State v. Huntley ( 2022 )


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  •                 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO
    DOCKET NO. 47981
    STATE OF IDAHO,                         )
    )
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                 )
    Boise, November 2021 Term
    )
    v.                                      )
    Opinion Filed: June 29, 2022
    )
    JEREMY LEE HUNTLEY,                     )
    Melanie Gagnepain, Clerk
    )
    Defendant-Respondent.                )
    _______________________________________ )
    Appeal from the District Court of the Second Judicial District of the State of
    Idaho, Nez Perce County. Jay P. Gaskill, District Judge.
    The decision of the district court is reversed, and the cased is remanded for further
    proceedings.
    Lawrence G. Wasden, Idaho Attorney General, Boise, for Appellant. Justin Porter
    argued.
    Eric D. Fredericksen, State Appellant Public Defender, for Respondent. Ben
    McGreevy argued.
    _____________________
    BRODY, Justice.
    This case involves an investigatory detention of Jeremey Lee Huntley based on a series of
    tips, corroborated in part, from a known confidential informant that Huntley was trafficking
    methamphetamine into Idaho. In the district court, Huntley moved to suppress the
    methamphetamine evidence found on his person and in his vehicle found during a search after
    the stop. The district court granted Huntley’s motion after concluding the officers lacked
    reasonable suspicion for the stop and that it was unlawfully prolonged. The State appealed. We
    reverse and remand for further proceedings.
    I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Huntley became the subject of a drug trafficking investigation based on tips from a paid
    1
    confidential informant (“the CI”). The investigation culminated in an investigatory stop of
    Huntley at his parked vehicle, a drug dog alert on his vehicle, and the discovery of
    methamphetamine on his person and in his vehicle.
    Leading up to the stop, in early August 2019, the CI told Detective Brett Dammon of the
    Lewiston Police Department that Huntley was trafficking methamphetamine from Washington
    into the Lewiston, Idaho area. The CI provided Detective Dammon with Huntley’s address in
    Lewiston and reported that Huntley drove a blue station wagon. Detective Dammon
    independently corroborated Huntley’s address through a police department computer system.
    Later, at the suppression hearing, Detective Dammon testified that the CI had “been deemed to
    be reliable” and had “provided reliable and correct information” in past cases.
    Still early in the month, on August 8, 2019, the CI called Detective Dammon and
    informed him that Huntley, at that time, “was out of the Lewis-Clark Valley possibly picking up
    methamphetamine” in Washington. The CI did not say how he knew this information. Later that
    night, the CI contacted Detective Dammon again by phone, and said he had just “met and spoken
    with” Huntley in Lewiston. The CI reported seeing Huntley “in possession of several ounces of
    methamphetamine” during the interaction.
    Starting sometime the next morning, on August 9, 2019, Detective Dammon, along with
    two other detectives, surveilled Huntley’s apartment complex. Later, around 2:30 p.m., the
    detectives saw Huntley exit the complex. Huntley was carrying a small child in a car seat, a
    black bag, and a large silver case. After leaving the complex, Huntley placed the child, bag, and
    case inside a blue station wagon. Huntley drove the station wagon away and the detectives
    followed him until he parked in another part of Lewiston. At this point, the detectives decided to
    stop Huntley at his parked vehicle to investigate him for illegal drug possession and trafficking.
    While the other two detectives informed Huntley of their drug investigation against him,
    and read Huntley his Miranda rights, Detective Dammon called for a drug-detection dog. After
    making his call, Detective Dammon approached Huntley and asked him if he was in possession
    of any illegal drugs and whether he would consent to a search. Huntley responded no to both
    questions. After this, the three detectives, and Huntley, waited for approximately fifteen minutes
    before the drug-detection dog arrived and conducted an exterior sniff of Huntley’s vehicle. At
    some point during the stop, a nearby family member retrieved the small child from Huntley’s
    station wagon.
    2
    The drug-detection dog alerted on the exterior of the station wagon, and the detectives
    used the alert as probable cause to further detain Huntley while they applied for a search warrant.
    After obtaining the search warrant, detectives found methamphetamine on Huntley’s person and
    roughly four ounces of methamphetamine inside the same large silver case that the detectives’
    previously witnessed Huntley place inside the station wagon. The detectives arrested Huntley for
    trafficking methamphetamine. After Huntley’s arrest, the State charged Huntley with trafficking
    between 28 and 200 grams (roughly one to seven ounces) of methamphetamine, a felony under
    Idaho Code section 37-2732B(a)(4)(A), and added a persistent violator sentencing enhancement
    under Idaho Code section 19-2514.
    After his arraignment, Huntley filed a motion to suppress the methamphetamine, arguing
    the illegality of the stop and the extension of the stop to wait for the drug-detection dog violated
    his constitutional rights under both the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution and
    Article I, Section 17, of the Idaho Constitution. The district court heard Huntley’s motion and
    both parties examined Detective Dammon. Thereafter, on March 18, 2020, the district court
    issued a written decision granting Huntley’s motion to suppress. Its decision relied on two
    independent grounds. First, the district court determined the stop was not supported by
    reasonable suspicion. Second, the district court determined the stop was unlawfully prolonged
    for fifteen minutes while waiting for the drug-detection dog to arrive.
    The State timely appealed the district court’s decision to this Court. Concerning the first
    ground, the parties agree the only issue is whether reasonable suspicion existed under the totality
    of the circumstances to stop Huntley.
    II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    When the Court reviews a district court’s order granting a motion to suppress, the
    standard of review is bifurcated. State v. Watts, 
    142 Idaho 230
    , 232, 
    127 P.3d 133
    , 135 (2005).
    First, the Court will accept the district court's findings of fact unless they are clearly erroneous.
    State v. Diaz, 
    144 Idaho 300
    , 302, 
    160 P.3d 739
    , 741 (2007). “Findings of fact are not clearly
    erroneous if they are supported by substantial and competent evidence.” State v. Bishop, 
    146 Idaho 804
    , 810, 
    203 P.3d 1203
    , 1209 (2009). Second, the Court freely reviews the district court's
    “application of constitutional principles in light of the facts found.” State v. Skurlock, 
    150 Idaho 404
    , 405, 
    247 P.3d 631
    , 632 (2011). “Accordingly, this Court freely reviews the constitutionality
    of a search and seizure.” Bishop, 
    146 Idaho at 810
    , 
    203 P.3d at 1209
    .
    3
    III. ANALYSIS
    On appeal, the State argues the district court erred because there was reasonable
    suspicion to support the investigatory stop. The State also argues that the original purpose of the
    stop, to investigate illegal drug possession and trafficking by Huntley, was never deviated from
    during the duration of the stop. Thus, the fifteen-minute wait for the drug-detection dog did not
    unlawfully prolong the stop. Huntley responds that the district court correctly determined the
    stop was made without reasonable suspicion. However, at oral argument, Huntley conceded that
    the district court erred in deciding the stop was unlawfully prolonged.
    For the reasons below, we hold the CI’s tips, in combination with the detectives’ partial
    corroboration, supplied reasonable suspicion to stop Huntley and investigate him for illegal drug
    possession and trafficking. We also hold that Huntley’s stop was not unlawfully prolonged.
    Accordingly, we reverse the district court’s decision and remand for further proceedings.
    The Fourth Amendment protects “[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons,
    houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures.” U.S. Const. amend. IV.
    This guarantee is incorporated to the states through the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
    Amendment. Mapp v. Ohio, 
    367 U.S. 643
    , 655 (1961). “The Fourth Amendment ‘protects
    people, not places[,]’ and forbids ‘not all searches and seizures, but unreasonable searches and
    seizures.’ ” State v. Hobson, 
    95 Idaho 920
    , 924, 
    523 P.2d 523
    , 527 (1974) (citations omitted).
    In addition, Article I, Section 17, of the Idaho Constitution guarantees at least the same
    protection. State v. Fees, 
    140 Idaho 81
    , 88, 
    90 P.3d 306
    , 313 (2004). However, if a defendant
    merely mentions his rights under the Idaho Constitution without arguing below why those rights
    provide greater protection than the Federal Constitution, the question of whether there is greater
    protection is not properly preserved for appeal. State v. Frederick, 
    149 Idaho 509
    , 513, 
    236 P.3d 1269
    , 1273 (2010). Here, Huntley’s motion to suppress mentioned his rights under Article I,
    Section 17, of the Idaho Constitution. However, Huntley never argued below why these rights
    are greater than those provided by the Fourth Amendment. Thus, we only address whether
    Huntley’s rights under the Fourth Amendment were violated.
    Under the exclusionary rule, evidence obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment
    generally may not be used against the victim of the violation. Bishop, 
    146 Idaho at
    810–11, 
    203 P.3d at
    1209–10; Wong Sun v. United States, 
    371 U.S. 471
    , 487–88 (1963). When a defendant
    moves to exclude evidence under this rule, the government carries the burden of proving that the
    4
    warrantless search or seizure in question was reasonable. State v. Anderson, 
    140 Idaho 484
    , 486,
    
    95 P.3d 635
    , 637 (2004). If reasonable, the search or seizure does not offend the defendant’s
    Fourth Amendment guarantee. 
    Id.
    A. The CI’s tips, coupled with the detectives’ partial corroboration, supplied
    reasonable suspicion to stop Huntley.
    On appeal, the State maintains reasonable suspicion existed to stop Huntley based on the
    tips alone, or, in the alternative, the tips plus corroboration of them in part. Specifically, the State
    argues the district court improperly discounted the presumed reliability of the CI’s tips as
    required by State v. Bishop, 
    146 Idaho 804
    , 
    203 P.3d 1203
     (2009) and incorrectly applied the
    probable cause standard instead of the reasonable suspicion standard. Huntley responds by
    echoing much of the district court’s reasoning and arguing that the content of the tips is
    innocuous information, i.e., that the facts do not support reasonable suspicion. Huntley also
    argues, relying on Nixon v. United States, 
    870 A.2d 100
    , 104 (D.C. 2005), that, as a matter of
    law, a paid informant’s tip is less reliable than one coming from a known citizen-informant
    without a financial interest. We agree with the State.
    “Typically, seizures must be based on probable cause to be reasonable.” Bishop, 
    146 Idaho at 811
    , 
    203 P.3d at
    1210 (citing Florida v. Royer, 
    460 U.S. 491
    , 499–500 (1983)).
    “However, limited investigatory detentions, based on less than probable cause, are permissible
    when justified by an officer’s reasonable articulable suspicion that a person has committed, or is
    about to commit, a crime.” Bishop, 
    146 Idaho at 811
    , 
    203 P.3d at 1210
    . In other words, an officer
    may, without violating constitutional guarantees, make an investigatory stop of an individual if
    that officer has reasonable suspicion that criminal activity is underway.” 
    Id.
     (citing Royer, 
    460 U.S. at 498
    ). “The quantity and quality of information necessary to establish reasonable
    suspicion is less than that necessary to establish probable cause.” 
    Id.
     (citing Alabama v. White,
    
    496 U.S. 325
    , 330 (1990)).
    However, reasonable suspicion requires more than “a mere hunch or inchoate and
    unparticularized suspicion.” Bishop, 
    146 Idaho at 811
    , 
    203 P.3d at 1210
     (quotations omitted).
    “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.” 
    Id.
     (citing United States v.
    Cortez, 
    449 U.S. 411
    , 417–18 (1981)); see also State v. Pachosa, 
    160 Idaho, 35
    , 39, 
    368 P.3d 655
    , 659 (2016).
    5
    In Bishop, we said that “[a]n informant’s tip regarding suspected criminal activity may
    give rise to reasonable suspicion when it would ‘warrant a man of reasonable caution in the
    belief that a stop was appropriate.’ ” 
    146 Idaho at
    811–12, 
    203 P.3d at
    1210–11 (citing White,
    
    496 U.S. at 329
    ). When a tip is involved, we still evaluate the totality of the circumstances, but
    the veracity, reliability, and basis of knowledge of the informant and their tip are “highly
    relevant” factors in determining whether reasonable suspicion exists. Bishop, 
    146 Idaho at
    811–
    12, 
    203 P.3d at
    1210–11. The tip must have “adequate indicia of reliability” to justify reasonable
    suspicion for a brief investigatory detention. 
    Id.
     (citing Adams v. Williams, 
    407 U.S. 143
    , 147
    (1972)). “The more reliable the tip, the less information required to establish reasonable
    suspicion.” Bishop, 
    146 Idaho at 811
    , 
    203 P.3d at 1210
    . If the tip lacks adequate indicia of
    reliability, the police typically must engage in corroboration of the tip, or further investigation,
    before they can establish reasonable suspicion for an investigatory stop. 
    Id. at 812
    , 
    203 P.3d at
    1211 (citing Adams, 
    407 U.S. at 147
    ).
    In Idaho, we generally recognize that there are two types of informants: anonymous
    versus known. Bishop, 
    146 Idaho at 812
    , 
    203 P.3d at 1211
    . First, an anonymous tip, that simply
    “provides a description of a suspect and alleges that he or she committed a crime[,]” generally
    will not give rise to reasonable suspicion without more (e.g., independent police corroboration).
    
    Id.
     Second, if the tip comes from a “known citizen-informant, the tip is generally sufficient to
    establish reasonable suspicion.” 
    Id.
     Unlike anonymous informants, a known informant’s
    “reputation can be assessed, and if the informant is untruthful, he or she may be subject to
    criminal liability for making a false report.” 
    Id.
     From this, we held in Bishop that a tip from a
    known informant is “presumed reliable . . . . [and] independent police verification of such tips is
    generally not necessary.” 
    Id.
     (emphasis added); see also State v. Van Dorne, 
    139 Idaho 961
    , 965,
    
    88 P.3d 780
    , 784 (Ct. App. 2004). Nevertheless, even in the face of presumed reliability, other
    surrounding circumstances stay relevant to the totality analysis. Bishop, 
    146 Idaho at 812
    , 
    203 P.3d at 1211
    .
    A non-exhaustive list of factors under the totality analysis includes whether: (1) the
    informant reveals his or her identity; (2) the informant reveals the basis of his or her knowledge;
    (3) the location of the informant is known; (4) the information was based on personal knowledge
    of events as they occurred; (5) the information was subject to “immediate confirmation or
    corroboration by police”; (6) the informant has previously provided reliable information; (7) the
    6
    provided information is predictive; and (8) the informant could be held criminally liable if their
    provided information is false. 
    Id.
     (citing White, 
    496 U.S. at
    331–32).
    Here, the district court’s totality analysis erred in two major respects. It improperly
    required corroboration of the tip before treating it as reliable (contrary to Bishop’s known
    citizen-informant presumption); and it mistook the standard required for reasonable suspicion
    with that of probable cause:
    Here, based upon the totality of the circumstances, there are very few
    factors indicative of reliability. Law enforcement did know of the CI’s identity
    and that he had provided reliable information in the past. But, in this
    circumstance, the only information the police could corroborate about the CI’s
    report is Huntley’s location and his vehicle. No other information available to
    police at this time gave rise to reasonable suspicion that a crime was occurring.
    Next, the detectives unreasonably prolonged Huntley’s detention while
    they waited for the arrival of a drug dog. A warrant was not applied for in this
    case until the drug dog hit on the car. Until that point, there does not appear to be
    enough evidence in the record that would have supported the detectives’
    application for a search warrant of Huntley’s home or car. The reliance on the
    drug dog hit indicates that the detectives needed a basis for the search warrant.
    ....
    Here, the State fails to meet its burden of proof as to the reasonableness of
    the original detention and any subsequent extension. There was no basis for
    Huntley’s stop beyond the information received by the CI. If the CI’s information
    was sufficient, the appropriate procedure would have been to have applied for a
    warrant based upon that information. Instead, the officers first attempted to search
    the car by asking Huntley for consent. When that was denied, they prolonged the
    detention until a drug dog arrived. Considering the totality of the circumstances,
    Huntley was inappropriately detained, with no basis to extend the detention until
    the drug dog arrived. Therefore, the Defendant’s motion to suppress is granted.
    As noted, the first problem with the district court’s analysis is that it did not apply the
    known citizen-informant presumption we set out in Bishop. The CI here is a known citizen-
    informant—one that shared a reliable history with Detective Dammon. Thus, the CI’s tips are
    entitled to a presumption of reliability under Bishop. However, the district court reversed the
    presumption because it treated the CI’s tips as presumptively unreliable unless sufficiently
    corroborated. This is particularly apparent where the district court emphasized that the “only”
    information the detectives could corroborate was Huntley’s location and his vehicle. Thus, the
    district court improperly discounted the CI’s tips as if they came from an anonymous source—
    not a known citizen-informant.
    Second, the district court conflated the level of proof sufficient for reasonable suspicion
    7
    with that required for probable cause. The district court reasoned the detectives should have
    waited for enough information from the CI to constitute probable cause for a warrant:
    There was no basis for Huntley’s stop beyond the information received by the CI.
    If the CI’s information was sufficient, the appropriate procedure would have been
    to have applied for a warrant based upon that information.
    However, a tip may be insufficient to support probable cause but sufficient to support reasonable
    suspicion for a stop. See White, 
    496 U.S. at 330
     (holding the same). “The Fourth Amendment
    does not require a policeman who lacks the precise level of information necessary for probable
    cause to arrest to simply shrug his shoulders and allow a crime to occur or a criminal to escape.”
    Adams, 
    407 U.S. at 147
    . The district court’s analysis does not reflect this principle. Moreover,
    the above reasoning, coupled with the district court’s added admonishment of the detectives for
    relying on the drug dog alert to supply probable cause, shows the district court improperly
    applied the heightened probable cause standard. Only reasonable suspicion that a crime was
    afoot was needed to stop Huntley, not probable cause.
    In sum, the district court’s analysis is unmoored from our decision in Bishop, and it
    applied the wrong standard of proof. Under our free review, we now apply our own totality
    analysis in light of the facts found by the district court and uncontroverted testimony from
    Detective Dammon.
    Here, the district court found that the CI was a known, paid, confidential informant who
    had supplied reliable information to Detective Dammon in the past. Thus, we start with the
    presumption that the CI’s tips as to Huntley were reliable. See Bishop, 
    146 Idaho at 812
    , 
    203 P.3d at 1211
    . Nevertheless, we must look at the totality of the circumstances before reaching a
    conclusion as to whether reasonable suspicion existed to stop Huntley.
    To begin, the CI’s accumulated tips include the following information. In early August
    2019, the CI reported Huntley was “involved in the sales of methamphetamine and trafficking
    methamphetamines” from Washington into Idaho. The CI supplied Huntley’s apartment address
    and reported that he had seen Huntley driving a blue station wagon. Detective Dammon testified
    the CI also reported “Huntley takes his drugs with him when he leaves [his] apartment.” The CI
    reported that on August 8, 2019, (the night before the stop) Huntley had left the Lewiston-
    Clarkston area of Idaho and was believed to be picking up methamphetamine in Washington.
    Finally, later that same night, the CI reported personally observing Huntley “in possession of
    several ounces of methamphetamine” in Lewiston, Idaho. Contrary to Huntley’s arguments on
    8
    appeal, these tips—taken together—are not innocuous.
    That said, the CI’s basis of knowledge for the above information is not entirely accounted
    for in the record. The CI reported personal knowledge of Huntley’s blue station wagon and that
    Huntley was in possession of several ounces of methamphetamine in Lewiston, Idaho (the night
    before the stop). However, on both direct and cross examination, Detective Dammon could not
    recall how the CI came about the rest of the above information. Thus, the “basis of knowledge”
    factor contributes to the presumed reliability of the CI’s tip yet detracts from it at the same time,
    i.e., the factor is a wash.
    Next, only a minimal part of the information provided by the CI was subject to immediate
    confirmation or corroboration (e.g., Huntley’s address). Furthermore, none of the information
    provided by the CI was predictive in any strict sense. For example, when the CI called Detective
    Dammon the night before the stop and reported seeing Huntley with “several ounces” of
    methamphetamine, the CI did not provide information predicting exactly where Huntley would
    be at a particular place, or time, with that methamphetamine.
    Nevertheless, any defects in establishing reasonable suspicion based on the tips alone
    were cured when the detectives independently corroborated parts of the CI’s tips. For example,
    prior to the stop, Detective Dammon confirmed that Huntley’s registered residence matched the
    address the CI supplied. The three detectives also witnessed Huntley exit the apartment complex
    at that same address and enter a blue station wagon. This corroborated Huntley’s vehicle and
    suspected location. Furthermore, the detectives witnessed Huntley leave his apartment carrying,
    among other things, a large silver case and placing it inside his vehicle before driving away. This
    is significant because the CI had reported seeing Huntley in possession of several ounces of
    methamphetamine the immediate night before. The CI had also informed Detective Dammon
    earlier in August that Huntley takes his “drugs” with him when he leaves his apartment. Thus, a
    person of reasonable caution would be warranted in the belief that the large silver case, taken
    from Huntley’s apartment into his vehicle, may contain the several ounces of methamphetamine
    the CI witnessed the night before.
    Accordingly, we hold, based on the totality of the circumstances, including the CI’s tips,
    that the stop was supported by reasonable suspicion. The district court’s decision to the contrary
    is reversed. Because of this, it unnecessary for us to discuss the State’s alternative argument that
    the CI’s tips alone were enough to supply reasonable suspicion for the stop.
    9
    In addition, we are unpersuaded by Huntley’s paid informant argument. Huntley argued
    on appeal that a paid known citizen-informant is less reliable as a matter of law than an unpaid
    one. Yet, the district court did not explicitly rely on the CI’s “paid” status in reaching its
    decision, nor did its analysis address any such distinction. Because of this, Huntley argues that it
    is “conceivable” the district court relied on this new distinction, and that Nixon v. U.S., 
    870 A.2d 100
    , 104 (D.C. 2005) supports this Court adopting the same. This argument is unconvincing for
    two reasons.
    First, a “paid informant” distinction apart from the “anonymous” versus “known”
    dichotomy is not clearly established or applied in the precedent relied upon in Nixon to claim the
    distinction exists. See Nixon, 
    870 A.2d at
    104 (citing Lawson v. United States, 
    360 A.2d 38
    , 39–
    40 (D.C. 1976)).
    Second, Huntley’s argument ignores the point of the “anonymous” versus “known”
    distinctions in Bishop. Known citizen-informants enjoy a presumption of reliability because if
    their reports are false, they may be subject to criminal prosecution. See Bishop, 
    146 Idaho at 812
    ,
    
    203 P.3d at 1211
    . Moreover, their presumed reliability only exists by virtue of a history of
    credible and reliable tips. 
    Id.
     The “paid” status of an informant does not affect whether they
    could be subject to criminal prosecution—nor does it invalidate the informant’s history of
    reliable tips. Thus, the “paid” status of an informant is irrelevant to why we presume the known
    citizen-informant is reliable in the first place under Bishop. Instead, whether an informant is paid
    is appropriate fodder for cross-examination to show potential bias. See State v. Spurr, 
    115 Idaho 898
    , 900–01, 
    771 P.2d 916
    , 919 (Ct. App. 1989) (noting the same). Thus, we decline Huntley’s
    invitation to craft a third category of reliability for “paid” informants distinct from our current
    “anonymous” versus “known” dichotomy under Bishop.
    Finally, under our determination that reasonable suspicion did exist to stop Huntley and
    investigate him for drug trafficking, we emphasize the narrow scope of this decision. We only
    address issues preserved for, and argued on, appeal. See State v. Neimeyer, 
    169 Idaho 9
    , 14, 
    490 P.3d 9
    , 14 (2021). “[B]oth the issue and the party’s position on the issue must be raised before
    the trial court for it to be properly preserved for appeal.” 
    Id.
     (quoting State v. Gonzalez, 
    165 Idaho 95
    , 99, 
    439 P.3d 1267
    , 1271 (2019)). In this case, the only issue raised before the trial
    court by the parties was whether the totality of the facts gave rise to reasonable suspicion to stop
    Huntley. Indeed, the parties agree that Huntley never argued that the Terry stop exception to the
    10
    warrant requirement was so “narrowly drawn” that it does not apply to justify his detention. See
    Terry v. Ohio, 392, U.S. 1, 27 (1968). Today, we decide the narrow question presented and hold
    that there was reasonable suspicion to believe that Huntley had methamphetamine in his
    possession at the time of the stop.
    B. The stop was not unlawfully extended because the detectives never deviated from
    the original purpose of the stop.
    The district court also concluded that “the detectives unreasonably prolonged Huntley’s
    detention while they waited for the arrival of a drug dog.” On appeal, the State argues “Huntley’s
    temporary, fifteen-minute detention was reasonable and lasted no longer than necessary to
    effectuate the purpose of the stop.” Although Huntley conceded at oral argument that the stop
    was not unlawfully prolonged, the district court’s conclusion here was a second and independent
    basis for granting Huntley’s motion to suppress. Thus, we decide the issue and reverse the
    district court.
    To comply with the Fourth Amendment, an investigative detention must be a reasonable
    seizure, i.e., temporary, reasonable in scope, and last no longer than is necessary to effectuate the
    purpose of the stop. State v. Linze, 
    161 Idaho 605
    , 609, 
    389 P.3d 150
    , 154 (2016). It remains a
    reasonable seizure “while the officer diligently pursues the purpose of the stop, to which that
    reasonable suspicion is related.” 
    Id.
     However, if the officer “deviates” from the original purpose
    of the stop—prolonging (i.e., adding time to) the stop—the officer no longer has that original
    reasonable suspicion supporting his actions. 
    Id.
     “This new seizure cannot piggy-back on the
    reasonableness of the original seizure.” 
    Id.
     Therefore, “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 an officer prolongs the stop by deviating from its original purpose
    (absent some established exception). 
    Id.
     “The rule isn’t concerned with when the officer
    deviates” from the original purpose of the stop, “it is concerned with the fact that the officer
    deviates from the original purpose of the stop at all.” 
    Id.
    Here, the purpose of the stop was to investigate Huntley for possession and trafficking of
    methamphetamine. The detectives diligently pursued the purpose of the stop and did not deviate
    from the stop’s original purpose at any point. Moreover, the fifteen-minute wait for the drug-
    detection dog was related to the purpose of the stop and lasted no longer than necessary to dispel
    or affirm the reasonable suspicion that Huntley possessed and was trafficking illicit drugs.
    11
    Therefore, we hold the stop of Huntley was not unlawfully prolonged and reverse the district
    court’s decision to the contrary.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    We reverse the district court’s decision granting Huntley’s motion to suppress and
    remand this case for further proceedings.
    Chief Justice BEVAN, Justice MOELLER, and Justice Pro Tem SCHROEDER,
    CONCUR.
    STEGNER, J., concurring in the result.
    While I do not disagree with the majority’s conclusion that the officers possessed
    reasonable suspicion to suspect Huntley had violated the laws of Idaho, I write separately to
    explain that had the issue been presented below, I would conclude law enforcement’s seizure and
    search of Huntley nevertheless violated the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement. The
    officers’ conduct in this case leads me to the troubling conclusion that their reliance on the paid
    confidential informant (“CI”) was an attempt to create a workaround to the Fourth Amendment’s
    warrant requirement. Although I agree with the majority that the officers possessed reasonable
    suspicion to suspect Huntley, I do not believe reasonable suspicion constitutes an exception to
    the warrant requirement when time is not of the essence, as it was not here. Unfortunately, when
    invited by this Court to brief that issue, both Huntley and the State agreed that the issue had not
    been preserved and this Court should not consider it. 1 Because that issue is not properly before
    this Court, I am constrained to agree with the result reached by the majority.
    The simplest and best solution would have been for the officers to seek a warrant from a
    disinterested magistrate utilizing the information provided to them by the purportedly reliable CI.
    Had the officers done so, I do not think we would now be discussing this case. Because the
    officers sought a way to sidestep the constitution, I am of the view that their behavior does not
    pass constitutional muster.
    1
    Because both parties have acknowledged that whether reasonable suspicion constitutes an exception to the warrant
    requirement when time is not of the essence was neither raised nor decided below, this decision has not been
    resolved and does not constitute the law of the case. See State v. Hawkins, 
    155 Idaho 69
    , 72, 
    305 P.3d 513
    , 516
    (2013).
    12
    I begin my analysis with the oft-repeated phrase that “[w]arrantless searches and seizures
    are presumptively unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment.” State v. Wulff, 
    157 Idaho 416
    ,
    419, 
    337 P.3d 575
    , 578 (2014) (italics added). A search conducted without a warrant must fall
    within a well-recognized exception to the warrant requirement to overcome this presumption of
    unreasonableness. 
    Id.
     “When a warrantless search or seizure is challenged by the defendant, the
    State bears the burden to show that a recognized exception to the warrant requirement is
    applicable.” Halen v. State, 
    136 Idaho 829
    , 833, 
    41 P.3d 257
    , 261 (2002). The concept of
    reasonable suspicion as an exception to the warrant requirement draws its genesis from Terry v.
    Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
     (1968). Without a warrant, law enforcement may conduct an exterior pat-down
    search for weapons if reasonable suspicion exists that a suspect is “armed and presently
    dangerous to the officer or others.” 
    Id.,
     
    392 U.S. at 24
    ; see also State v. Bishop, 
    146 Idaho 804
    ,
    818, 
    203 P.3d 1203
    , 1217 (2009). In Terry, the United States Supreme Court discussed unique
    circumstances faced by law enforcement officers “on the beat,” which cannot practically be
    subjected to the warrant requirement. Terry, 
    392 U.S. at 20
    . The concept of “reasonable
    suspicion” was created in Terry because officers on the street are engaged in “necessarily swift
    action predicated upon the on-the-spot observations [by] the officer on the beat[.]” 
    Id. at 20
    . It
    should be readily apparent to even the casual observer that the basis for the reasonable suspicion
    exception to the warrant requirement did not exist under these circumstances: the officers waited
    seventeen hours to seize Huntley.
    Terry’s framework was designed as a narrow exception to the warrant requirement to
    enable the officer on the scene who often needs to make split-second safety decisions:
    Our evaluation of the proper balance that has to be struck in this type of case leads
    us to conclude that there must be a narrowly drawn authority to permit a
    reasonable search for weapons for the protection of the police officer, where he
    has reason to believe that he is dealing with an armed and dangerous individual,
    regardless of whether he has probable cause to arrest the individual for a crime.
    The officer need not be absolutely certain that the individual is armed; the issue is
    whether a reasonably prudent man in the circumstances would be warranted in the
    belief that his safety or that of others was in danger. And in determining whether
    the officer acted reasonably in such circumstances, due weight must be given, not
    to his inchoate and unparticularized suspicion or ‘hunch,’ but to the specific
    reasonable inferences which he is entitled to draw from the facts in light of his
    experience.
    
    Id. at 27
     (italics added).
    13
    In my view, the officers’ conduct in this case is not akin to a “stop and frisk” interaction
    as contemplated by Terry. See 
    id.
     The information provided by the CI was not the type of
    information which would give rise to the police behavior sought to be justified in today’s
    decision. Certainly, based on the CI’s information, officers had no basis whatsoever to suspect
    that Huntley was presently armed or dangerous. There is not a scintilla of evidence to suggest the
    officers were fearful of Huntley. Furthermore, the officers were not making any split-second
    decision that could be characterized as “on-the-spot” or a justification of immediate action. In
    fact, the officers in this case had ample time to investigate Huntley and pursue a search warrant
    prior to seizing him in the manner they did. As noted, they had approximately 17 hours between
    the time they received the paid CI’s information and the time they seized Huntley. This amount
    of time is the antithesis of a split-second safety decision with which officers on the beat are often
    faced.
    If we were to countenance the police behavior in this case, it would eviscerate the need
    for a warrant. It would in essence do away with the presumption that warrantless searches are
    unreasonable. If the police receive information from a paid informant, they would then be
    allowed to seize an individual who is the subject of that informant notwithstanding the Fourth
    Amendment’s warrant requirement. Not only would this be bad law, but it is also bad policy.
    Conferring this power on the police would be misguided because of the ripe potential for
    “informants” providing information regarding individuals they seek to have seized irrespective
    of whether the underlying conduct is criminal. See, e.g., State v. Guzman, 
    122 Idaho 981
    , 998,
    
    842 P.2d 660
    , 677 (1992) (“In addition to encouraging compliance with the constitutional
    requirement that no warrant shall issue but upon probable cause, it also lessens the chances that
    innocent citizens will have their homes broken into and ransacked by the police because of
    warrants issued upon incomplete or inaccurate information.”).
    Although akin to a Terry stop, the officers’ detention and subsequent search of Huntley
    and his vehicle could have (and should have) been conducted with a warrant. The officers should
    have applied for a warrant using the paid CI’s information as the basis for probable cause. See,
    e.g., State v. Guzman, 
    122 Idaho 981
    , 984, 
    842 P.2d 660
    , 663 (1992); Dunlap v. State, 
    126 Idaho 901
    , 907, 
    894 P.2d 134
    , 140 (Ct. App. 1995). “[T]he Constitution requires ‘that the deliberate,
    impartial judgment of a judicial officer . . . be interposed between the citizen and the police[.]’ ”
    Katz v. United States, 
    389 U.S. 347
    , 356 (1967) (quoting Wong Sun v. United States, 
    371 U.S. 14
    471, 481–82 (1963)) (second and third alteration in original). The requirement of an impartial
    magistrate is especially important here, where the paid CI is “known” only to police officers—
    not the defendant, perhaps not the prosecutor, and certainly not the judge. A “paid” informant is
    both de facto and de jure an agent of the police. See State v. LePage, 
    102 Idaho 387
    , 392, 
    630 P.2d 674
    , 679 (1981) (holding that an informant who deliberately elicits incriminating statements
    from a criminal defendant post-indictment violates the Sixth Amendment because the informant
    is acting as an agent of the government); see also United States v. Henry, 
    447 U.S. 264
    , 274
    (1980) (same).
    Instead of obtaining a warrant, officers attempted to pressure Huntley to consent to the
    search of his car, which he lawfully declined. When that course of action failed, officers then
    waited fifteen minutes for a drug detection dog to sniff Huntley’s vehicle which then alerted to
    the presence of contraband. Only at this point did officers “use[] the alert as probable cause to
    further detain Huntley while they applied for a search warrant.” In my view, not applying for a
    warrant until after the drug dog alerted on Huntley’s vehicle is evidence of the officers’ strategy
    to avoid obtaining a warrant in the first place. Typically, a drug dog alert on a vehicle gives
    officers probable cause to search the vehicle without a warrant. State v. Howard, ___ Idaho ___,
    
    496 P.3d 865
    , 869 (2021) (“A reliable drug dog’s alert, standing alone, is sufficient to establish
    probable cause for a warrantless search of a car.”).
    Once the drug dog alerted, it would have been unnecessary under the Fourth Amendment
    to then obtain a search warrant. This begs the question: Why would officers who have validly
    established probable cause to search a suspect’s vehicle by way of a drug-dog alert feel the need
    to apply for a search warrant before acting on the dog’s alert? I believe the officers’ decision to
    get a warrant before searching the vehicle but after the dog alerted demonstrates that the officers
    knew their investigation of Huntley was on thin constitutional ice. I would resist the State’s
    efforts to create a new method to work around the Fourth Amendment. The reasonable suspicion
    doctrine created by Terry was intended to afford a police officer the legitimate authority to
    search a suspect for weapons when quick action was necessary. It was never intended or
    designed to give police the ability to avoid a review of their actions when ample time exists to
    engage a disinterested magistrate to gain approval for their action. In actuality, the police in this
    case seek to expand reasonable suspicion far beyond its intended purpose. I think the Court in
    Terry would be appalled at the effort to expand the holding in Terry to such lengths. In fact, the
    15
    Court in Terry explicitly noted that the authority it granted to officers to perform weapons frisks
    be “narrowly drawn.” 
    392 U.S. 27
     (italics added).
    In conclusion, a search absent a warrant is presumptively unreasonable because “the
    police must, whenever practicable, obtain advance judicial approval of searches and seizures
    through the warrant procedure.” Terry, 
    392 U.S. at 20
    . The officers here chose not to obtain a
    warrant—even though it was far more than merely practicable. Moreover, they have not
    identified a well-established exception to the warrant requirement justifying their failure to
    obtain a warrant. They have instead attempted to dramatically expand “reasonable suspicion” to
    do away with the need to obtain a search warrant. “[I]n dealing with the rapidly unfolding and
    often dangerous situations on city streets the police are in need of an escalating set of flexible
    responses, graduated in relation to the amount of information they possess.” 
    Id. at 10
    . This
    interest must be balanced, however, against the individual’s constitutional rights.
    A Terry stop constitutes “a serious intrusion upon the sanctity of the person, which may
    inflict great indignity and arouse strong resentment, and [] is not to be undertaken lightly.” 
    Id. at 17
    . Our judicial system retains a “traditional responsibility to guard against police conduct which
    is over-bearing or harassing, or which trenches [sic] upon personal security without the objective
    evidentiary justification which the Constitution requires.” 
    Id. at 15
    . We cannot and should not
    allow the Terry stop exception to the warrant requirement to swallow the Fourth Amendment’s
    prohibition on unreasonable searches and seizures. See State v. Downing, 
    163 Idaho 26
    , 32, 
    407 P.3d 1285
    , 1291 (2017) (“The [inevitable discovery] doctrine ‘is not intended to swallow the
    exclusionary rule whole by substituting what the police should have done for what they really
    did.’ ” (quoting State v. Holman, 
    109 Idaho 382
    , 392, 
    707 P.2d 493
    , 503 (Ct. App. 1985)).
    Because the litigants have concluded that neither party preserved this issue for appeal, I
    reluctantly concur with the majority’s result. However, under my conclusion that reasonable
    suspicion does not constitute an exception to the warrant requirement when time is not of the
    essence, I think that the officers’ warrantless seizure and subsequent search of Huntley was both
    presumptively unreasonable (because they lacked a warrant) and actually unreasonable (because
    it was not based on any reasonable suspicion that Huntley posed a risk to the officers’ or the
    public’s safety). Their action should not be allowed to stand. Because that issue is regrettably not
    before this Court, I concur with the majority’s result.
    16