IA: Officer’s inability to read a temporary LPN led to a stop without RS

An officer’s inability to read a temporary license plate that was otherwise in order led to a stop that was without reasonable suspicion. Defendant did nothing wrong. State v. Carmody, 2013 Iowa App. LEXIS 1145 (November 6, 2013):

Carmody’s vehicle was stopped for displaying a temporary registration card, because, as one officer explained at the suppression hearing: “[The Cadillac] didn’t have any license plates on it, and we couldn’t read the temporary tag.” He further stated: “At the car length distance from the suspect vehicle, we could see a temp tag” but “couldn’t make out the markings on it.” However, the officer admitted that was “not real unusual” and “happen[ed] regularly.” The officer did not claim he did not see the temporary registration card before initiating the stop, nor did he assert the card was irregular, altered, improperly displayed, or in violation of any applicable statute or regulation. The officer advanced no reason for his inability to read the card. The officer articulated no mistake of fact in stopping the car, and the officer stated no reasonable grounds to believe the vehicle was not properly registered. Consequently, the officer had no specific and articulable facts upon which to reasonably believe criminal activity was afoot.

The officers’ excuse for pulling Carmody over was merely that he could not make out the markings on the temporary tag, a regular occurrence in his experience. If the excuse made here, without more, met constitutional muster, officers would effectively have free reign to pull over any driver who is in full compliance with Iowa Code section 321.25. We conclude the excuse does not meet constitutional muster because our jurisprudence does not recognize an unbridled cart blanche authority on the part of officers to make random investigatory traffic stops.

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