon to remain seated, Grubb returned to his
    patrol car. A records search confirmed that Tacardon was on
    probation with a search condition. After additional officers
    arrived, the deputy placed Tacardon in the back of the patrol car
    and searched the BMW. He seized the three plastic bags in the
    backseat and a vial containing 76 pills. A search incident to
    arrest revealed that Tacardon carried $1,904 in cash.
    Laboratory analysis confirmed that the bags contained 696
    grams of marijuana, and the pills were hydrocodone. The
    amount of drugs, their presence in a car, and the accompanying
    cash were factors consistent with possession for sale.
    Tacardon was charged with possession for sale of
    hydrocodone and marijuana. (Health & Saf. Code, §§ 11351,
    11359, subd. (b).) At the preliminary hearing, the magistrate
    denied Tacardon’s motion to suppress the evidence (Pen. Code,
    § 1538.5) and held him to answer. The magistrate reasoned: “it
    was a police contact . . . . [I]n other words, he didn’t stop the
    defendant. There certainly was a point at which the defendant
    wasn’t free to go but that still would not preclude it being
    characterized as a contact.” The deputy’s observation of a large
    quantity of what appeared to be marijuana in plain view in the
    back of the car justified further investigation.
    Tacardon renewed his motion to suppress in conjunction
    with a motion to dismiss the information. (Pen. Code, §§ 995,
    subd. (a)(2)(B), 1538.5, subds. (i), (m); People v. Lilienthal (1978)
    
    22 Cal.3d 891
    , 896–897; People v. McDonald (2006) 
    137 Cal.App.4th 521
    , 528–529.) Based on the preliminary hearing
    record, the superior court granted the motion and dismissed the
    charges. The court held that Deputy Grubb engaged in a
    consensual encounter when he initially pulled behind
    3
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    Tacardon’s car and turned on his spotlight. But his detention of
    the female passenger effectuated a detention of Tacardon.
    The Court of Appeal reversed. It agreed with the superior
    court that Grubb’s position behind Tacardon’s car, spotlight
    illumination, and approach on foot did not “manifest a sufficient
    show of police authority to constitute a detention.” (People v.
    Tacardon (2020) 
    53 Cal.App.5th 89
    , 99 (Tacardon).) The court
    noted that the deputy did not block defendant’s car, use his
    emergency lights, or immediately and aggressively question
    Tacardon. (Id. at pp. 98–99.) It concluded: “Simply put,
    although a person whose vehicle is illuminated by police
    spotlights at night may well feel he or she is ‘the object of official
    scrutiny, such directed scrutiny does not amount to a
    detention.’ ” (Id. at pp. 99–100, quoting People v. Perez (1989)
    
    211 Cal.App.3d 1492
    , 1496 (Perez).) However, it rejected the
    superior court’s conclusion that Grubb’s interaction with the
    female passenger transformed the encounter with Tacardon into
    a detention. It reasoned that there was “no evidence [Tacardon]
    observed the deputy’s interaction with [the passenger], or that
    the deputy conveyed to defendant that he, like [his passenger],
    was required to remain.” (Tacardon, at p. 100.)
    In analyzing the deputy’s initial approach, the Court of
    Appeal expressly disagreed with People v. Kidd (2019) 
    36 Cal.App.5th 12
     (Kidd), which found an unlawful detention on
    similar facts. In Kidd, a patrolling officer saw two men parked
    on a residential street with the car’s fog lights on at 1:30 in the
    morning. (Id. at p. 15.) He drove past the car, made a U-turn,
    and parked 10 feet behind the vehicle. The officer shined two
    spotlights on the parked car and approached on foot. (Id. at p.
    16.) The appellate court found that Kidd, who was in the
    driver’s seat, was detained when the officer pulled up behind the
    4
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    parked car and turned on the patrol car’s spotlights. (Id. at pp.
    21–22.) The court observed: “motorists are trained to yield
    immediately when a law enforcement vehicle pulls in behind
    them and turns on its lights. Regardless of the color of the lights
    the officer turned on, a reasonable person in Kidd’s
    circumstances ‘would expect that if he drove off, the officer
    would respond by following with red light on and siren
    sounding . . . .’ ” (Id. at p. 21, quoting People v. Bailey (1985) 
    176 Cal.App.3d 402
    , 406 (Bailey).) The court further observed that
    “any ambiguity was removed when the officer more or less
    immediately exited his patrol vehicle and began to approach
    Kidd’s car. Although the officer’s approach was, according to
    record, not made in a particularly aggressive or intimidating
    manner, a reasonable person in Kidd’s circumstances would not
    have felt free to leave.” (Kidd, at pp. 21–22.)
    We granted review to resolve this conflict in the Courts of
    Appeal.
    II. DISCUSSION
    The outcome here turns on the distinction between a
    consensual encounter and a detention. Deputy Grubb did not
    stop the car. It was already parked on the street when he saw
    it. Officers can approach people on the street and engage them
    in consensual conversation. (People v. Brown (2015) 
    61 Cal.4th 968
    , 974 (Brown).) So merely walking up to someone in a parked
    car is not a detention. The issue presented is whether there are
    additional circumstances, the totality of which transformed the
    encounter into a detention.
    “An officer may approach a person in a public place and
    ask if the person is willing to answer questions. If the person
    voluntarily answers, those responses, and the officer’s
    5
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    observations, are admissible in a criminal prosecution.
    [Citations.]      Such consensual encounters present no
    constitutional concerns and do not require justification.
    [Citation.] However, ‘when the officer, by means of physical
    force or show of authority, has in some way restrained the
    liberty of a citizen,’ the officer effects a seizure of that person,
    which must be justified under the Fourth Amendment to the
    United States Constitution. [Citations.] In situations involving
    a show of authority, a person is seized ‘if “in view of all of the
    circumstances surrounding the incident, a reasonable person
    would have believed that he was not free to leave,” ’ or
    ‘ “otherwise terminate the encounter” ’ [citation], and if the
    person actually submits to the show of authority.” (Brown,
    supra, 61 Cal.4th at p. 974.)
    We consider the totality of the circumstances in
    determining whether a detention occurred. (Florida v. Bostick
    (1991) 
    501 U.S. 429
    , 437 (Bostick); Michigan v. Chesternut
    (1988) 
    486 U.S. 567
    , 572 (Chesternut); Brown, supra, 61 Cal.4th
    at p. 980.) Relevant circumstances may include: the presence
    of multiple officers, an officer’s display of a weapon, the use of
    siren or overhead emergency lights, physically touching the
    person, the use of a patrol car to block movement, or the use of
    language or of a tone of voice indicating that compliance with
    the officer’s request is compelled. (Chesternut, at p. 575; In re
    Manuel G. (1997) 
    16 Cal.4th 805
    , 821.) The facts are reviewed
    objectively. As People v. Franklin (1987) 
    192 Cal.App.3d 935
    (Franklin) explained, “The officer’s state of mind is not relevant
    . . . except insofar as his overt actions would communicate that
    state of mind.” (Id. at p. 940.) Likewise, “the individual citizen’s
    subjective belief [is] irrelevant . . . .” (Manuel G., at p. 821.)
    6
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    Where, as here, a suppression motion is made before a
    magistrate in conjunction with a preliminary hearing and no
    new evidence is presented in superior court, we are “concerned
    solely with the findings of the [magistrate].” (People v. Gentry
    (1992) 
    7 Cal.App.4th 1255
    , 1262.) We defer to the magistrate’s
    express and implied findings of fact if supported by substantial
    evidence. (People v. Williams (1988) 
    45 Cal.3d 1268
    , 1301;
    People v. Romeo (2015) 
    240 Cal.App.4th 931
    , 941–942; People v.
    Hua (2008) 
    158 Cal.App.4th 1027
    , 1033; Gentry, at p. 1262.) We
    independently assess whether the challenged search or seizure
    violates the Fourth Amendment, applying federal constitutional
    standards. (Brown, supra, 61 Cal.4th at p. 975; People v. Lenart
    (2004) 
    32 Cal.4th 1107
    , 1118; see Cal. Const., art. I, § 28, subd.
    (f)(2).)
    It is clear that Tacardon was detained at some point. The
    question is when. The timing is critical to the outcome. The
    parties agree that Deputy Grubb had no reasonable suspicion of
    criminal activity before he smelled marijuana smoke and saw
    what appeared to be bags of marijuana in the backseat. So if
    Tacardon was detained before that point, the action was
    unjustified and evidence subsequently discovered during the
    deputy’s search was subject to suppression. (Terry v. Ohio
    (1968) 
    392 U.S. 1
    , 12, 15, 21–22.)
    A. Pulling Behind, Activating Spotlight, and
    Approaching the Parked Car
    In Brown, supra, 
    61 Cal.4th 968
    , the circumstances were
    these. At 10:37 p.m., a 911 caller reported that more than four
    people were fighting in an alley behind his house, and someone
    said they had a loaded gun. The dispatcher sent out this
    information and Deputy Geasland responded, using lights and
    siren. (Id. at pp. 972–973.) As he drove down the alley,
    7
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    Geasland saw a car driving toward him and away from the
    reported location. Geasland yelled to the driver, “ ‘Hey. Did you
    see a fight?’ ” (Id. at p. 973.) Brown drove on without
    responding. Seeing no one else in the alley, Geasland drove
    after Brown. When he saw Brown’s car parked nearby, he
    stopped behind it and activated the patrol car’s colored
    emergency lights. He approached and spoke to Brown, whom he
    arrested for driving under the influence. (Ibid.) We concluded
    that Brown was detained when the deputy stopped behind his
    parked car and turned on the patrol car’s overhead emergency
    lights.    Observing that “[t]he Supreme Court has long
    recognized that activating sirens or flashing lights can amount
    to a show of authority” (id. at p. 978), we concluded that, under
    the circumstances presented, “a reasonable person in Brown’s
    position would have perceived Geasland’s actions as a show of
    authority, directed at him and requiring that he submit by
    remaining where he was. As a sister-state court has observed:
    ‘We see little difference, from the perspective of the occupants in
    the vehicle, [between] turning on the blue lights behind a
    moving vehicle and turning on the blue lights behind a parked
    vehicle. The lights still convey the message that the occupants
    are not free to leave.’ ” (Ibid., quoting State v. Gonzalez
    (Tenn.Crim.App. 2000) 
    52 S.W.3d 90
    , 97.)
    Brown did not, however, adopt a bright line rule that “an
    officer’s use of emergency lights in close proximity to a parked
    car will always constitute a detention of the occupants.” (Brown,
    supra, 61 Cal.4th at p. 980.) Instead, we emphasized such an
    inquiry “ ‘must take into account “ ‘all of the circumstances
    surrounding the incident’ ” in each individual case.’ ” (Ibid.) We
    gave the following example: “a motorist whose car had broken
    down on the highway might reasonably perceive an officer’s use
    8
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    of emergency lights as signaling that the officer has stopped to
    render aid or to warn oncoming traffic of a hazard, rather than
    to investigate crime. Ambiguous circumstances may be clarified
    by whether other cars are nearby or by the officer’s conduct
    when approaching.” (Ibid.) We observed, on the facts before us,
    that “no circumstances would have conveyed to a reasonable
    person that Deputy Geasland was doing anything other than
    effecting a detention. Under the totality of these circumstances,
    Brown was detained when Geasland stopped behind the parked
    car and turned on his emergency lights.” (Ibid.)
    This case involves the use of a spotlight, rather than red
    and blue emergency lights. Accordingly, we consider how the
    use of a spotlight affects the analysis of whether a detention took
    place.
    Several Courts of Appeal have found the distinction
    between a spotlight and red and blue emergency lights
    significant. In Perez, supra, 
    211 Cal.App.3d 1492
    , an officer
    pulled up facing the defendant’s parked car, leaving room for the
    defendant to drive away, and activated the patrol car’s high
    beams and spotlights. The officer walked up to the car, knocked
    on the window, identified himself, shined a flashlight into the
    car, and asked the defendant to roll the window down. The
    officer immediately smelled marijuana. (Id. at pp. 1494–1495.)
    The Court of Appeal found no detention, noting that the officer
    had not blocked the defendant’s car or activated the patrol car’s
    emergency lights. It further reasoned that, “[w]hile the use of
    high beams and spotlights might cause a reasonable person to
    feel himself the object of official scrutiny, such directed scrutiny
    does not amount to a detention.” (Id. at p. 1496.)
    9
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    In People v. Rico (1979) 
    97 Cal.App.3d 124
    , an officer
    investigating a recent shooting saw a car driving on the freeway
    that matched the description of a suspect vehicle. The officer
    pulled alongside the car and shined a spotlight on it. He then
    dropped back and followed the car for approximately five
    minutes without activating his emergency lights. The driver
    eventually pulled over on his own, and the officer stopped
    several car lengths behind, again turned on his spotlight, and
    engaged the car’s occupants. He ultimately recovered a rifle, the
    butt of which he saw sticking out from under the driver’s seat.
    (Id. at pp. 128–129.) The appellate court concluded that the
    officer’s initial “momentary use of the spotlight” to observe the
    suspect vehicle’s occupants as he was driving next to them was
    not a detention “in the absence of flashing lights, sirens or a
    directive over the loudspeaker.” (Id. at p. 130.) Indeed, the
    officer “immediately pulled back without any show of authority.”
    (Ibid.)
    In Franklin, supra, 
    192 Cal.App.3d 935
    , an officer saw the
    defendant walking in a high crime area wearing a full-length
    camouflage jacket on a warm summer evening. Finding this
    odd, the officer shined a spotlight on the defendant and parked
    the patrol car directly behind him. The defendant approached
    the officer and asked, “ ‘What’s going on?’ ” (Id. at p. 938.) He
    was sweaty and “ ‘jittery.’ ” (Ibid.) When the officer asked the
    defendant to remove his hands from his pockets, he saw what
    appeared to be blood on the defendant’s hands and a vial in his
    pocket containing white powder. The defendant fled and was
    detained. (Ibid.) The Court of Appeal concluded that shining a
    spotlight on the defendant and parking behind him was not a
    detention: “the officer did not block [the defendant’s] way; he
    directed no verbal requests or commands to [the defendant].
    10
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    Further, the officer did not alight immediately from his car and
    pursue [the defendant]. Coupling the spotlight with the officer’s
    parking the patrol car, [the defendant] rightly might feel himself
    the object of official scrutiny. However, such directed scrutiny
    does not amount to a detention.” (Id. at p. 940.)
    A survey of federal and sister-state authorities yields
    similar results. (U.S. v. Campbell-Martin (8th Cir. 2021) 
    17 F.4th 807
    , 811–812, 814 [no detention where officer parked two
    spots away from the defendant’s car, shined a spotlight on it,
    and approached on foot]; U.S. v. Tafuna (10th Cir. 2021) 
    5 F.4th 1197
    , 1199, 1201–1202 [no detention where officer parked with
    his patrol car at an angle to the defendant’s driver’s side door,
    activated a bar of “takedown” lights, and approached the
    defendant’s car]; see also 
    id.
     at p. 1201 [citing cases from the 1st,
    7th, 8th, and 9th Cir.]; U.S. v. Tanguay (1st Cir. 2019) 
    918 F.3d 1
    , 2–3, 7–8 (Tanguay) [no detention where officer parked about
    10 feet behind the defendant’s car, activated his floodlights, and
    approached on foot]; People v. Cascio (Colo. 1997) 
    932 P.2d 1381
    ,
    1382–1383, 1386–1388 (Cascio) [no detention where two
    deputies parked about 10 feet behind defendant’s van, trained a
    spotlight on it, and approached on foot].) Applying the totality
    of the circumstances test to the record before them, these courts
    held there had been no detention despite the use of a spotlight.
    (But see U.S. v. Delaney (D.C. Cir. 2020) 
    955 F.3d 1077
    , 1079–
    1080, 1082–1083 [detention occurred where officers parked
    within a few feet of the nose of the defendant’s car in a narrow
    parking lot, significantly restricting the defendant’s movement,
    and activated their “take-down light”].)
    As noted, Kidd, supra, 
    36 Cal.App.5th 12
     came to a
    contrary conclusion based on facts similar to those presented
    here. In that case a patrolling officer saw two men parked on a
    11
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    residential street with the car’s fog lights on at 1:30 in the
    morning. The officer decided to check and see if the occupants
    were stranded, “ ‘or what exactly they[ were] doing.’ ” (Id. at p.
    15.) He drove past the car, made a U-turn and parked 10 feet
    behind the vehicle, shining two spotlights on it. As he
    approached the car, he smelled marijuana smoke and asked the
    men what they were doing. Kidd was in the driver’s seat. The
    passenger was seen attempting to hide bags of suspected
    marijuana. The officer asked if either man was on probation or
    parole. When Kidd admitted he was on probation, the officer
    told both men to leave the car and sit in the patrol vehicle. A
    subsequent probation search revealed packaged marijuana, a
    digital scale, a pistol with a serial number removed, and 142
    alprazolam pills. (Id. at pp. 15−16.)
    The Kidd court held the defendant was detained without
    reasonable suspicion “as soon as the officer pulled in behind him
    and turned his spotlights on him.” (Kidd, supra, 36 Cal.App.5th
    at p. 22.) Kidd began by acknowledging the authority of Rico
    and Franklin that, without more, the mere act of parking behind
    someone “would not reasonably be construed as a detention,” nor
    would shining a spotlight on a person. (Id. at p. 21.) It also
    acknowledged that the officer did not block the car, activate
    emergency lights, or approach in an aggressive or intimidating
    manner. (Id. at pp. 21–22.) The court nonetheless concluded
    that the defendant was detained under the totality of the
    circumstances. (Id. at p. 21.) Quoting People v. Garry (2007)
    
    156 Cal.App.4th 1100
    , 1111−1112 (Garry) (see discussion, post,
    at pp. 21–22), it concluded the “officer’s ‘show of authority’ was
    so intimidating as to communicate to any reasonable person
    that he or she was ‘ “ ‘not free to decline [his] requests or
    otherwise terminate the encounter.’ ” ’ ” (Kidd, at p. 21.) As for
    12
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    the significance of the spotlights, the court reasoned: “motorists
    are trained to yield immediately when a law enforcement vehicle
    pulls in behind them and turns on its lights. Regardless of the
    color of the lights the officer turned on, a reasonable person in
    [the defendant’s] circumstances ‘would expect that if he drove
    off, the officer would respond by following with red light on and
    siren sounding.’ ” (Kidd, at p. 21, quoting Bailey, supra, 176
    Cal.App.3d at p. 406.)
    The Kidd court’s discussion of the spotlight differs from
    the other appellate court decisions. By concluding that a
    reasonable person would not feel free to leave when an officer
    pulls in behind the person’s parked car and turns on the patrol
    car’s lights, “[r]egardless of the color of the lights the officer
    turned on” (Kidd, supra, 36 Cal.App.5th at p. 21), the court
    described the use of a spotlight in this circumstance as
    essentially indistinguishable from the activation of red and blue
    emergency lights. We disagree. As other courts have held, the
    use of a spotlight generally conveys a different meaning to a
    reasonable person than the use of a patrol car’s emergency
    lights. Red and blue lights are almost exclusively reserved for
    emergency and police vehicles. (See Veh. Code, §§ 21055, subd.
    (b), 25258, subd. (b)(1), 25269.) An officer’s use of flashing red
    lights, or combination of red and blue lights, behind a vehicle
    typically conveys a command to stop. (Brown, supra, 61 Cal.4th
    at p. 978; but see id. at p. 980.) Indeed, a motorist may not be
    convicted of evading police unless a red light is displayed. (Veh.
    Code, § 2800.1, subd. (a)(1); People v. Hudson (2006) 
    38 Cal.4th 1002
    , 1008.)
    By contrast, a reasonable person would understand that
    spotlights can have a practical function that differs from the
    essentially communicative function of emergency lights. A
    13
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    spotlight can be used to illuminate the surrounding area for
    safety or other purposes unrelated to the projection of authority.
    Proper illumination enhances the officer’s ability to make
    “ ‘swift, on-the-spot decisions’ ” that are appropriate to the
    circumstances. (Brown, supra, 61 Cal.4th at p. 984, quoting
    United States v. Sokolow (1989) 
    490 U.S. 1
    , 11.)1 And, in certain
    circumstances, depending on how the spotlight is used, it might
    help both the officer and the civilian see what the other is doing
    and make decisions accordingly. Thus, unlike Kidd, we believe
    a reasonable person would distinguish between a spotlight and
    1
    The dissent asserts that the police do not have the same
    latitude to conduct an investigation at night as they do during
    the day. (Dis. opn. of Liu, J., post, at pp. 10–11.) The authorities
    cited are inapposite. Penal Code sections 840 and 1533 limit the
    ability to arrest or execute a search warrant at night out of
    concern for the sanctity of the home. The cited sections do not
    impose general restrictions on an officer’s authority or
    responsibility to investigate crimes at night. Further, they do
    not at all restrict police investigations in public places. Instead,
    Penal Code section 840 prohibits an arrest for the commission of
    a misdemeanor or infraction between 10:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m.
    and specifically excepts arrests “made in a public place.” (Id.,
    subd. (2).) Penal Code section 1533 requires that a search
    warrant be served only between 7:00 a.m. and 10:00 p.m. absent
    a finding of good cause. (See also People v. Watson (1977) 
    75 Cal.App.3d 592
    , 595–596 [Pen. Code, § 1533 is concerned with
    the drastic intrusion upon a person’s residence by execution of a
    search warrant].)
    The nonbinding authority of U.S. v. Wilson (4th Cir. 2000)
    
    205 F.3d 720
    , 723–724 and U.S. v. McLemore (8th Cir. 2018) 
    887 F.3d 861
    , 866–867 hold that an officer’s inability to see does not
    justify a suspicionless detention. They do not address whether
    an officer can investigate darkened areas or whether the use of
    illumination effects a detention.
    14
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    red and blue emergency lights in considering whether the
    person was free to leave or otherwise terminate the encounter.
    As in Brown, however, we decline to state a bright-line
    rule. A court must consider the use of a spotlight together with
    all of the other circumstances. It is certainly possible that the
    facts of a particular case may show a spotlight was used in an
    authoritative manner. These may include flashing lights at the
    driver to pull the car over or attempting to blind the driver,
    which would be relevant considerations under the totality of the
    circumstances. (See, e.g., Cascio, supra, 932 P.2d at p. 1388.)
    But use of a spotlight, standing alone, does not necessarily effect
    a detention.
    Considering the circumstances here, Tacardon was not
    detained when Deputy Grubb parked behind the BMW, shined
    a spotlight on it, and began to approach on foot. Grubb made
    eye contact with Tacardon as he drove by. He then made a U-
    turn, parked 15 to 20 feet behind Tacardon’s car, and employed
    the spotlight. After taking about 20 seconds to inform the
    dispatcher, he began walking towards the car. The deputy’s
    conduct up to this point conveyed none of the coercive hallmarks
    of a detention. He did not stop Tacardon’s vehicle or block him
    from driving away. He did not activate a siren or emergency
    lights or give directions by loudspeaker. He did not approach
    rapidly or aggressively on foot or draw a weapon. He gave no
    commands and made no demands; in fact, he did not seem to
    communicate at all with Tacardon or his passengers until the
    woman got out of the car and began to walk away. As we explain
    below (see discussion, post, at p. 26), it was only after she was
    given, and complied with, Grubb’s directive to remain that she
    was detained.
    15
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    Until that point, the deputy’s conduct was consistent with
    that in United States v. Drayton (2002) 
    536 U.S. 194
     (Drayton).
    There, the high court found no detention where there was “no
    application of force, no intimidating movement, no
    overwhelming show of force, no brandishing of weapons, no
    blocking of exits, no threat, no command, not even an
    authoritative tone of voice.” (Id. at p. 204.) In this context, a
    reasonable person would view the deputy’s use of a spotlight as
    similarly lacking in coercive force. The deputy used the
    spotlight as a matter of course. There was no evidence it was
    unusually bright or flashing, or that Tacardon was blinded or
    overwhelmed by the light. Certainly, a reasonable person would
    notice the deputy’s use of a spotlight, and depending on how it
    is used, a spotlight may contribute to the coerciveness of a police
    encounter. But under the totality of the circumstances here,
    Tacardon was not detained.
    The dissent argues that this conclusion “strains credulity.”
    (Dis. opn. of Liu, J., post, at p. 4.) Citing a magazine article and
    a manual by a patrol officer, the dissent asserts that it is a
    matter of common experience for both officers and civilians alike
    that a spotlight has a disorienting effect on a car’s occupants.
    (Id. at p. 6.) It also relies on cases which noted some evidence of
    that effect. (Id. at p. 7.) But no such evidence was elicited here.
    The deputy was not asked whether he had been trained to use
    his spotlight in that fashion, or whether its use in this
    circumstance was disorienting. Tacardon did not testify that he
    16
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    was blinded by the spotlight. For this reason, the nonbinding
    cases cited by the dissent are distinguishable.2
    2
    In U.S. v. Delaney, supra, 
    955 F.3d 1077
    , the officers
    parked their patrol car approximately “ ‘[three] feet away from
    the nose of the [defendant’s] Jeep’ ” and trained their patrol car’s
    “take-down light” on it. (Id. at pp. 1082, 1083.) The court noted
    that “[s]uch aptly named lights ‘are designed to illuminate the
    stopped car as well as to provide protection for an officer by
    blinding and disorienting the car’s occupants if they look back
    at the squad car.’ ” (Id. at p. 1083, quoting U.S. v. Shelby (7th
    Cir. 2000, Oct. 26, 2000, No. 00-1873) 
    2000 WL 1611120
    , p. *1,
    fn. 1 [unpublished table decision].) Notably, the unpublished
    case Delaney quoted for the description of the “take-down light”
    provides no source material for this factual assertion; nor did it
    involve a Fourth Amendment challenge to the defendant’s
    detention in that case. (See Shelby, supra, 
    2000 WL 1611120
    ,
    at pp. *1, fn. 1, *2.)
    In U.S. v. Sigmond-Ballesteros (9th Cir. 2002) 
    285 F.3d 1117
    , the officer in that case, having “pulled alongside
    Defendant’s truck” as it traveled in the slow lane of a highway,
    “shined his alley light almost directly into Defendant’s face”
    while the defendant was still driving. (Id. at pp. 1120, 1124.)
    The defendant put his hand up to shield his eyes from the light.
    (Id. at p. 1120.) The officer described the defendant’s act of
    covering his face as “ ‘suspicious behavior,’ ” but the court
    disagreed and concluded that this gesture did not supply
    reasonable suspicion to detain. (Id. at p. 1124.) It did not
    consider whether use of such illumination effected a detention.
    (Ibid.)
    In State v. Garcia-Cantu (Tex.Crim.App. 2008) 
    253 S.W.3d 236
    , the officer trained a spotlight on the defendant’s truck
    “even before he stopped his [patrol] car” (id. at p. 245), blocked
    the defendant’s truck (id. at p. 246), approached the car in an
    authoritative manner (id. at p. 248), asked, “ ‘What are you
    doing here?’ ” (ibid.), shined a flashlight into the defendant’s
    eyes, and requested identification (ibid.). The defendant
    testified at the suppression hearing that when the officer pulled
    17
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    Citing a treatise, the dissent reasons that “[s]ingling out a
    parked car and training a powerful spotlight on it from behind,
    as [Deputy] Grubb did here, is ‘conduct significantly beyond’ any
    sort of ‘nonoffensive contact . . . between two ordinary citizens.’ ”
    (Dis. opn. of Liu, J., post, at p. 9, quoting 4 LaFave, Search and
    Seizure (6th ed. 2002) § 9.4(a), pp. 597, 598, fns. omitted.) But
    LaFave, and the extra-jurisdictional cases cited, do not support
    the conclusion that the circumstances of this case qualified as
    such a “significant[]” departure from ordinary expectations as to
    effect a detention. (Id. at p. 597.) Addressing specifically the
    subject of police contact with persons seated in parked vehicles,
    LaFave acknowledges that no seizure occurs when an officer
    “merely walks up [and poses a question] to a person . . . who is
    seated in a vehicle located in a public place.” (Id. at pp. 591–
    592, fn. omitted; see also id. at p. 610.) Significantly, its list of
    supporting citations includes Tanguay, supra, 
    918 F.3d 1
    , which
    held that the officers’ act of parking behind a car, activating
    floodlights, and approaching on foot did not constitute a
    detention (LaFave, at p. 598, fn. 81, citing Tanguay, at p. 7), and
    U.S. v. Mabery (8th Cir. 2012) 
    686 F.3d 591
    , which held that the
    officer’s act of shining a spotlight on Mabery’s vehicle from the
    street did not constitute a seizure. (LaFave, at p. 592, fn. 62; see
    Mabery, at pp. 595–597.) None of the circumstances LaFave
    cites as likely to elevate the encounter to a seizure are present
    in this case: an order to “ ‘freeze’ ” or get out of the car, “boxing
    the car in, approaching it on all sides by many officers, pointing
    a gun at the suspect and ordering him to place his hands on the
    up behind him, he “couldn’t see anything more except a big
    spotlight, ‘a big white light.’ ” (Id. at p. 240.) The court found a
    detention based on the totality of the circumstances. (Id. at p.
    249.)
    18
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    steering wheel, or use of flashing lights as a show of authority.”
    (LaFave, at pp. 611, 612–613, italics added, fns. omitted; see
    also 
    id.
     at pp. 613–614, fn. 130 [citing, among other authorities,
    Brown, supra, 
    61 Cal.4th 968
     and contrasting cases where only
    use of spotlight was involved].)
    Tacardon reasons that he was clearly the focus of the
    deputy’s “official scrutiny” when the deputy made eye contact,
    turned the patrol car around, parked behind the BMW,
    activated his spotlight, and began walking towards the car.
    According to Tacardon, he “knew he was engaged in an
    encounter with the authorities even before the deputy
    approached the car on foot, and was well aware of the light
    glaring immediately behind his car.” He cites Kidd’s holding
    that “any ambiguity [as to whether a detention occurred] was
    removed when the officer more or less immediately exited his
    patrol vehicle and began to approach [the defendant’s] car.
    Although the officer’s approach was, according to record, not
    made in a particularly aggressive or intimidating manner, a
    reasonable person in [the defendant’s] circumstances would not
    have felt free to leave.” (Kidd, supra, 36 Cal.App.5th at pp. 21–
    22.)
    Under Tacardon’s proposed rule, any person who is aware
    of police scrutiny and is then illuminated by a spotlight is
    necessarily detained. Such a rigid approach fails to properly
    honor the totality of the circumstances test noted in Brown. A
    person approached by an officer may well consider himself the
    object of official scrutiny. Indeed he is. An officer of the law has
    initiated a contact for some reason and is requesting interaction.
    The question is where Fourth Amendment jurisprudence draws
    the line between mere consensual contact, which requires no
    justification, and a detention, which requires articulation of a
    19
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    reasonable suspicion that a crime may be afoot. But the high
    court has long held an officer’s mere approach does not
    constitute a seizure. (Bostick, 
    supra,
     501 U.S. at p. 434;
    Chesternut, 
    supra,
     486 U.S. at pp. 575–576; INS v. Delgado
    (1984) 
    466 U.S. 210
    , 216 (Delgado); Florida v. Royer (1983) 
    460 U.S. 491
    , 497 (plur. opn. of White, J.).) While a reasonable
    person in Tacardon’s position might “feel himself the object of
    official scrutiny, such directed scrutiny does not amount to a
    detention.” (Perez, supra, 211 Cal.App.3d at p. 1496; accord,
    People v. Chamagua (2019) 
    33 Cal.App.5th 925
    , 927, 929;
    Franklin, supra, 
    192 Cal.App.3d 935
    , 940.) A detention occurs,
    not the moment a person knows an officer would like to interact,
    but when a person would reasonably believe he or she “ ‘ “was
    not free to leave” ’ or ‘ “otherwise terminate the encounter,” ’ ”
    and submits to the officer’s show of authority. (Brown, supra,
    61 Cal.4th at p. 974.)
    Notably, courts ruling a detention occurred have
    emphasized other coercive aspects of the officer’s approach that
    are not present here. Wilson v. Superior Court (1983) 
    34 Cal.3d 777
     is instructive in considering when targeted scrutiny might
    transform a contact into a detention. There, an undercover
    narcotics officer approached the defendant as he walked off a
    plane in the Los Angeles International Airport. The officer
    identified himself, displayed his badge, and asked if he “ ‘might
    have a minute of [the defendant’s] time.’ ” (Id. at p. 781.) When
    the defendant said, “ ‘Sure,’ ” the officer advised him that he was
    “ ‘conducting a narcotics investigation, and that [he] had
    received information that [the defendant] would be arriving
    today from Florida carrying a lot of drugs.’ ” (Ibid., italics
    omitted.) We found that a detention occurred and clarified when
    it took place. “[I]t is evident that Detective Kaiser did not detain
    20
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    Wilson, for federal constitutional purposes, merely by
    approaching him, identifying himself as a police officer, and
    asking if he might have a minute of his time. [H]owever, the
    officer did not simply ask Wilson if he would permit a search of
    his luggage. Instead, he advised Wilson that he was conducting
    a narcotics investigation and that he ‘had received information
    that . . . [Wilson] would be arriving today from Florida carrying
    a lot of drugs.’ ” (Id. at p. 790, italics omitted.) At that point
    “the entire complexion of the encounter changed . . . .” (Id. at p.
    791.) “Common sense suggests to us that in such a situation, an
    ordinary citizen, confronted by a narcotics agent who has just
    told him that he has information that the citizen is carrying a
    lot of drugs, would not feel at liberty simply to walk away from
    the officer.” (Id. at p. 790.)
    In Garry, supra, 
    156 Cal.App.4th 1100
    , an officer on night
    vehicle patrol saw the defendant standing near a parked car. He
    pulled up about 35 feet away, turned the patrol car’s spotlight
    on the defendant, and walked “ ‘briskly’ ” toward him. (Id. at p.
    1104.) When the defendant told the officer, “ ‘ “I live right
    there” ’ ” and pointed to a house, the officer replied, “ ‘Okay, I
    just want to confirm that,’ ” and asked the defendant if he was
    on probation or parole. (Ibid.) When the defendant said he was
    on parole, the officer grabbed him and a struggle ensued. The
    officer handcuffed the defendant and searched him, discovering
    narcotics. (Ibid.) The appellate court found a detention,
    emphasizing that the officer had rushed at the defendant,
    disregarded the defendant’s representation that he was merely
    standing outside of his own home, and voiced an intention “ ‘to
    confirm that.’ ” (Ibid.; see 
    id.
     at pp. 1111–1112.) The court
    reasoned: “any reasonable person who found himself in
    defendant’s circumstances, suddenly illuminated by a police
    21
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    spotlight with a uniformed, armed officer rushing directly at
    him asking about his legal status, would believe themselves to
    be ‘under compulsion of a direct command by the officer.’ ” (Id.
    at p. 1112, quoting People v. McKelvy (1972) 
    23 Cal.App.3d 1027
    ,
    1034.)
    In People v. Kasrawi (2021) 
    65 Cal.App.5th 751
    , review
    granted September 1, 2021, S270040, an officer patrolling in a
    residential neighborhood early one morning saw the defendant
    cross the street and begin to enter a car. The officer turned on
    the patrol car’s spotlight and “pulled up behind and to the side
    of” the defendant’s vehicle. (Id. at p. 754.) The defendant turned
    to face the officer, who immediately approached and walked to
    within a few feet of the defendant, asking him where he was
    coming from. The defendant responded that he was resting
    while on a drive from Los Angeles, which the officer found
    suspicious because the street was several miles from the
    highway. The officer detained and handcuffed the defendant
    and discovered an outstanding warrant. A search incident to
    arrest yielded stolen items from nearby cars. (Id. at pp. 754–
    755.) The appellate court concluded that the defendant was
    detained before he responded to the officer’s inquiry. (Id. at p.
    756.) It emphasized that the officer parked within a few feet of
    the defendant’s car; “ ‘bathed’ ” the defendant with light;
    immediately approached with “speed and surety,” as
    memorialized by the officer’s body camera; and asked an
    immediate, pointed question, which demanded an answer. (Id.
    at pp. 759, 760.)
    The facts of Wilson, Garry, and Kasrawi are
    distinguishable from the events here.       Upon initially
    approaching Tacardon’s vehicle, Deputy Grubb did not walk
    rapidly, pose any questions to Tacardon, or accuse him of
    22
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    anything. The deputy’s nighttime approach, aided by a spotlight
    for illumination, did not, without more, effect a detention.
    People v. Kidd, supra, 
    36 Cal.App.5th 12
     is disapproved to the
    extent it is inconsistent with the holding here.
    Citing other dissenting opinions and legal commentators,
    the dissent posits that the “ ‘free to leave’ standard has long been
    criticized for having ‘an air of unreality’ and for lacking ‘common
    . . . understanding’ of how civilians experience encounters with
    the police.” (Dis. opn. of Liu, J., post, at p. 8, quoting Drayton,
    supra, 536 U.S. at pp. 208, 210 (dis. opn. of Souter, J.).) Our
    dissenting colleague emphasizes that he personally would not
    feel free to simply drive away from the officer in this
    circumstance, and suspects others would not either. (Dis. opn.
    of Liu, J., post, at p. 2.) As other courts have noted, however,
    “[t]he ‘free to walk away’ test . . . must be read in conjunction
    with the Court’s frequent admonitions that ‘a seizure does not
    occur simply because a police officer approaches an individual
    and asks a few questions.’ [Citations.] What emerges between
    the two imperatives, therefore, is the directive that police
    conduct, viewed from the totality of the circumstances, must
    objectively communicate that the officer is exercising his or her
    official authority to restrain the individual’s liberty of
    movement before we can find that a seizure occurred.” (U.S. v.
    Cardoza (1st Cir. 1997) 
    129 F.3d 6
    , 16; see also, e.g., Delgado,
    
    supra,
     466 U.S. at p. 216 [“While most citizens will respond to a
    police request, the fact that people do so, and do so without being
    told they are free not to respond, hardly eliminates the
    consensual nature of the response”].) Applying this standard,
    the high court has held, for example, that workers were not
    seized when armed law enforcement agents, displaying badges
    and positioned near the exits, questioned the workers at their
    23
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    job site about their citizenship as part of a “ ‘factory survey[].’ ”
    (Delgado, at p. 212; see 
    id.
     at pp. 212–213, 215–221.) It likewise
    determined there was no detention where the defendant, in an
    airport, agreed to speak to law enforcement after knowing he
    had attracted the officer’s attention, and the officer displayed
    his badge and asked to talk. (Florida v. Rodriguez (1984) 
    469 U.S. 1
    , 4–6 (per curiam).)
    In Drayton, 
    supra,
     
    536 U.S. 194
    , plain-clothes officers
    boarded a Greyhound bus at a scheduled stop after securing the
    driver’s permission to conduct a routine drug and weapons
    interdiction effort. Officer Lang displayed his badge and spoke
    to each passenger, positioning himself so that he did not block
    the aisle. (Id. at pp. 197–198.) Drayton and his companion
    Brown were seated together. The officer asked if they were
    traveling with luggage, and the pair pointed to a bag in the
    overhead rack. (Id. at pp. 198–199.) Lang asked, “ ‘Do you mind
    if I check [the bag]?’ ” and Brown said, “ ‘Go ahead.’ ” (Id. at p.
    199.) The check revealed no contraband. Brown then consented
    to a pat-down search of his person, which resulted in the
    discovery of contraband. Brown was arrested. (Ibid.) Lang then
    asked Drayton, “ ‘Mind if I check you?’ ” (Ibid.) Drayton lifted
    his hands and a pat-down revealed objects similar to drug
    packaging.       Drayton was likewise arrested.           Further
    investigation revealed both men had bundles of cocaine powder
    duct-taped between several pairs of their boxer shorts. (Ibid.)
    The court held Drayton had not been detained before the pat-
    down revealed what appeared to be drug packaging. (Id. at pp.
    203–206.) It concluded that “ample” evidence pointed to a
    consensual encounter. (Id. at p. 204.)
    Here, though Grubb made clear his interest in speaking
    with Tacardon, he did not objectively communicate that he was
    24
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    exercising his official authority to restrain him. If the high court
    believes the standard should be changed or applied in a different
    way, it may certainly so conclude. Until then, however, it is the
    standard the court prescribes, and we are bound by the court’s
    application of that standard.
    The dissent also questions whether today’s result creates
    an incentive for citizens to drive away from officer encounters,
    risking escalation and danger for both the officer and the
    civilian. (Dis. opn. of Liu, J., post, at pp. 9–12.) But as the high
    court has recognized in other contexts, individuals frequently
    have alternatives for asserting their Fourth Amendment rights,
    such as refusing to answer the officer’s questions or otherwise
    declining to act in the manner the officer has requested.
    (Bostick, supra, 501 U.S. at pp. 435–437.) And while many law-
    abiding citizens will choose to cooperate with the police “because
    [they] know that their participation enhances their own safety
    and the safety of those around them,” that fact alone does not
    negate the consensual nature of their response. (Drayton,
    
    supra,
     536 U.S. at p. 205.)
    B. Detention of the Passenger
    Tacardon argues that Deputy Grubb’s detention of the
    female passenger who got out of the car effectively
    communicated to Tacardon that he also was not free to leave.
    The Court of Appeal rejected this assertion. Although the court
    had “no difficulty concluding [the passenger] was detained”
    when Grubb “ordered her to remain on the sidewalk near the
    [car],” it found “no evidence defendant observed the deputy’s
    interaction with [the passenger], or that the deputy conveyed to
    defendant that he, like [the passenger], was required to remain.”
    (Tacardon, supra, 53 Cal.App.5th at p. 100.) It therefore
    25
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    concluded that “the magistrate’s implied finding that defendant
    was not detained at this point is supported by substantial
    evidence.” (Ibid.)
    It is clear that Grubb detained the female passenger. As
    the deputy approached Tacardon’s car, the passenger “jumped
    out” of the back seat, closed the door behind her, and walked
    towards the back of the BMW. When the deputy asked her what
    she was doing, she responded, “I live here.” He then directed
    her to stand near the sidewalk, and she complied. At this point,
    the woman was detained.
    The question is what effect, if any, did Grubb’s conduct
    have on Tacardon. It is well established that an officer’s show
    of authority towards others can communicate that the defendant
    is also not free to leave or terminate the encounter. In Brendlin
    v. California (2007) 
    551 U.S. 249
     (Brendlin), for example, the
    Supreme Court held that a passenger riding in a vehicle is
    detained when an officer pulls a driver over for a traffic
    violation. The court there emphasized that “an ‘unintended
    person . . . [may be] the object of the detention,’ so long as the
    detention is ‘willful’ and not merely the consequence of ‘an
    unknowing act.’ ” (Id. at p. 254, quoting Brower v. Inyo County
    (1989) 
    489 U.S. 593
    , 596.) It explained: when a car containing
    passengers is pulled over, “any reasonable passenger [will
    understand] the police officers to be exercising control to the
    point that no one in the car [is] free to depart without police
    permission.” (Brendlin, at p. 257.)
    But for this rule to apply, the defendant must be aware of
    the officer’s show of authority directed at another. In Brendlin,
    for example, the officer used “ ‘flashing lights’ ” to stop the
    vehicle in which Brendlin was riding. (Brendlin, 
    supra,
     
    551 U.S. 26
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    at p. 260.) Likewise, in Brown, supra, 
    61 Cal.4th 968
    , the
    deputy “pulled behind [the defendant’s] car and activated the
    overhead emergency lights on his patrol car.” (Id. at p. 973.) We
    rejected the People’s argument that Brown was not aware of the
    deputy’s presence until the deputy approached the car on foot as
    unsupported by substantial evidence. “[The deputy] did not
    testify that Brown was unconscious, probing under the seat, or
    otherwise distracted. The reasonable inference to be drawn
    from the record was that Brown was aware of the deputy’s
    overhead emergency lights flashing in the dark immediately
    behind his car.” (Id. at p. 980.)
    Here, then, the critical factual question was whether
    Tacardon overheard or otherwise perceived the deputy’s
    interaction with the passenger. But the record shows the
    magistrate did not consider this question. At the preliminary
    hearing, the prosecutor argued that the deputy’s directives to
    the passenger were “irrelevant with respect to the defendant.
    Whether or not he stopped her under the Fourth Amendment to
    keep her from going into that house is not something I need to
    argue to the court because she’s not here.” That argument
    confuses the issue of the passenger’s standing to challenge her
    own detention with the effect her detention may have had on
    Tacardon. The magistrate appeared to adopt the prosecutor’s
    position, commenting to defense counsel that “[the deputy] said
    to the woman she couldn’t leave. As said by [the prosecutor],
    that’s not the question. [T]he question is [whether] the
    defendant [was] told he couldn’t leave.” This formulation is
    overly narrow. The question is not whether Tacardon was “told
    he couldn’t leave” but whether the totality of the circumstances
    reasonably conveyed to Tacardon he was compelled to remain.
    The magistrate further observed that “there certainly was a
    27
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    point at which the defendant wasn’t free to go, but that still
    would not preclude it being characterized as a contact.” The
    observation overlooks the principle that a consensual encounter
    can evolve into a detention, and suggests the magistrate did not
    resolve the critical question of the point at which a detention
    occurred. The magistrate never made an express factual finding
    as to whether Tacardon was aware of Grubb’s interaction with
    the passenger. Its endorsement of the prosecutor’s argument
    indicates it did not make an implied finding either.
    Because an individual may be detained as a result of a
    police officer’s directives to another person (Brendlin, supra, 551
    U.S. at p. 260), the magistrate erred by failing to consider
    whether the deputy’s interaction with Tacardon’s passenger,
    together with all the other relevant circumstances, effected a
    detention of Tacardon as well. Although we independently
    determine whether the defendant was detained as a matter of
    law, we rely on the magistrate’s factual findings. We normally
    imply in favor of the magistrate’s order every finding that is
    supported by the evidence, but this rule “operates only where it
    can be presumed that the court has performed its function of
    weighing the evidence. If analysis of the record suggests the
    contrary, the rule should not be invoked.” (Estate of Larson
    (1980) 
    106 Cal.App.3d 560
    , 567.)             Because the record
    affirmatively shows the magistrate did not consider whether
    Tacardon was aware of the deputy’s interaction with his
    passenger, the Court of Appeal was wrong to presume the
    magistrate considered the issue and resolved it against
    Tacardon. Instead, the record shows the magistrate made no
    finding at all on that question. (See In re Edgerrin J. (2020) 
    57 Cal.App.5th 752
    , 769.)
    28
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    Under the circumstances here, we cannot resolve this
    factual question in the first instance. “As the finder of fact in a
    proceeding to suppress evidence [citation], the superior court is
    vested with the power to judge the credibility of the witnesses,
    resolve any conflicts in the testimony, weigh the evidence and
    draw factual inferences in deciding whether a search is
    constitutionally unreasonable.” (People v. Woods (1999) 
    21 Cal.4th 668
    , 673.) We cannot displace the magistrate as the
    trier of fact unless the evidence is susceptible to only one
    reasonable interpretation. (Cf. Brown, supra, 61 Cal.4th at p.
    980.)
    Here, unlike Brown, the record supports conflicting
    inferences on the issue of Tacardon’s awareness. Tacardon did
    not testify at the hearing, so any conclusions to be drawn about
    his awareness of the interaction between Grubb and the female
    passenger were necessarily circumstantial. On the one hand,
    Tacardon made eye contact with the deputy as the deputy drove
    by in a marked patrol car. That fact could support an inference
    that Tacardon was also aware of the deputy’s conduct in turning
    around, parking behind Tacardon’s car, shining his spotlight,
    and leaving his patrol car to approach Tacardon on foot. An
    inference could also be drawn that Tacardon was aware his
    passenger had left the car. As for Tacardon’s awareness of the
    events transpiring thereafter, Tacardon’s car was parked on a
    residential street at night, the engine was off, there was no
    evidence the street was busy, and the encounter between the
    deputy and the passenger occurred about five feet behind the
    car.
    On the other hand, the car doors were closed and the front
    windows were only “slightly lowered.” When the deputy
    encountered the passenger, he was far enough away from the
    29
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    car that he could not smell marijuana smoke coming from the
    windows. He spoke to the passenger in a moderate voice and
    did not draw a weapon. Tacardon was reclined in the driver’s
    seat and wore a hoodie that covered his head. There was smoke
    in the car and the car’s rear windows were tinted. All of these
    things may have affected Tacardon’s ability to see and hear
    what was going on behind the car. And the occupants were
    using marijuana, which may have affected their degree of
    attention. There is no evidence Tacardon asked why the deputy
    had detained the passenger or otherwise signaled to the deputy
    that he was aware of that circumstance.
    On this record, we cannot say there is only one reasonable
    inference to be drawn from the facts. Accordingly, we find it
    appropriate to remand the matter for a new factual finding as to
    whether Tacardon was aware of the woman’s detention and to
    assess whether Tacardon was detained under the totality of the
    circumstances. (See People v. Jenkins (2004) 
    119 Cal.App.4th 368
    , 374; see also Bostick, 
    supra,
     501 U.S. at p. 437.)3
    3
    Having concluded that Tacardon’s detention was
    supported by reasonable suspicion, the Court of Appeal found it
    unnecessary to address the Attorney General’s other argument
    that discovery of Tacardon’s probation search condition was an
    intervening circumstance that removed the taint of an otherwise
    illegal detention. (Tacardon, supra, 53 Cal.App.5th at p. 97, fn.
    5.) A similar issue is pending before us in People v. McWilliams,
    review granted June 30, 2021, S268320, which involves
    discovery of a parole search condition. In this case, the Attorney
    General did not raise the issue in an answer to Tacardon’s
    petition for review, and neither party has briefed it. Moreover,
    the question is premature given our remand for further factual
    findings necessary to determine when Tacardon was detained.
    30
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.
    III. DISPOSITION
    The judgment of the Court of Appeal is reversed and the
    case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this
    opinion.
    CORRIGAN, J.
    We Concur:
    CANTIL-SAKAUYE, C. J.
    KRUGER, J.
    JENKINS, J.
    GUERRERO, J.
    31
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    S264219
    Concurring and Dissenting Opinion by Justice Groban
    I agree with the majority opinion that we should “remand the
    matter for a new factual finding as to whether Tacardon was aware of
    the [passenger’s] detention and to assess whether Tacardon was
    detained under the totality of the circumstances.” (Maj. opn., ante, at
    p. 30.) However, the opinion further concludes that “Tacardon was
    not detained when Deputy Grubb parked behind the BMW, shined a
    spotlight on it, and began to approach on foot.” (Maj. opn., ante, at
    p. 15.) Conversely, the dissenting opinion concludes defendant Leon
    William Tacardon was detained at this point in the interaction
    without reasonable suspicion in violation of the Fourth Amendment.
    (Dis. opn., post, at pp. 1–2.) As to this issue, I would take a different
    approach from both the majority opinion and the dissenting opinion.
    As both the majority and dissent recognize, the shining of a
    police spotlight on a suspect can contribute to the coerciveness of the
    encounter and is a factor that must be considered as part of the
    relevant totality of circumstances inquiry. (Maj. opn., ante, at pp. 1,
    6, 14–16; dis. opn., post, at pp. 3, 7–8.) I think it is a close question
    whether Tacardon was detained when Deputy Grubb made a U-turn,
    parked behind his car, shined a spotlight on it, and began to approach
    on foot. But we do not need to reach this question. We are already
    remanding for the superior court to determine whether these facts,
    plus Tacardon’s possible awareness of his passenger’s detention,
    constituted a detention of Tacardon. I would therefore let the superior
    court assess the totality of relevant facts rather than have this court
    make a determination now with respect to only some of them.
    1
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Groban, J., concurring and dissenting
    GROBAN, J.
    2
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    S264219
    Dissenting Opinion by Justice Liu
    As today’s opinion recounts, Sheriff’s Deputy Joel Grubb
    was patrolling a residential neighborhood at night in a marked
    car and “had both his headlights and high beams on for ‘extra
    visibility.’ He drove past a BMW legally parked in front of a
    residence, in the vicinity of a streetlight. The car’s engine and
    headlights were off; smoke emanated from slightly open
    windows. He saw three people inside and made eye contact with
    the occupants as he drove past them. Grubb made a U-turn,
    parked about 15 to 20 feet behind the BMW, and turned on his
    spotlight. He did not activate his siren or emergency lights or
    issue any commands to the car’s occupants. He sat in his patrol
    car for 15 to 20 seconds while he informed dispatch of his
    location. He then approached the BMW at a walking pace. He
    did not draw a weapon.” (Maj. opn., ante, at pp. 1–2.) There is
    more to the encounter (id. at pp. 2–3), but my disagreement with
    the court centers on these facts.
    The court concludes that at this point in the interaction,
    defendant Leon William Tacardon, who was in the driver’s seat
    of the BMW, was not detained within the meaning of the Fourth
    Amendment because a reasonable person in his position would
    have believed he was free to leave or otherwise terminate the
    encounter with Deputy Grubb. (Maj. opn., ante, at pp. 15–16,
    19–20.) In my view, this conclusion does not accord with
    “[c]ommon sense.” (Wilson v. Superior Court (1983) 
    34 Cal.3d 777
    , 790.) An “ordinary citizen” in Tacardon’s position “would
    1
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Liu, J., dissenting
    not feel at liberty to simply walk [or drive] away from the
    officer.” (Ibid.) I certainly wouldn’t, and I suspect readers of
    today’s opinion wouldn’t either. On the facts above, I would hold
    that Tacardon was detained without reasonable suspicion in
    violation of the Fourth Amendment and that the judgment of
    the Court of Appeal must be reversed and the information
    dismissed.
    I.
    The resolution of this case is straightforward under the
    reasoning of People v. Kidd (2019) 
    36 Cal.App.5th 12
     (Kidd), a
    case with similar facts. In Kidd, an officer in a patrol car saw
    two men parked on a residential street at 1:30 a.m. (Id. at p. 15.)
    “The officer passed the car, made a U-turn, and parked about 10
    feet behind the car”; he “pointed two spotlights . . . at the
    occupied car, and then exited his patrol vehicle.” (Ibid.) As he
    approached the car, he smelled marijuana and, upon reaching
    the driver’s side window, “shined his flashlight in the car and
    asked the occupants what they were doing. Kidd was in the
    driver’s seat.” (Ibid.) The officer observed the passenger
    attempting to hide bags of suspected marijuana and asked if
    either man was on probation or parole. (Ibid.) After Kidd said
    he was on probation, the officer ordered the men out of the car
    and found drugs and a gun inside the car. (Id. at pp. 15–16.)
    “Taking into account the totality of the circumstances,”
    the Court of Appeal explained that “Kidd was detained when the
    officer made a U-turn to pull in behind him and trained
    spotlights on his car. The officer did not block Kidd’s car in, and
    he did not illuminate his colored emergency lights, so as to
    unambiguously signal a detention. Nevertheless, motorists are
    trained to yield immediately when a law enforcement vehicle
    2
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Liu, J., dissenting
    pulls in behind them and turns on its lights. Regardless of the
    color of the lights the officer turned on, a reasonable person in
    Kidd’s circumstances ‘would expect that if he drove off, the
    officer would respond by following with red light on and siren
    sounding . . . .’ [Citation.] Moreover, any ambiguity was
    removed when the officer more or less immediately exited his
    patrol vehicle and began to approach Kidd’s car. Although the
    officer’s approach was . . . not made in a particularly aggressive
    or intimidating manner, a reasonable person in Kidd’s
    circumstances would not have felt free to leave.” (Kidd, supra,
    36 Cal.App.5th at pp. 21–22.)
    Today’s opinion rejects this commonsense conclusion and
    says that a police officer’s “use of a spotlight, standing alone,
    does not necessarily effect a detention.” (Maj. opn., ante, at
    p. 15.) But Kidd’s reasoning is consistent with that proposition.
    (See Kidd, supra, 36 Cal.App.5th at p. 21 [“Without more, a law
    enforcement officer shining a spotlight on a person does not
    constitute a detention.”].) The disagreement here concerns what
    significance a court should assign to the use of a spotlight in
    considering whether the totality of circumstances of a nighttime
    police encounter amounts to a detention.
    Today’s opinion relies on cases involving spotlights where
    the Courts of Appeal and federal and sister-state courts have
    held that no detention occurred. (Maj. opn., ante, at pp. 9–11.)
    But those cases are not binding on us, and the fact that Kidd is
    in the minority does not diminish the soundness of its reasoning.
    (Cf. Minkler v. Safeco Ins. Co. of America (2010) 
    49 Cal.4th 315
    ,
    331 [adopting minority position even though “[a] greater
    number of cases . . . have taken the opposite view”]; Vandenberg
    v. Superior Court (1999) 
    21 Cal.4th 815
    , 834 [adopting Court of
    Appeal position even though “most other courts addressing the
    3
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Liu, J., dissenting
    issue . . . have taken a contrary approach”]; People v.
    Scott (1994) 
    9 Cal.4th 331
    , 353 & fn. 16 [adhering to “th[e]
    minority view” while “recogniz[ing] that the weight of authority
    is otherwise”].)
    In reaching today’s holding, the court contends that
    although activation of red and blue emergency lights “typically
    conveys a command to stop,” “the use of a spotlight generally
    conveys a different meaning to a reasonable person . . . .” (Maj.
    opn., ante, at p. 13.) Because “[a] spotlight can be used to
    illuminate the surrounding area for safety or other purposes
    unrelated to the projection of authority” (id. at pp. 13–14), the
    court “believe[s] a reasonable person would distinguish between
    a spotlight and red and blue emergency lights in considering
    whether the person was free to leave” (id. at pp. 14–15; see id.
    at p. 13 [“[A] reasonable person would understand that
    spotlights can have a practical function that differs from the
    essentially communicative function of emergency lights.”]).
    I imagine this conclusion comes as news to anyone who
    has ever had their car illuminated by a police spotlight. The
    court apparently envisions that a reasonable person in
    Tacardon’s circumstances would think, “Oh, the officer who just
    eyeballed me, made a U-turn, pulled up behind me in his patrol
    car, pointed a bright spotlight at my car, got out of his car, and
    is now walking toward me isn’t trying to stop me. He just turned
    on his spotlight to see what’s going on. Good thing he didn’t turn
    on his emergency lights . . . looks like I’m free to leave.” This
    strains credulity.      The spotlight, whatever its “practical
    function” (maj. opn., ante, at p. 13), contributes to the officer’s
    show of authority. No reasonable person would feel free to leave
    in such circumstances. A reasonable person would instead
    submit to the officer’s approach and stay put.
    4
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Liu, J., dissenting
    In this case, Deputy Grubb may well have “used the
    spotlight as a matter of course” (maj. opn., ante, at p. 16) for
    “purposes unrelated to the projection of authority” (id. at p. 14).
    And it is reasonable to believe that using a spotlight in dark
    conditions “might help both the officer and the civilian see what
    the other is doing and make decisions accordingly.” (Ibid.) “The
    ultimate question, however, is not the abstract reasonableness
    of the officer’s actions” or the purposes behind those actions “but
    rather the effect of the cumulative show of authority on a
    reasonable person’s assessment of whether they are free to
    terminate the encounter with law enforcement.” (People v.
    Kasrawi (2021) 
    65 Cal.App.5th 751
    , 758–759.) Even if it is
    reasonable for an officer to use a spotlight for illumination
    during a nighttime encounter with a parked motorist, the
    question is what the motorist would reasonably believe when
    confronted with the officer’s actions. And it is evident from
    ordinary experience that “an officer’s show of authority is
    usually bolstered by a spotlight — even if it is used primarily for
    safety purposes . . . .” (Id. at p. 760.)
    Here, Deputy Grubb did not use his spotlight to illuminate
    a general area for investigation. Instead, he pointed the
    spotlight at Tacardon’s parked car after making eye contact with
    its occupants, making a U-turn, and pulling up behind the car.
    A reasonable person would have concluded that the officer
    activated the spotlight and trained it on the car as part of a
    series of targeted actions to detain the car and its occupants.
    The court says that “[w]hile a reasonable person in Tacardon’s
    position might ‘feel himself the object of official scrutiny, such
    directed scrutiny does not amount to a detention.’ ” (Maj. opn.,
    ante, at p. 20.) To be sure, “[p]olice officers are as free as any
    other citizen to knock on someone’s door and ask to talk with
    5
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Liu, J., dissenting
    them, to approach citizens on the street or in their cars and to
    ask for information or their cooperation.” (State v. Garcia-
    Cantu (Tex.Crim.App. 2008) 
    253 S.W.3d 236
    , 243 (Garcia-
    Cantu).) But it is equally true that such scrutiny can amount to
    a detention in certain circumstances. The question is whether
    a reasonable person would feel free to leave or terminate the
    encounter, and the fact that activation of a spotlight causes a
    person to “ ‘feel himself the object of official scrutiny’ ” (maj.
    opn., ante, at p. 20) is probative, even if not dispositive.
    Today’s opinion says, “There was no evidence [the
    spotlight] was unusually bright or flashing, or that Tacardon
    was blinded or overwhelmed by the light. Certainly, a
    reasonable person would notice the deputy’s use of a spotlight,
    and depending on how it is used, a spotlight may contribute to
    the coerciveness of a police encounter.” (Maj. opn., ante, at
    p. 16.) But the fact that a spotlight has a disorienting effect that
    augments a police officer’s show of authority and the
    coerciveness of the encounter is a matter of common experience
    to civilians and officers alike. (See Santos, Making Nighttime
    Traffic Stops (June 20, 2012) Police Magazine [instructing police
    to “[u]se your high beams, spotlights, and takedowns” to
    “creat[e] a ‘Wall of Light’ that will overwhelm the occupants of
    the subject vehicle with intense light”]; Rayburn, Advanced
    Vehicle Stop Tactics: Skills for Today’s Survival Conscious
    Officer (2010) p. 4 [instructing officers that “[t]he spotlight will
    make it difficult for the operator of the vehicle to see”].)
    Further, it does not matter whether an officer is
    “attempting to blind the driver” (maj. opn., ante, at p. 15) or
    whether, in Deputy Grubb’s view, the spotlight’s “use in this
    circumstance was disorienting” or “whether he had been trained
    to use his spotlight in that fashion” (id. at p. 16). What matters
    6
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Liu, J., dissenting
    is the effect, which courts routinely infer from the totality of the
    circumstances. (See U.S. v. Delaney (D.C. Cir. 2020) 
    955 F.3d 1077
    , 1083 [shining a police “cruiser’s take-down light” into a
    stopped car from behind “ ‘provide[s] protection for an officer by
    blinding and disorienting the car’s occupants if they look back
    at the squad car’ ”]; U.S. v. Sigmond-Ballesteros (9th Cir. 2002)
    
    285 F.3d 1117
    , 1123 [“The sudden introduction of a light source
    into the driver’s compartment of a vehicle, while the vehicle is
    operated at night, can be disruptive and can lead to a decrease
    in visibility, if not temporary blindness.”]; Garcia-Cantu, 
    supra,
    253 S.W.3d at p. 240 [occupant of a car illuminated from behind
    may be unable to “see anything more except a big spotlight, ‘a
    big white light’ ”].)
    To be clear, I do not urge a per se rule that “any person
    who is aware of police scrutiny and is then illuminated by a
    spotlight is necessarily detained.” (Maj. opn., ante, at p. 19; see
    Garcia-Cantu, 
    supra,
     253 S.W.3d at p. 244 [“per se rules
    generally do not determine whether any specific citizen-police
    encounter amounted to a Fourth Amendment detention”; courts
    must examine the totality of the circumstances].) And I agree
    that relevant circumstances may include whether the officer
    stopped a moving vehicle, blocked a person from driving away,
    gave instructions by loudspeaker, approached aggressively,
    used a commanding tone of voice, or drew a weapon. (Maj. opn.,
    ante, at pp. 6, 15–16.) My objection is to the court’s conclusion
    that Deputy Grubb’s use of a spotlight to illuminate Tacardon’s
    car lacked “coercive force” that informed whether a reasonable
    person would have felt free to terminate the encounter. (Id. at
    p. 16.) I would hold that shining a police spotlight to illuminate
    a parked car on a residential street contributes to the
    coerciveness of the encounter in the circumstances here, where
    7
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Liu, J., dissenting
    it was preceded by an officer on patrol making eye contact with
    the car’s occupants, making a U-turn, and pulling up behind the
    car, and then followed a few seconds later by the officer getting
    out of his patrol vehicle and approaching the car.
    II.
    Although I acknowledge there is case law that supports
    today’s holding (maj. opn., ante, at pp. 9–11), it must also be
    acknowledged that judicial application of the “free to leave”
    standard has long been criticized for having “an air of unreality”
    and for lacking “common . . . understanding” of how civilians
    experience encounters with the police. (United States v. Drayton
    (2002) 
    536 U.S. 194
    , 208, 210 (dis. opn. of Souter, J.); see State
    v. Fogg (Iowa 2019) 
    936 N.W.2d 664
    , 675–677 (dis. opn. of Appel,
    J.) [citing criticism by justices of the United States Supreme
    Court, lower court judges, and scholars]; Sundby, The Rugged
    Individual’s Guide to the Fourth Amendment: How the Court’s
    Idealized Citizen Shapes, Influences, and Excludes the Exercise
    of Constitutional Rights (2018) 65 UCLA L.Rev. 690, 718, 721
    (Sundby) [4th Amend. jurisprudence has a “tone of
    obliviousness” and “does not accord with reality”];
    LaFave, Pinguitudinous Police, Pachydermatous Prey: Whence
    Fourth Amendment “Seizures”? (1991) 1991 U. Ill. L.Rev. 729,
    739–740 [“[T]he Court finds a perceived freedom to depart in
    circumstances when only the most thick-skinned of suspects
    would think such a choice was open to them.”].)
    To say that a person in Tacardon’s position was
    experiencing a “consensual contact” with Deputy Grubb (maj.
    opn., ante, at p. 19) is to proffer a rather sanguine and
    empirically dubious view of police-citizen interactions.
    (Kessler, Free to Leave? An Empirical Look at the Fourth
    8
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Liu, J., dissenting
    Amendment’s Seizure Standard (2009) 
    99 J. Crim. L. & Criminology 51
    , 62 [“[T]here is a wealth of evidence from
    psychological studies suggesting that people rarely comply
    freely with requests from police officers.”]; see, e.g., Sommers &
    Bohns, The Voluntariness of Voluntary Consent: Consent
    Searches and the Psychology of Compliance (2019) 
    128 Yale L.J. 1962
    ; Smith et al., Testing Judicial Assumptions of the
    “Consensual” Encounter: An Experimental Study (2013) 14 Fla.
    Coastal L.Rev. 285; Lichtenberg, Miranda in Ohio: The Effects
    of Robinette on the “Voluntary” Waiver of Fourth Amendment
    Rights (2001) 
    44 How. L.J. 349
    .)
    Professor LaFave, while recognizing the “ ‘moral and
    instinctive pressures to cooperate’ ” with the police, has said:
    “[T]he confrontation is a seizure only if the officer adds to those
    inherent pressures by engaging in conduct significantly beyond
    that accepted in social intercourse. The critical factor is whether
    the policeman, even if making inquiries a private citizen would
    not, has otherwise conducted himself in a manner which would
    be perceived as a nonoffensive contact if it occurred between two
    ordinary citizens.” (4 LaFave, Search and Seizure (6th ed. 2022)
    § 9.4(a), fns. omitted.) Singling out a parked car and training a
    powerful spotlight on it from behind, as Deputy Grubb did here,
    is “conduct significantly beyond” any sort of “nonoffensive
    contact . . . between two ordinary citizens.” (Ibid.; see Veh.
    Code, § 24409, subd. (b) [prohibiting use of high beams
    “[w]henever the driver of a vehicle follows another vehicle
    within 300 feet to the rear”].)
    As the court suggests, Fourth Amendment doctrine on
    police use of spotlights is significantly animated by safety
    concerns. (Maj. opn., ante, at pp. 13–14; see U.S. v. Tanguay
    (1st Cir. 2019) 
    918 F.3d 1
    , 7–8.) Yet one might wonder whether
    9
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Liu, J., dissenting
    today’s opinion creates new safety issues for both officers and
    civilians. By holding that Tacardon was not detained at the
    point when Deputy Grubb had activated his spotlight and began
    to approach on foot, the court contemplates that a person in
    Tacardon’s position may simply drive away without warning —
    even if an officer is walking toward the car and even if a
    passenger, desiring to leave the encounter, is exiting the car.
    Such a scenario would not promote the safety of either officers
    or civilians.
    The fact is that notwithstanding today’s decision,
    reasonable persons in Tacardon’s position will not drive away
    because they will not feel free to leave. A more realistic
    statement of today’s holding is that even though the use of a
    spotlight will often contribute to the coerciveness of a nighttime
    encounter, this circumstance simply does not outweigh safety
    concerns in the Fourth Amendment analysis. A carveout for
    spotlights would arguably put officers on the same footing, day
    or night, with regard to investigatory activities like approaching
    a parked car.
    Yet there is no policy or principle of which I am aware that
    says the police must have the same latitude for conducting
    investigation during the night as during the day. To the
    contrary, California law distinguishes between daytime and
    nighttime intrusions by police. (See Pen. Code, § 840 [“An arrest
    for the commission of a misdemeanor or an infraction cannot be
    made between the hours of 10 o’clock p.m. of any day and 6
    o’clock a.m. of the succeeding day, unless” certain criteria are
    met]; id., § 1533 [requiring showing of good cause before
    magistrate may approve service of search warrant between
    10:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m.]; Tuttle v. Superior Court (1981) 
    120 Cal.App.3d 320
    , 331 [“By adopting Penal Code section 1533, the
    10
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Liu, J., dissenting
    Legislature has clearly taken note that there is a special threat
    to privacy presented by nighttime police intrusions.”].)
    Moreover, courts have refused to credit darkness as an excuse
    for police intrusions conducted without reasonable suspicion.
    (See, e.g., U.S. v. Wilson (4th Cir. 2000) 
    205 F.3d 720
    , 723–724
    [vacating conviction stemming from vehicle pullover conducted
    because officer, due in part to darkness, could not read
    expiration date on vehicle’s registration tag]; U.S. v.
    McLemore (8th Cir. 2018) 
    887 F.3d 861
    , 866 [rejecting
    government’s argument that inability to read temporary license
    plate due to darkness justified police stop and affirming
    suppression of evidence].)
    Recognizing the coercive effect of spotlights would likely
    limit some nighttime investigations, including ones like Deputy
    Grubb’s that turn up contraband.             However, for every
    suspicionless stop that uncovers criminal activity, there are
    many others that come up empty.                  (See Bar-Gill &
    Friedman, Taking Warrants Seriously (2012) 106 Nw. U. L.Rev.
    1609, 1655 [“police find evidence in only about 10% to 20% of the
    total traffic searches”].) And “it is no secret that people of color
    are disproportionate victims of this type of [suspicionless]
    scrutiny.” (Utah v. Strieff (2016) 
    579 U.S. 232
    , 254 (dis. opn. of
    Sotomayor, J.); see Ayres & Borowsky, A Study of Racially
    Disparate Outcomes in the Los Angeles Police Department (Oct.
    2008) pp. 5–8 [Black and Hispanic residents of Los Angeles,
    compared to Whites, were more likely to be stopped, frisked,
    searched, and arrested but significantly less likely to be found
    with weapons or drugs]; Gross & Barnes, Road Work: Racial
    Profiling and Drug Interdiction on the Highway (2002) 101
    Mich. L.Rev. 651, 668 [searches of White drivers in Maryland
    reveal drugs 22% more often than searches of Black drivers and
    11
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Liu, J., dissenting
    over 200% more often than searches of Hispanic drivers]; Note,
    Discrimination During Traffic Stops: How an Economic Account
    Justifying Racial Profiling Falls Short (2012) 87 N.Y.U. L.Rev.
    1025, 1040 [searches of White drivers in Illinois reveal
    contraband over 50% more often than searches of non-White
    drivers]; cf. Kang et al., Implicit Bias in the Courtroom (2012)
    59 UCLA L.Rev. 1124, 1142 [“the conditions under which
    implicit biases translate most readily into discriminatory
    behavior are when people have wide discretion in making quick
    decisions with little accountability”].)
    Moreover, not all individuals feel the same degree of
    freedom to rebuff police advances, even if the law says they are
    free to leave. (See Pierson et al., A large-scale analysis of racial
    disparities in police stops across the United States (July 2020) 4
    Nature Human Behaviour 736, 739 [Black and Hispanic drivers
    are twice as likely as White drivers to undergo search when
    stopped by police]; cf. Utah v. Strieff, supra, 579 U.S. at p. 254
    (dis. opn. of Sotomayor, J.) [“For generations, black and brown
    parents have given their children ‘the talk’ — instructing them
    never to run down the street; always keep your hands where
    they can be seen; do not even think of talking back to a
    stranger — all out of fear of how an officer with a gun will react
    to them.”].) Would a reasonable person in Tacardon’s position
    feel free to drive away from Deputy Grubb or otherwise refuse
    to cooperate? The court’s holding leaves many citizens “ ‘in a
    “Catch-22.” Exercise of citizen rights in the face of police rights
    may cause police to escalate the intrusiveness of the encounter
    and place the citizen at risk of both physical harm and formal
    arrest. Failure to exercise citizen rights by responding to the
    officer, however, may be viewed as consensual conduct removing
    the encounter from Fourth Amendment analysis.’ ” (State v.
    12
    PEOPLE v. TACARDON
    Liu, J., dissenting
    Fogg, supra, 936 N.W.2d at p. 681 (dis. opn. of Appel, J.); see
    Sundby, supra, 65 UCLA L.Rev. at p. 726 [such deprivation of
    constitutional rights “undermines the trust and legitimacy with
    which the justice system is viewed by minority communities”].)
    In sum, today’s opinion stretches the concepts of a
    “consensual encounter” and being “free to leave” beyond the
    bounds of common understanding and ordinary experience. I
    fear that the benefits of the court’s decision, which expands the
    investigatory authority of the police, will come at the cost of
    subjecting more law-abiding persons to unwarranted
    surveillance, creating more police-civilian interactions with the
    potential for misunderstanding or escalation, and deepening the
    distrust that some communities have long had toward law
    enforcement.
    I respectfully dissent.
    LIU, J.
    13
    See next page for addresses and telephone numbers for counsel who
    argued in Supreme Court.
    Name of Opinion People v. Tacardon
    __________________________________________________________
    Procedural Posture (see XX below)
    Original Appeal
    Original Proceeding
    Review Granted (published) XX 
    53 Cal.App.5th 89
    Review Granted (unpublished)
    Rehearing Granted
    __________________________________________________________
    Opinion No. S264219
    Date Filed: December 29, 2022
    __________________________________________________________
    Court: Superior
    County: San Joaquin
    Judge: Michael J. Mulvihill, Jr.
    __________________________________________________________
    Counsel:
    Xavier Becerra and Rob Bonta, Attorneys General, Gerald A. Engler
    and Lance E. Winters, Chief Assistant Attorneys General, Michael P.
    Farrell, Assistant Attorney General, Eric L. Christoffersen and
    Christopher J. Rench, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and
    Appellant.
    Paul Kleven, under appointment by the Supreme Court, for Defendant
    and Respondent.
    Counsel who argued in Supreme Court (not intended for
    publication with opinion):
    Christopher J. Rench
    Deputy Attorney General
    1300 I Street
    Sacramento, CA 94244-2550
    (916) 210-7661
    Paul Kleven
    Attorney at Law
    1604 Solano Avenue
    Berkeley, CA 94707
    (510) 528-7347