---
title: "Stop and Frisk"
type: Legal Term
source: https://casebriefly.com/legal-terms/stop-and-frisk
---

# Stop and Frisk

Stop and frisk, established in Terry v. Ohio (1968), permits a law enforcement officer to briefly detain a person (a Terry stop) based on reasonable suspicion that criminal activity is afoot, and to conduct a limited pat-down of the outer clothing (a Terry frisk) if the officer has reasonable suspicion that the person is armed and dangerous. Reasonable suspicion requires specific, articulable facts and rational inferences drawn from those facts -- it is more than a hunch but less than probable cause. The frisk is strictly limited to a pat-down for weapons; if an officer feels a non-weapon item whose contraband nature is immediately apparent, it may be seized under the plain feel doctrine (Minnesota v. Dickerson). The duration and scope of the stop must be reasonably related to the circumstances that justified the stop in the first place.

## Related Terms

- fourth-amendment-seizure
- warrant-exceptions
- plain-view-doctrine
- consent-search

## Related Cases

- arizona-v-gant

## Example

An officer observed a man pacing repeatedly in front of a jewelry store, peering inside, and conferring with two others, which provided reasonable suspicion to stop and frisk the men, leading to the discovery of concealed weapons.

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Source: [Stop and Frisk — CaseBriefly](https://casebriefly.com/legal-terms/stop-and-frisk)
