Santos v. State , 230 Md. App. 487 ( 2016 )


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  •                REPORTED
    IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 2448
    September Term, 2015
    ANTHONY SANTOS
    v.
    STATE OF MARYLAND
    Arthur,
    Reed,
    Beachley,
    JJ.
    Opinion by Beachley, J.
    Filed: October 26, 2016
    - Reported Opinion -
    Anthony Santos, appellant, presents one question for our review: whether the Circuit
    Court for Baltimore County erred in denying appellant’s motion to suppress evidence
    seized as a result of an illegal search. Appellant entered conditional guilty pleas to
    distributing heroin and possession with intent to distribute cocaine. We find no error and
    affirm.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    On September 30, 2014, at approximately 12:45 p.m., Detective Dominic Bridges
    and Sergeant George Rakowski were patrolling in an unmarked car near the Eastpoint Mall
    in Dundalk. Both officers were assigned to the narcotics section of the Baltimore County
    Police Department. While traveling on an access road around the mall, the officers
    observed a black car parked outside a McDonald’s restaurant. Detective Bridges noticed
    the car because, in his experience, “drug transactions and things like that are occurring at
    places, public places where you can blend in.” He also noted that the vehicle was parked
    away from the restaurant itself, though spaces were available closer to the McDonald’s.
    Sergeant Rakowski noted that the officers knew the parking lot to be “highly concentrated
    for narcotics transactions.”
    Detective Bridges saw appellant in the driver’s seat and a white female, later
    identified as Amanda Fitch, in the passenger’s seat. He noticed that they were “looking
    around” and believed they were checking for the presence of police. The officers observed
    Ms. Fitch exit the car, enter the McDonald’s restaurant, and sit at a table with a white male.
    Both officers noted that she was wearing pajama pants. Appellant then drove out of the
    - Reported Opinion -
    parking lot, passing the officers. The officers noticed that appellant was not wearing a seat
    belt and was “manipulating” his cell phone. Detective Bridges believed that everything he
    had observed to that point was consistent with a drug transaction. He told Sergeant
    Rakowski that he intended to stop the vehicle. The officers followed appellant and
    conducted a traffic stop in a parking lot in front of a Bank of America branch on the other
    side of the mall.
    Detective Bridges approached the driver’s side of appellant’s car while Sergeant
    Rakowski went to the passenger’s side.        Detective Bridges identified himself as an
    undercover detective, explained the reasons for the stop, and asked for appellant’s license
    and registration.   Both officers observed that appellant was unusually nervous and
    “sweating profusely” even though it was “not a hot day.” Detective Bridges noted that
    appellant was trembling; he instructed appellant to place the vehicle in park and appellant
    complied. Sergeant Rakowski asked appellant where he was coming from. Appellant
    replied that he had just come from the mall. Sergeant Rakowski then asked appellant if he
    had stopped anywhere or met with anyone. Appellant replied that he had not met anyone
    and was headed home. Because he had just seen appellant at the McDonald’s with Ms.
    Fitch, Detective Bridges concluded that appellant was lying. Detective Bridges asked
    appellant to exit and move to the rear of the car.
    Detectives Herr and Johnson arrived in a second vehicle within two to three minutes
    after the initial stop. While Detective Bridges conducted a record and registration check,
    Sergeant Rakowski and Detective Johnson went back to the McDonald’s to try to find Ms.
    2
    - Reported Opinion -
    Fitch. Appellant’s record check revealed two possible warrants. Detective Bridges asked
    the precinct desk to confirm whether the warrants were active.
    Meanwhile, after arriving at the McDonald’s, which was “right around the corner”
    from the location of the traffic stop, Sergeant Rakowski went inside to look for Ms. Fitch.
    Unable to find her in the dining area, Sergeant Rakowski asked the manager to check the
    women’s bathroom for a female matching Ms. Fitch’s description. The manager obliged
    and told Sergeant Rakowski that a woman matching the description was in the bathroom.
    After she exited the bathroom, Sergeant Rakowski asked Ms. Fitch about “the stuff you
    just got from the guy in the car, the black car at the top of the hill.” Ms. Fitch replied that
    she had “already used it.” She explained that appellant had retrieved the heroin from
    behind the passenger’s seat of the car. Sergeant Rakowski then radioed Detective Herr at
    the scene of the traffic stop and informed him that Ms. Fitch had admitted to buying heroin
    from appellant. Sergeant Rakowski estimated he made the radio report six minutes after
    leaving the traffic stop. According to Detective Bridges, he and Detective Herr received
    Sergeant Rakowski’s call after appellant’s license and registration had been verified, but
    before learning the status of appellant’s warrants.
    Based on the information he received from Sergeant Rakowski, Detective Bridges
    arrested appellant and searched his car. Detective Bridges found a modified WD-40 can
    containing suspected illegal drugs behind the passenger’s seat. A laboratory analysis
    confirmed that the substances were heroin and cocaine.
    3
    - Reported Opinion -
    At the hearing on appellant’s motion to suppress evidence, appellant’s counsel
    attempted to pinpoint the timing and sequence of the events. Detective Bridges testified
    that the stop occurred at 12:47 p.m. and that the warrants check came back as negative at
    1:00 p.m. This testimony was based on audio recordings between the detective and police
    dispatch. Sergeant Rakowski testified similarly. Appellant’s counsel then showed both
    officers the written dispatch record indicating that unit “N-120”—Sergeant Rakowski—
    was “in route” to an unspecified destination at 1:03 p.m. Neither officer could initially
    determine whether “in route” meant that Sergeant Rakowski was traveling to or from the
    McDonald’s. Sergeant Rakowski ultimately concluded, based on the audio-record of
    communications, that he was at the McDonald’s when he made a radio request for a marked
    patrol car. Sergeant Rakowski made that call at 1:01 or 1:02 p.m., fourteen to fifteen
    minutes after the initial traffic stop at 12:47 p.m.
    Appellant also testified at the suppression hearing. He denied using his phone while
    driving, but acknowledged the “possibility” of not wearing his seat belt.
    Based on the testimony and evidence, the circuit court denied the motion to
    suppress, specifically finding the testimony of both Detective Bridges and Sergeant
    Rakowski credible. The trial court also made the following findings of facts:
     The officers noticed appellant’s car parked on the “upper lot” away from the
    McDonald’s.
     Both appellant and his female passenger (Ms. Fitch) were “looking around.”
    4
    - Reported Opinion -
     The female passenger exited the vehicle and went into the McDonald’s where
    she “sat with a man.”
     As appellant passed the officers, they noticed that appellant was not wearing
    a seat belt and was “manipulating his phone.”
     Appellant was “nervous beyond what one would normally expect” when
    stopped by the officers.
     Appellant was “sweating profusely.”
     When asked where he had been, appellant stated that he had been at the mall.
    Appellant denied having met with anyone “when, in fact, he had met with
    the red haired pajama bottom lady” (Ms. Fitch). Appellant provided those
    answers before exiting the car.
     Sergeant Rakowski left the scene of the traffic stop to go to the McDonald’s
    before dispatch provided the record check.
     Approximately thirteen minutes elapsed between the traffic stop at 12:47
    p.m. and the report at 1:00 p.m. verifying that appellant did not have any
    active warrants.
     Sergeant Rakowski was at the McDonald’s when he requested a patrol car.
    The trial court concluded that the traffic stop was a valid Whren1 stop, the questions
    posed to appellant by the officers were “routine,” and that the officers had “reasonable
    1
    Whren v. United States, 
    517 U.S. 806
    (1996).
    5
    - Reported Opinion -
    suspicion” to detain appellant based on his answers and the officers’ other observations.
    The trial court therefore denied the motion to suppress.
    In order to preserve his right to appeal, appellant entered a conditional guilty plea
    to charges of distributing heroin and possession of cocaine with intent to distribute. The
    court accepted the plea and sentenced appellant to ten years without the possibility of
    parole on the distribution charge and fifteen years consecutive, but suspended, on the
    possession with intent charge. Appellant timely noted this appeal.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    “When reviewing the disposition of a motion to suppress evidence alleged to have
    been seized in contravention of the Fourth Amendment . . . we view the evidence adduced
    at the suppression hearing, and the inferences fairly deducible therefrom, in the light most
    favorable to the party that prevailed on the motion.” Crosby v. State, 
    408 Md. 490
    , 504
    (2009). The one qualification to this general rule is that “[t]he actual findings of fact made
    by the hearing judge, unless clearly erroneous, ‘trump’ the version most favorable to the
    prevailing party to the extent to which they might be in conflict.” Charity v. State, 
    132 Md. App. 598
    , 606 (2000). “Nevertheless, in resolving the ultimate question of whether
    the detention and attendant search of an individual’s person or property violates the Fourth
    Amendment, we make our own independent constitutional appraisal by reviewing the law
    and applying it to the facts of the case.” 
    Crosby, 408 Md. at 505
    (internal quotation marks
    omitted). Here, the trial court made several specific findings of fact in denying appellant’s
    motion to suppress. We will therefore accept these facts unless clearly erroneous. As to
    6
    - Reported Opinion -
    all other facts and evidence, we will assume the version of the facts most favorable to the
    State and make our own independent conclusions of the law.
    DISCUSSION
    Our analysis begins with the so-called “Whren-stop.” We observed in Charity v.
    State, 
    132 Md. App. 598
    , 601 (2000):
    In Whren v. United States, 
    517 U.S. 806
    , 
    116 S. Ct. 1769
    , 
    135 L. Ed. 2d 89
           (1996), the Supreme Court extended law enforcement officers a sweeping
    prerogative, permitting them to exploit the investigative opportunities
    presented to them by observing traffic infractions even when their primary,
    subjective intention is to look for narcotics violations.
    In assessing the traffic stop, the only concern is whether the officer possessed sufficient
    information to objectively justify the stop; the officer’s subjective intent is irrelevant.
    Jackson v. State, 
    190 Md. App. 497
    , 503 (2010). Here, the officers observed appellant not
    wearing a seat belt and “manipulating” his cell phone while driving. Appellant correctly
    notes that only uniformed police officers are authorized to stop motorists for seat belt
    violations. See Md. Code (1977, 2012 Repl. Vol., 2016 Supp.) § 22-106(a) of the
    Transportation Article (“TR”). At oral argument appellant conceded that there is no such
    limitation for stopping a driver while using a handheld telephone. Accordingly, the trial
    court correctly found that the traffic stop was justified under Whren.2
    A.     Limitations of a Traffic Stop Under Ferris v. State
    2
    TR § 21-1124.2(d)(2) states: A driver of a motor vehicle that is in motion may not use
    the driver’s hands to use a handheld telephone other than to initiate or terminate a wireless
    telephone call or to turn on or turn off the handheld telephone.
    7
    - Reported Opinion -
    In Ferris v. State, 
    355 Md. 356
    , 369 (1999), the Court of Appeals explained the
    limitations imposed upon law enforcement after a valid traffic stop:
    The Fourth Amendment protects against unreasonable searches and
    seizures, including seizures that involve only a brief detention. United States
    v. Mendenhall, 
    446 U.S. 544
    , 551, 
    100 S. Ct. 1870
    , 1875, 
    64 L. Ed. 2d 497
           (1980). The Supreme Court has made clear that a traffic stop involving a
    motorist is a detention which implicates the Fourth Amendment. See United
    States v. Sharpe, 
    470 U.S. 675
    , 682, 
    105 S. Ct. 1568
    , 1573, 
    84 L. Ed. 2d 605
           (1985); Berkemer v. McCarty, 
    468 U.S. 420
    , 439, 
    104 S. Ct. 3138
    , 3150, 
    82 L. Ed. 2d 317
    (1984) (analogizing the degree of intrusiveness of the usual
    traffic stop to the degree of restraint imposed by the typical Terry stop). It is
    equally clear, however, that ordinarily such a stop does not initially violate
    the federal Constitution if the police have probable cause to believe that the
    driver has committed a traffic violation. Whren v. United States, 
    517 U.S. 806
    , 810, 
    116 S. Ct. 1769
    , 1772, 
    135 L. Ed. 2d 89
    (1996). Nonetheless, the
    Supreme Court has also made it clear that the detention of a person “must be
    temporary and last no longer than is necessary to effectuate the purpose of
    the stop.” Florida v. Royer, 
    460 U.S. 491
    , 500, 
    103 S. Ct. 1319
    , 1325, 
    75 L. Ed. 2d 229
    (1983) (plurality opinion).
    The Court further explained that,
    the officer’s purpose in an ordinary traffic stop is to enforce the laws of the
    roadway, and ordinarily to investigate the manner of driving with the intent
    to issue a citation or warning. Once the purpose of that stop has been
    fulfilled, the continued detention of the car and the occupants amounts to a
    second detention. See 
    Royer, 460 U.S. at 500
    , 103 S. Ct. at 1325-26. Thus,
    once the underlying basis for the initial traffic stop has concluded, a police-
    driver encounter which implicates the Fourth Amendment is constitutionally
    permissible only if either (1) the driver consents to the continuing intrusion
    or (2) the officer has, at a minimum, a reasonable, articulable suspicion that
    criminal activity is afoot.
    
    Id. at 372.
    It is that second component – reasonable articulable suspicion – that formed
    the basis of the trial court’s ruling in this case and to which we turn our attention.
    8
    - Reported Opinion -
    B.      Reasonable Articulable Suspicion Under Terry
    The officers detained appellant at 12:47 p.m. for two traffic violations. Almost
    immediately, the status of appellant’s detention embarked upon a parallel track of a Terry
    investigation for a narcotics violation. In State v. Ofori, 
    170 Md. App. 211
    , 245 (2006),
    we recognized the potential for a second, independent justification for a detention:
    The caselaw universally recognizes the possibility that by the time a
    legitimate detention for a traffic stop has come to an end, or more frequently
    while the legitimate traffic stop is still in progress, justification may develop
    for a second and independent detention. Unfolding events in the course of
    the traffic stop may give rise to Terry-level articulable suspicion of
    criminality, thereby warranting further investigation in its own right and for
    a different purpose.
    And in 
    Jackson, 190 Md. App. at 515
    , we further explained:
    There is no logically sound reason why at any point in the course of a
    traffic stop, articulable suspicion might not achieve critical mass for a Terry
    criminal investigation. If such articulable suspicion may develop in the total
    absence of a traffic stop, it may as readily develop in the course of one. From
    that point on, the processing of 1) the traffic infraction and 2) the Terry
    investigation for narcotics involvement may proceed simultaneously on
    parallel tracks. The time limit for processing the traffic infraction, to be sure,
    might run its course before the Terry drug investigation time limit runs out;
    but the detention itself will still be reasonable as long as either of its justifying
    rationales, the old one or the new one, remains vital.
    As in Jackson, the traffic stop and detention of appellant in this case almost
    immediately morphed into a parallel Terry-stop. The trial court found reasonable suspicion
    under Terry rather than the ripening of probable cause to arrest while waiting for the
    records check. While we may decide a suppression issue on any legal basis supported by
    the facts, we will limit our de novo constitutional review in this case to the Terry-based
    justification for the detention.
    9
    - Reported Opinion -
    1.     Articulable Suspicion for a Narcotics Violation
    Whether the police have reasonable articulable suspicion to investigate further is
    based on the totality of circumstances. The Supreme Court unanimously articulated that
    standard in United States v. Arvizu:
    When discussing how reviewing courts should make reasonable-
    suspicion determinations, we have said repeatedly that they must look at the
    “totality of the circumstances” of each case to see whether the detaining
    officer has a “particularized and objective basis” for suspecting legal
    wrongdoing. This process allows officers to draw on their own experience
    and specialized training to make inferences from and deductions about the
    cumulative information available to them that “might well elude an
    untrained person.”
    
    534 U.S. 266
    , 273 (2002) (emphasis added) (citations omitted).
    With this framework, we turn our attention to the present case. Officers first noticed
    appellant because he had parked away from the McDonald’s despite closer parking spaces
    being available. Sergeant Rakowski testified that he knew the parking lot to be “highly
    concentrated for narcotics transactions.” Detective Bridges testified that appellant and Ms.
    Fitch were “looking around”; inferentially, he believed they were checking the area for the
    presence of police officers. Ms. Fitch exited the vehicle, went into the McDonald’s, and
    sat down at a table with a male. Based on his training and experience, Detective Bridges
    believed he was observing a drug transaction.
    After performing the traffic stop, Detective Bridges noticed appellant sweating
    profusely and trembling. Sergeant Rakowski testified that appellant had “sweat rolling
    down his face,” which he believed to be abnormal. Detective Bridges testified what
    occurred:
    10
    - Reported Opinion -
    [STATE]: Okay. Based on the observations that you just described, what
    happened next? Or what did you ask him to do, if anything?
    [DETECTIVE]: Sergeant Rakowski had asked him some questions and after
    that occurred, we asked him to step out of the vehicle.
    [STATE]: Okay. Do you recall what questions were asked?
    [DETECTIVE]: I do.
    [STATE]: What, what did he ask him?
    [DETECTIVE]: I don’t remember the specific words that were used, but
    Detective Sergeant Rakowski asked where he was coming from and the
    [appellant] said that he was leaving the mall or he had just come from the
    mall and which I took notice of because he was coming from a McDonald’s
    restaurant and then Sergeant Rakowski said, well, did you meet with anybody
    or who were you just talking with and he said no, I didn’t meet with anybody,
    I’m headed home.
    [STATE]: And that was inconsistent with what you just observed?
    [DETECTIVE]: Exactly.
    [STATE]: Okay.
    [DETECTIVE]: I, obviously, had just seen that that was false.
    The officers then asked appellant to exit the car.
    The trial court found both officers credible and made specific findings of fact. It
    concluded that, under the totality of the circumstances, the police had reasonable
    articulable suspicion to detain appellant for further investigation. We agree.
    Although a totality of the circumstances analysis is unique to each case, case law
    informs our decision. In Jackson, the defendant was stopped for speeding on Interstate 95.
    
    Jackson, 190 Md. App. at 502
    . During the course of the traffic stop, a K-9 unit scanned
    11
    - Reported Opinion -
    defendant’s car and alerted for the presence of drugs. 
    Id. at 504.
    This Court ultimately
    held that the K-9 scan occurred while the traffic violation was still being processed and
    therefore the stop was not unreasonably prolonged. 
    Id. 514. However,
    we further held
    that, even if the detention were excessive under Whren and its progeny, the officer still had
    reasonable articulable suspicion to detain the defendant. 
    Id. We considered
    the following
    factors as part of that analysis: defendant’s extreme nervousness, the presence of multiple
    air fresheners and cell phones (hallmarks of drug trafficking), the location of the stop in a
    known drug area, the use of a rental car with out-of-state tags, and defendant’s illogical
    explanation for where he had been. 
    Id. at 519-24.
    The last factor carried particular weight. The defendant claimed that “he was
    coming from Hagerstown, Maryland and had stopped at the Baltimore Travel Plaza.” 
    Id. at 524.
    The officer became immediately suspicious because “[defendant] was North of
    where he said he was traveling from and traveling Southbound.” 
    Id. We described
    this as
    being “irremediably suspicious,” noting, “That the appellant was self-evidently caught in,
    to put it gently, an awkward quandary was another factor, and a big one, in the totality that
    added up to reasonable articulable suspicion.” 
    Id. at 525.
    In Carter v. State, 
    143 Md. App. 670
    (2002), police received an anonymous call
    about a suspicious vehicle parked on the parking lot of an elementary school. 
    Id. at 680.
    The caller stated that individuals were possibly selling drugs and that juveniles were
    approaching and leaving the vehicle. 
    Id. When the
    police arrived six minutes after the
    call, they observed two individuals walking away from a van, the only vehicle on the lot.
    12
    - Reported Opinion -
    
    Id. at 681.
    The two individuals began running as the police approached. 
    Id. The officers
    stopped the van as it attempted to exit the lot. 
    Id. What occurred
    after the stop aids our
    analysis:
    In the first minutes of the stop, moreover, articulable suspicion of drug
    activity continued to mount. The driver, for starters, could not produce an
    operator’s license. The driver was then asked what the van was doing on the
    school parking lot at that hour. He stated that he and the others were on the
    parking lot for the purpose of “picking someone up.” He was unable to state,
    however, who that person to be picked up was or how they would know him.
    The front seat passenger was independently asked by another officer why the
    van and its occupants were on the school property lot. By contrast with the
    driver’s explanation, he explained that they were there for the purpose of just
    “hanging out.”
    
    Id. at 682.
    The Carter Court noted the significance of inconsistent statements in Terry-
    stop analysis:
    The fundamental purpose of a Terry-stop, based as it is on reasonable
    suspicion, is to confirm or to dispel that suspicion by asking for an
    explanation of the suspicious behavior. A major factor in then determining
    whether to terminate or to prolong the Terry-stop, therefore, is necessarily
    the nature of the response or responses given to the police.
    
    Id. at 683-84.
    In United States v. Mason, 
    628 F.3d 123
    (4th Cir. 2010), the United States Court of
    Appeals for the Fourth Circuit held that an officer had reasonable articulable suspicion
    based on the totality of the circumstances.         The officer there made the following
    observations:
     The defendant driver did not pull his vehicle over promptly.
     The officer detected an “extreme” odor of air fresheners.
    13
    - Reported Opinion -
     There was only a single key on the defendant’s key ring (leading the officer
    to conclude that the defendant and his passenger may have been on a
    “turnaround” trip as drug couriers).
     Defendant was sweating and unusually nervous.
     Defendant and his passenger gave conflicting stories about where they had
    stayed and the purpose of their travel.
    
    Id. at 130-31.
    In finding reasonable articulable suspicion, the Fourth Circuit noted the significance
    of the conflicting stories provided by the defendant and his passenger:
    We recognize that several of these facts could hardly have
    distinguished suspicious activity from innocent travel. But when all the
    articulated facts are taken as a whole, especially when they include the fact
    of Mason and Govan’s conflicting stories about the place where they stayed
    and the purpose of their travel, sufficient facts existed to have given an
    experienced officer a reasonable suspicion that criminal activity was afoot.
    
    Id. at 129
    (emphasis added).
    Turning to the case at bar, there might have been an innocent explanation for
    appellant parking in the upper lot away from the McDonald’s. There might have been an
    innocent explanation for appellant and Ms. Fitch “looking around” while seated in the
    vehicle. It is certainly understandable that appellant was nervous when he was stopped by
    the police. It is even conceivable that appellant had an innocent explanation for lying to
    the police about where and with whom he had been minutes before the stop. Nevertheless,
    as explained by the Supreme Court in United States v. Sokolow, 
    490 U.S. 1
    , 9-10 (1989),
    reasonable suspicion can develop from “‘a series of acts, each of them perhaps innocent’
    14
    - Reported Opinion -
    if viewed separately, ‘but which taken together [warrants] further investigation.’” We also
    note the Supreme Court’s observation in Arvizu that reasonable suspicion determinations
    allow “officers to draw on their own experience and specialized training to make inferences
    from and deductions about the cumulative information available to them” that might not
    be readily apparent to an untrained person. 
    534 U.S. 266
    , 273 (2002). The circumstances
    in this case, taken together, sufficed to form reasonable articulable suspicion and permitted
    the officers to further investigate.
    Appellant argues that the officers exceeded the permissible scope of the traffic stop
    when they asked appellant where and with whom he had been. In appellant’s view, those
    questions were improper because they were wholly unrelated to the traffic stop. We are
    persuaded by the Fourth Circuit’s response to that contention as recounted in Mason:
    There is no support in Fourth Amendment jurisprudence for the notion
    that questioning unrelated to the purpose of a traffic stop requires reasonable
    suspicion, provided that the questioning occurs within the timeframe
    reasonably necessary to effectuate the traffic stop. An officer’s questions or
    actions during the course of a traffic stop or any other legal detention need
    not be solely and exclusively focused on the purpose of that detention. In
    Arizona v. Johnson, 
    555 U.S. 323
    , 
    129 S. Ct. 781
    , 788, 
    172 L. Ed. 2d 694
           (2009), a unanimous Supreme Court noted just that:
    A lawful roadside stop begins when a vehicle is pulled over for
    investigation of a traffic violation. The temporary seizure of
    driver and passengers ordinarily continues, and remains
    reasonable, for the duration of the stop . . . . An officer’s
    inquiries into matters unrelated to the justification for the
    traffic stop, this Court has made plain, do not convert the
    encounter into something other than a lawful seizure, so long
    as those inquiries do not measurably extend the duration of the
    stop.
    15
    - Reported Opinion 
    - 628 F.3d at 131
    (internal citations omitted). Here, the unrelated questions posed by the
    officers to appellant did not measurably extend the duration of the traffic stop. Indeed,
    those questions were asked within minutes of the stop, clearly before any traffic citation
    could be written or record check completed. It is this fact that distinguishes this case from
    Charity where we held that inconsistent stories provided by the defendant and his passenger
    “were all post-Whren 
    phenomena.” 132 Md. App. at 631
    .3
    In summary, we hold that, under the totality of the circumstances, the trial court
    correctly ruled that the police had reasonable articulable suspicion that drug activity was
    afoot. Hence, appellant was properly detained while the officers further investigated their
    suspicions.
    2.     The Duration of the Stop
    The final issue – the duration of the detention – requires little discussion. The
    constitutional duration of a Terry-stop varies dramatically from that of a traffic stop
    generally, including Whren-inspired stops. 
    Carter, 143 Md. App. at 692
    . Under Ferris,
    once the purpose of the traffic stop is fulfilled, further detention is not permitted. 
    Ferris, 335 Md. at 372
    . With Terry-stops, the inquiry is whether the police “diligently pursued a
    means of investigation that was likely to confirm or dispel their suspicions quickly.”
    United States v. Sharpe, 
    470 U.S. 675
    , 686 (1985). “The permitted duration of a Terry-
    3
    Appellant also cites Whitehead v. State, 
    116 Md. App. 497
    (1997) for the proposition that
    the officers unnecessarily prolonged the traffic stop. We note that Whitehead focuses on a
    lack of probable cause; there is minimal Terry analysis.
    16
    - Reported Opinion -
    stop cannot be measured by the clock alone.” 
    Carter, 143 Md. App. at 692
    . Where
    reasonable suspicion quickly appears after a Whren traffic stop as in the present case, the
    rules pertaining to Terry-stops take over. The inquiry shifts to whether the police pursued
    their investigation from that point in a diligent and reasonable manner.
    Applying that standard to this case, the answer is clear. Armed with reasonable
    suspicion minutes after the traffic stop, Sergeant Rakowski and Detective Johnson went to
    the McDonald’s to locate Ms. Fitch. With the assistance of the restaurant manager they
    quickly found her. Ms. Fitch confirmed that she had purchased heroin from appellant.
    Sergeant Rakowski then radioed Detective Herr, who was at the scene of the traffic stop,
    to advise Detective Herr about Ms. Fitch’s admission. Sergeant Rakowski estimated that
    he made this radio call within six minutes of leaving the traffic stop. Specifically, Sergeant
    Rakowski testified that he made the call for a marked police car at 1:01 or 1:02 p.m. while
    still at the McDonald’s after talking to Ms. Fitch. Given that the traffic stop occurred at
    12:47 p.m. and Sergeant’s Rakowski made his call for a patrol car at 1:02 p.m., at the latest,
    it is clear that the officers had confirmed their suspicions within fifteen minutes. We
    conclude that the officers here pursued their on-going Terry investigation in a diligent and
    reasonable manner.4
    4
    It is arguable that probable cause to arrest ripened within the constitutionally permissible
    time frame articulated in Ferris. Detective Bridges testified he received Sergeant
    Rakowski’s radio call about Ms. Fitch’s admission of a drug deal before Detective Bridges
    learned the status of appellant’s warrants. The trial court did not make any finding of fact
    on this issue and did not deny the motion to suppress on this basis. We find it unnecessary
    to resolve this question. Viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to the State,
    17
    - Reported Opinion -
    Finding no constitutional infirmity, we affirm the trial court’s denial of appellant’s
    motion to suppress.
    JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
    FOR BALTIMORE COUNTY AFFIRMED.
    APPELLANT TO PAY COSTS.
    however, it would appear that the Ferris clock had not expired prior to the ripening of
    probable cause to arrest.
    18