What are the facts?
A 911 caller reported that a silver Ford F-150 pickup had run her off the road on California's Highway 1. The caller provided specific identifying information, including the truck's make, color, and license plate number, and the report was made shortly after the alleged incident. The 911 call was recorded and routed through the emergency system, which can capture and trace caller information, and making false emergency reports is a crime under California law. Acting on a broadcast of the tip, officers located a truck matching the description within minutes. They followed the truck for several minutes but did not independently observe erratic driving or a traffic violation. Nevertheless, they initiated a stop based on the tip that the driver had run another vehicle off the road, a circumstance consistent with impaired or reckless driving. Upon approaching the truck, an officer smelled marijuana. A search of the truck uncovered multiple bundles—approximately 30 pounds—of marijuana. The occupants, Lorenzo Prado Navarette and Jose Prado Navarette, were arrested and charged. They moved to suppress the evidence, arguing the stop violated the Fourth Amendment because it rested on an uncorroborated anonymous tip. The California courts upheld the stop, and the U.S. Supreme Court granted certiorari.
What is the legal issue?
Does the Fourth Amendment permit a traffic stop based solely on an anonymous 911 tip alleging dangerous driving, when officers corroborate only identifying details and observe no independent traffic violations before stopping the vehicle?
What rule applies?
Under Terry v. Ohio and its progeny, an officer may conduct a brief investigatory stop when there is reasonable suspicion—specific, articulable facts, viewed under the totality of the circumstances—that criminal activity may be afoot. Anonymous tips can supply reasonable suspicion if they exhibit sufficient indicia of reliability, including a basis of knowledge (e.g., eyewitness account), contemporaneity, detailed identifying information, and features that enhance verifiability and accountability (e.g., 911 systems that can record, locate, and trace callers, and legal penalties for false reporting). Officers need not personally observe criminal behavior if the reliable tip provides reasonable suspicion of an ongoing or imminent offense.
What did the court hold?
Yes. The anonymous 911 tip exhibited sufficient indicia of reliability to create reasonable suspicion that the driver was engaged in drunk or reckless driving, thereby justifying the traffic stop under the Fourth Amendment.
What is the reasoning?
The Court, in a 5–4 opinion by Justice Thomas, emphasized that reasonable suspicion is a "less demanding" standard than probable cause and turns on the totality of the circumstances. First, the caller claimed to be an eyewitness to the alleged traffic offense—being run off the road—which provided a solid basis of knowledge and reduced the risk of rumor or fabrication. Second, the caller made a contemporaneous report soon after the incident, lending credibility to the account because contemporaneity generally supports reliability. Third, the use of the 911 system materially enhanced reliability: 911 calls are recorded, can often be traced to particular phones or locations, and false emergency reports are criminalized, all of which provide disincentives to fabrication and means to hold callers accountable. Fourth, the reported conduct—running another vehicle off the road—is behavior strongly suggestive of impaired or extremely reckless driving, an ongoing and dangerous offense that justifies swift police intervention. The officers corroborated the vehicle's description, location, and direction of travel, which, combined with the reliability features of the tip, satisfied reasonable suspicion even though the officers did not personally observe erratic driving during surveillance. The Court distinguished Florida v. J.L., where an untraceable, bare-bones tip about a concealed gun lacked predictive information or indicia of reliability; by contrast, the 911 eyewitness report here, made shortly after the event and tied to a specific vehicle and plate number, furnished the requisite indicia. While the conduct could have had innocent explanations, reasonable suspicion tolerates a "substantial possibility" of criminal activity and does not demand officers rule out innocent conduct. Because the stop was lawful, the subsequent detection of marijuana odor and the ensuing search—supported by probable cause under the automobile exception—were not fruits of an unconstitutional seizure. Justice Scalia, joined by Justices Ginsburg, Sotomayor, and Kagan, dissented. The dissent argued the tip lacked traditional reliability markers (such as predictive details permitting independent police verification), the inference of drunk driving from a single incident was too attenuated, and reliance on the 911 system's traceability overstated its reliability enhancements. In the dissent's view, the stop violated the Fourth Amendment because the officers failed to corroborate illegal driving before seizing the vehicle.
Why is this case significant?
Navarette refines the jurisprudence on anonymous tips and reasonable suspicion by identifying circumstances in which a 911 report can justify a vehicle stop without independent observation of illegality. It underscores that contemporaneous, eyewitness 911 tips about dangerous, ongoing conduct—especially drunk or reckless driving—may suffice under Terry's totality test. For students, the case is a key comparative with Alabama v. White (anonymous tip plus predictive corroboration is sufficient) and Florida v. J.L. (bare anonymous tip is insufficient), illustrating how reliability can be established through different combinations of factors, including the emergency context and 911 system features. It also highlights the balance courts strike between preventing imminent harms and guarding against overreliance on anonymous accusations.
Did Navarette overrule Florida v. J.L. on anonymous tips?
No. Navarette distinguished J.L. Rather than abandoning J.L.'s skepticism toward bare, unverified anonymous tips, the Court found sufficient indicia of reliability here: an eyewitness, contemporaneous 911 report of dangerous driving, detailed vehicle identification, and 911 traceability with penalties for false reports. J.L. still controls when a tip lacks reliability markers and merely alleges concealed criminality without corroboration.
Must officers personally observe erratic driving before stopping a vehicle based on a tip?
No. Under Navarette, officers may rely on a sufficiently reliable 911 tip to form reasonable suspicion of ongoing dangerous driving without witnessing an independent traffic violation. The totality of the circumstances—not personal observation alone—governs the analysis.
What specific factors made the 911 tip reliable enough in Navarette?
The Court emphasized four: (1) the caller's claim of firsthand observation (being run off the road), (2) the contemporaneous nature of the report, (3) detailed description of a specific vehicle (make, color, license plate, direction), and (4) the 911 system's recording, traceability, and legal penalties for false reports, which deter fabrication and allow accountability.
How does Navarette affect DUI and reckless driving enforcement?
It authorizes officers to act swiftly on reliable 911 tips of dangerous driving, even without observing erratic behavior themselves, to prevent imminent harm. But it does not create a blanket rule: tips still must carry indicia of reliability, and courts will scrutinize factors like contemporaneity, detail, and the means of reporting.
What did the dissent find problematic about the majority's approach?
The dissent argued that the tip lacked predictive details enabling verification (as in Alabama v. White), that inferring intoxication from a single road incident was speculative, and that the 911 system does not guarantee reliability or identifiability. It warned that the majority's reasoning risks granting police broad power to stop vehicles based on uncorroborated accusations.
Was the subsequent search of the truck constitutional?
Yes, under the majority's analysis. Once the lawful stop occurred, the officer's detection of the odor of marijuana provided probable cause to search the vehicle under the automobile exception. Because the stop itself complied with the Fourth Amendment, the evidence was not subject to suppression as fruit of the poisonous tree.