OPINION
COCHRAN, J.,
delivered the opinion of the Court
in which MEYERS, WOMACK, KEASLER, HERVEY and HOLCOMB, JJ., joined.
A tow-truck driver made a citizen’s arrest of appellant for DWI after pursuing him through busy Houston streets late one night. Appellant was then charged with DWI and unlawfully carrying a weapon. He filed a motion to suppress under Article 38.23, the Texas exclusionary statute,1 and claimed that evidence obtained as a result of this citizen’s arrest should have been excluded because the tow-truck driver violated traffic laws when he pursued appellant. After the trial court denied the motion to suppress, appellant pleaded guilty and appealed the trial court’s suppression ruling. The court of appeals affirmed the trial court’s ruling. It concluded that laws regulating the flow of traffic do not fall within the category of “laws” implicated by Article 38.23 because those laws do not exist to regulate the acquisition of evidence to be used in a criminal [30]*30case.2 We granted review,3 and we affirm the court of appeals.
I.
The evidence showed that Edward James, a limousine driver, was stopped at the corner of Westheimer and Loop 610 at 1:45 a.m., waiting for the light to change. Suddenly a purple Corvette ran into the car behind Mr. James, veered toward the curb, and finally “jagged” back to the left hitting the limousine. The Corvette ended up underneath the rear bumper of Mr. James’s limousine. Appellant was driving the Corvette.
Mr. James and a couple of his clients, professional football players, got out of the limousine to inspect the damage. The football players said that appellant was drunk, and then they got back into the car. Mr. James asked appellant for his driver’s license and proof of insurance. He noticed that appellant had alcohol on his breath, his speech was “blurry,” his eyes were “wiggling” and red, his balance was unsteady, and “he was backing up and holding onto his car, propping himself up onto his car.” Mr. James concluded that appellant was drunk. Appellant and Mr. James exchanged driver’s license information, but appellant never gave Mr. James his insurance documentation. Mr. James asked him to wait until the police arrived, but after waiting for a while, appellant became very nervous. He said, “I’m going to have to go, I’ve got to go.” Appellant got into his car and backed it up, tearing out part of the limousine’s back bumper. Mr. James said that appellant ran the red light as he drove west down Westheimer at a high rate of speed.
Meanwhile, several tow-truck drivers had arrived at the accident scene. Joseph Moore was one of them. He noticed that the damage to the three cars wasn’t too bad; they could all still be driven. He thought that the parties could resolve the accident without the need for police assistance. But there was a problem because appellant did not have the required insurance information. Appellant “was reluctant to cooperate and he seemed agitated at the fact that the limo driver wanted him to stay until the police arrived!.] [H]e wanted to leave and he seemed really testy about the limo driver pressing him for the information that he needed.” Appellant appeared to be under the influence of something. “His speech was slurred. He was fumbling. He was agitated- He didn’t seem coordinated.” Mr. Moore did not think it was safe for appellant to leave the scene, so he “made the decision based on public safety and his mannerisms that something needed to be done in an effort to try to stop him from harming anyone else or himself.” Mr. Moore was especially concerned because he didn’t think that appellant “ever looked to find out if any other traffic was coming” when he left the accident scene.
Mr. Moore and about five other wrecker drivers followed appellant in their trucks because they were “really uncomfortable with the fact that he was driving and at that time of night there was a lot of people on the road and [they] felt like he was a danger to himself and other people.” They tried to stop him near the corner of Post Oak and Westheimer, but appellant put his Corvette into reverse, backed up, drove partially up on the curb and went [31]*31around them. He then “whipped” into a parking lot and crossed it at 30 to 40 miles an hour, came back out onto the road, “never hit[ ] his brakes, almost sideswipe[d] a car and proceed[ed] westbound on Westheimer.”
Mr. Moore followed as appellant took two left turns and went the wrong way-down West Alabama into oncoming traffic. His driving was “[v]ery dangerous,” so Mr. Moore followed with his “overhead lights on to alert people that we are coming the wrong way.” Mr. Moore knew that he was taking a chance going down a one-way street, but “[m]y motive is public safety.” Then appellant drove west in the eastbound lanes head-on into heavy traffic on Westheimer, so Mr. Moore crossed over the median and followed, going the right way. Appellant “whip[ped]” into a bar parking lot going “maybe 50 m.p.h.” Mr. Moore followed, along with other wrecker drivers who had caught up. They “corralled” appellant in the parking lot. Mr. Moore got out and went up to appellant’s Corvette, asked him to put the car in park and give up the keys. When appellant told him “to ‘F’ off,” Mr. Moore reached in to take the keys “at which point I felt a cold object to the right temple of my head.” It was a handgun. Mr. Moore slid down beside appellant’s car and sidled to the rear of the car until the police arrived two or three minutes later.
At the motion to suppress hearing, the trial judge asked appellant to specify his legal issue,4 and defense counsel stated,
The sole argument ... is whether the citizen who placed Mr. Miles under arrest had probable cause to do so, number one. Whether it violated a law in order to arrest Mr. Miles. Number three, whether a citizen has a right to pursue a person if the citizen believes that that person committed a breach of the peace.
After the trial judge denied the motion, appellant pled guilty and appealed those legal issues.
The court of appeals determined that Mr. Moore did make a citizen’s arrest, but that the trial judge did not abuse his discretion in concluding that Mr. Moore had probable cause to arrest appellant for driving while intoxicated.5 Finally, the court of appeals disagreed with appellant’s assertion that Article 38.23 compelled the exclusion of any evidence resulting from appellant’s arrest because Mr. Moore violated various traffic laws in effecting the arrest. It noted that a violation of law does not always invoke the provisions of Article 38.23 because the primary purpose of that statute “is to deter unlawful actions that violate the rights of criminal suspects.” 6 Thus, the “ Taw which is violated in obtaining evidence must exist for the purpose of regulating the acquisition of evidence to be used in a criminal case.’ ”7 Noting that the laws regulating the flow of traffic do not fall into that category, the court then held that Mr. Moore’s actions, though perhaps dangerous, did not implicate Article 38.23.8
[32]*32II.
Article 38.23(a), the Texas exclusionary statute, states,
No evidence obtained by an officer or other person in violation of any provisions of the Constitution or laws of the State of Texas, or of the Constitution or laws of the United States of America, shall be admitted in evidence against the accused on the trial of any criminal case.9
In this case, we must address two specific portions of Article 38.23:(1) whether an “other person” may make a citizen’s arrest for the misdemeanor offense of DWI, and (2) whether the statute bars evidence obtained by an “other person” if that person violates traffic “laws of the State of Texas” in the process of making a citizen’s arrest.
The plain language of Article 38.23, like that of the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution, appears to be relatively straightforward. But, like the Fourth Amendment, its meaning and application are not always so simple. Scores of Supreme Court decisions have explained the' contours of constitutional search-and-seizure law and the exclusionary rule that enforces its prohibitions. Thousands of federal and state cases have done the same. A six-volume treatise on the Fourth Amendment expands each year as courts and commentators continue to construe the purportedly plain-language meaning of this short constitutional provision.10 Although the Texas exclusionary statute has not received anywhere near the judicial or academic attention that the Fourth Amendment has attracted, it, too, is considerably more complex in application than its simple words suggest.11
In many respects, the Texas exclusionary rule mirrors the federal one. But Article 38.23(a), unlike the Fourth Amendment, applies to certain actions by private individuals as well as those by government officers. To understand which actions and [33]*33why, we examine the historical context in which Article 38.23 was enacted.
A. The History of the Texas Exclusionary Statute.
In 1922, the Court of Criminal Appeals decided Welchek v. State.12 In that Prohibition-era case, a sheriff and “a number of other gentlemen” had “been waiting and looking for” the defendant to drive down the road. When they saw him approach, they stopped his car and seized three one-gallon jugs of whiskey from it even though they did not have a warrant.13 This confiscation was, according to the Court, a common scenario and the “question of search and seizure is now being raised in nearly all liquor cases tried in this State[.]”14 The Court rejected the argument that the search-and-seizure provision of the Texas Constitution contained an implicit exclusionary rule.15 It specifically rejected the reasoning of those United States Supreme Court cases that had imposed an exclusionary rule on federal courts under the Fourth Amendment.16 The Court rested its decision both on its reasoning that the Texas Constitution did not expressly or implicitly contain any such exclusionary rule and on its view of sound public policy.17
The Texas Legislature obviously disagreed with this Court’s reasoning in Wel-chek. In “an ambitious effort to undo Welchek,”18 the 1925 Legislature enacted Senate Bill 115, which stated, “No evidence obtained by an officer or other person in violation of any provision of the Constitution or laws of the State of Texas, or of the United States of America, shall be admitted in evidence against the accused on the trial of any criminal case.”19 Senate Bill 115 was codified as Article [34]*34727a of the 1925 Code of Criminal Procedure, and, between 1926 and 1928, this Court reversed at least thirty-four convictions based upon the new statutory exclusionary rule.20 Thirty-two of those cases were prohibition liquor cases.21
In applying this exclusionary rule, we stated that “[t]he manifest purpose” of Article 727a “was to reverse the rule applied by this court in the Welchek case[.]”22 The Legislature thus “sanctioned the construction by the Federal courts of the search-and-seizure clause of the [federal] Constitution.”23 But if the legislative purpose of Article 727a was to enact a Texas exclusionary rule just like the federal rule, why did the statute bar evidence illegally obtained by any “other person” as well as by law enforcement officers? Surely the 1925 Legislature knew that, in 1921, the Supreme Court had explicitly held that the federal exclusionary rule applied only to government actors, not private individuals.24
The Texas Legislature enacted an exclusionary rule broader than its federal counterpart 25 precisely because of the Welchek scenario and the “widespread problem of vigilante-type private citizens [acting] in concert with the police conducting illegal [35]*35searches for whiskey.”26 Long before national Prohibition laws were enacted, Texas had created its own local-option liquor and prohibition laws.27 Enforcement of these local-option laws led to the formation of various citizen groups, including the “Law and Order League,” whose members pledged to aid officers to enforce the laws, especially local-option laws, and to “ ‘clean up’ their town and county of crime[.]”28 Presumably, the Legislature foresaw that, if the exclusionary rule applied only to government officials or their agents, these “Law and Order League” members might well continue their illegal seareh-and-sei-zure operations without the participation or supervision of police officers.29 Then these vigilante members would hand over the illegally seized evidence, on a “silver platter,” to government officers for use in criminal trials.30 To avoid the prospect of implicitly encouraging or condoning vigilante action by these citizen groups, the Legislature applied its statutory exclusionary rule to both law-enforcement officers and private persons.31
As Presiding Judge McCormick noted in his dissent in State v. Johnson, “Deterrence of police illegality is the ‘core’ rationale for applying the federal exclusionary rule,” but that rationale has considerably less force when “private persons acting in a purely private capacity illegally obtain evidence.”32 Presumably, the 1925 [36]*36Legislature believed that this deterrence rationale operated with considerably greater force during the era of the “Law and Order Leagues.” Until the Legislature itself decides that the type of vigilante action prevalent during the early Prohibition era is no longer a threat to the privacy interests of Texas citizens, we are bound to follow both the plain language and the manifest legislative intent of the original Article 727a (recodified almost verbatim as Article 38.23(a)). The Texas exclusionary rule applies to illegal searches or seizures conducted by law enforcement officers or “other persons,” even when those other persons are not acting in conjunction with, or at the request of, government officials.
Thus, the plain language and history of Article 38.23 lead to an inescapable conclusion: if an officer violates a person’s privacy rights by his illegal conduct mating the fruits of his search or seizure inadmissible in a criminal proceeding under Article 38.23,33 that same illegal conduct undertaken by an “other person” is also subject to the Texas exclusionary rule. If the police cannot search or seize, then neither can the private citizen. Conversely, if an officer may search or seize someone under the particular circumstances, then the private citizen’s equivalent conduct does not independently invoke the Texas exclusionary rule, and the evidence obtained by either the officer or the private person may be admissible.
B. Searches and Seizures Conducted by “Other Persons.”
Few Texas cases have discussed the types of searches and seizures conducted by private citizens that are illegal for purposes of the Texas exclusionary rule.34 In [37]*37Gillett v. State,35 this Court declined to address whether the search of a dressing room by a Foley’s Department Store security officer constituted an illegal search by a private person. Instead a majority of the Court held that the defendant did not have an objectively reasonable expectation of privacy in the dressing room because signs were posted saying that the dressing rooms were monitored.36 Thus, evidence obtained from such a search, whether undertaken by an officer or a private security guard, was not barred by the Texas exclusionary rule.
In Stone v. State,37 this Court stated that a babysitter, taking care of the defendant’s children, had permission to return to the defendant’s home to retrieve diapers and other baby supplies when she saw a stack of photographs on the bedroom dresser and looked through them.38 The photographs depicted the defendant and his wife having oral sex with a neighborhood child. The babysitter took the photographs to the apartment manager who then gave them to the police. This Court held that the babysitter did not commit theft when she took the pictures because she had no “intent to deprive” the owner of his property.39 Thus, she committed no illegal act in seizing the photographs and turning them over to the police.40 Although this Court did not mention it, an alternate rationale for its holding might be that if a law enforcement officer had been standing in the shoes of the babysitter who was legitimately in the bedroom, he could have seized these photographs if they were in plain view and clearly depicted sexual [38]*38assault of a child.41 Had the search and seizure been made by an officer, the fruits of a “plain view” seizure would not be excluded under Article 38.23(a). Thus, the fruits of the babysitter’s seizure would not be excluded under the rule.
Similarly, in Cobb v. State,42 this Court held that five knives that the defendant’s father took from the defendant’s apartment were not inadmissible under Article 38.23. The father was legitimately in the apartment at the request of the defendant’s live-in girlfriend to retrieve her car keys and he took the knives, not with the intent to steal them, but to give them to the police.43 The defendant’s father thought that the knives were connected to the capital murder investigation of his son.44 Thus, he did not take the knives with the “intent to deprive” the owner (his son and his son’s girlfriend) of them. In Cobb, as in Stone, the Court could have analyzed the issue according to the original rationale of Article 38.23.45 Had a police officer been requested to enter the defendant’s apartment to retrieve the car keys and had that officer seen the knives in plain view on the kitchen counter, he could have seized them if he immediately recognized them as incriminating evidence in the capital murder investigation.46 If the officer’s seizure under Article 38.23 would not be unlawful, then the citizen’s seizure would not be unlawful.
Conversely, in State v. Johnson,47 this Court held that evidence seized by the decedent’s sons who purportedly “burglarized” the funeral home jointly operated by the defendant and the decedent was inadmissible under Article 38.23. Neither they [39]*39nor police officers had permission to enter the funeral home. Thus, neither an officer nor the citizens were legitimately in the funeral home, and neither could make a warrantless seizure of those items. What the police could not do, the decedent’s sons could not do either.48 Similarly, in Jenschke v. State,49 we held that the parents of a child (who had said that the defendant sexually assaulted her) acted illegally when they broke into the defendant’s truck and took a used condom from inside it without the intent to immediately turn it over to the police. An officer, standing in the parents’ shoes, could not have entered the defendant’s garage, found the key to the truck, unlocked it, and made a warrantless search of that truck without permission or other exigent circumstances. Thus, neither could the citizens.50
None of these cases was explained on this basis, but this rule — that a private person can do what a police officer standing in his shoes can legitimately do, but cannot do what a police officer cannot do— would explain the outcome in each case and is consistent with the purpose of Article 38.23.51 We conclude that the historical rationale for including unlawful conduct by an “other person” under the Texas exclusionary statute is best explained and implemented by this rule.
C. Texas Law Allows a Citizen’s Arrest for DWI.
Article 38.23 is not the only statute governing the conduct of citizens in the search-and-seizure arena. Under Texas law, neither officers nor citizens have an unfettered right to arrest a person. They may do so only under limited, statutorily-authorized, circumstances set out in Chapter 14 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. Article 14.01(a) provides:
A peace officer or any other person, may, without a warrant, arrest an offender when the offense is committed in his presence or within his view, if the offense is one classed as a felony or as an offense against the public peace.52
Article 14.01(b) provides that peace officers may arrest an offender without a warrant “for any offense committed in his presence or within his view.”53 Thus, a peace officer may arrest offenders for any [40]*40misdemeanor committed within his view as well as any such felony, while citizens may arrest only for a felony or a misdemeanor that is “an offense against the public peace.”54
Professor Dawson has noted, “In one sense, of course, all criminal violations are offenses against the public peace.”55 Such a broad interpretation of “public peace” would make Article 14.01(a) unnecessary. Under that broad interpretation, both officers and citizens would be able to arrest for any offense committed within their view or presence, but Article 14.01(b) explicitly limits such a right to peace officers. As Professor Dawson explains, Texas courts have developed two independent lines of cases interpreting what constitutes “offenses against the public peace” under Article 14.01(a).56 First, some cases have held that only those misdemeanor offenses listed in Title 9 of the 1925 Penal Code are “offenses against the public peace” under the citizen-arrest statute.57 Second, some cases have equated “offense against the public peace” with “breach of the peace.”58 Under this second line of cases, a valid citizen’s arrest for a misdemeanor required “some showing of actual or threatened violence.”59 In Woods v. State,60 we quoted Corpus Juris which explained that the term “breach of the peace” included
all violations of the public peace or order, or decorum; ... a disturbance of the public tranquillity by any act or conduct inciting to violence or tending to provoke or excite others to break the peace; a disturbance of public order by an act of violence, or by any act likely to produce violence, or which, by causing consternation and alarm disturbs the peace and quiet of the community.... Actual or threatened violence is an essential element of a breach of the peace.61
We then concluded that whether a specific act constituted a breach of the peace depended upon the surrounding facts and circumstances in the particular case.62 In Woods, we held that the defendant did not have a right to arrest the deceased who had assaulted the defendant’s wife because the deceased had already completed the assault and had left the scene.63 “There was nothing to suggest that the breach of the peace might be renewed or continued or that appellant’s pursuit of deceased was to prevent a renewal of the offense.”64 Thus, in Woods, we reaffirmed our earlier rule of law:
[41]*41the right of a private individual to arrest without warrant for a breach of the peace, committed in his presence or view, is limited to the time the offense is committed or while there is continuing danger of its renewal, and does not include the right to pursue and arrest for the purpose of insuring the apprehension or future trial of the offender.65
We have also indicated that some crimes are, by their very nature, offenses against the public peace. These include public drunkenness66 and driving while intoxicated.67 But, as Judge Davidson noted in his dissent in McEathron v. State,68 this may be too broad a position.69 One can imagine a scenario in which a person, though intoxicated, poses no threat to the public peace at the time that an officer or private citizen makes a warrantless arrest.
The statutory authorization for both officers and citizens to arrest for an “offense against the public peace” codifies an “exigent circumstances” exception to the warrant requirement. This exception to the warrant requirement is like that set out in Article 18.16 which allows “any person”— officer or citizen — to make a warrantless arrest to prevent the consequences of theft — the escape of the thief and the disappearance of the property stolen.70 Similarly, under Article 14.04, an officer may make a warrantless arrest when he has “satisfactory proof’ to believe that a person has committed a felony offense and is [42]*42about to escape.71 In all of these statutes, the Legislature codified a preference for arrests under warrant. But it also recognized that under some circumstances there is no time to procure a warrant. These exigent circumstances require an immediate arrest and include 1) offenses committed in the presence or view of an officer or citizen that pose a continuing threat to the public peace,72 2) theft offenses in which the perpetrator may disappear along with the stolen property,73 and 3) escapes of felony offenders.74 One might even conclude that the statutory right to make a warrantless arrest under Article 14.03 when the offender is found in a “suspicious place” is yet another codification of the exigent circumstances exception to arrest under warrant.75
Based on the history and purpose of Article 14.01(a), as well as precedent, we reaffirm the reasoning in Woods and conclude that a citizen may make a warrant-less arrest of a person who commits a misdemeanor within the citizen’s presence or view if the evidence shows that the person’s conduct poses a threat of continuing violence or harm to himself or the public. It is the exigency of the situation, not the title of the offense, that gives both officer and citizen statutory authorization to protect the public from an ongoing threat of violence, harm, or danger by making a warrantless arrest.
With this general framework of Article 38.23(a) in mind, we turn to the circumstances in this particular case.
III.
Appellant claims that (1) Mr. Moore lacked any legal authority to arrest appellant; and (2) even if he did have authority to arrest appellant, the evidence obtained as a result of that arrest was inadmissible because Mr. Moore violated traffic laws in the process of effecting that arrest.
A. Mr. Moore had authority to arrest appellant under Article 14.01(a).
Appellant acknowledges that this Court has previously held that driving while intoxicated is a breach of the peace,76 but he claims that Romo confused “breaches of the peace” with “offenses against the public peace.” This is a semantic difference without a legal distinction under Article 14.01(a). The relevant legal issue is whether (1) Mr. Moore had probable cause to believe that appellant was driving while intoxicated in his view, and (2) the evidence showed that appellant’s commission of this offense, if not stopped, posed an ongoing threat of violence or harm to appellant or others.77
[43]*43In this case, the evidence shows that Mr. Moore clearly had probable cause to believe that appellant was driving while intoxicated on “something” when he left the scene of the accident. Mr. Moore was not alone in forming the opinion that appellant was intoxicated, and Mr. Moore was not alone in seeing that appellant left the scene at a high rate of speed. According to one witness, he ran a red light while leaving the scene. Such driving, especially while intoxicated, posed a danger to pedestrians and other drivers on the road. Indeed, appellant had already caused a three-car accident, so Mr. Moore’s concern was well-founded. The evidence showed that there were numerous other cars traveling on Westheimer at this time of night. Mr. Moore testified that he pursued appellant “based on public safety” and because he thought “something needed to be done in an effort to stop him from harming anyone else or himself.” Appellant’s driving down Westheimer was “very dangerous.” He “whipped” in and out of a parking lot at high speeds, almost sideswiped another car, and turned down West Alabama, a one-way-street, going the wrong way into oncoming traffic. Then he drove the wrong way into heavy traffic on Westheimer. Appellant’s conduct indisputably posed a continuing danger to himself and others. This ongoing, potentially lethal conduct was, under any definition of the term, both a breach of the public peace and an offense against the public peace. Clearly, no one — neither citizen nor police officer — must obtain an arrest warrant before attempting to protect the public welfare from this type of reckless driving while intoxicated. These are precisely the type of exigent circumstances that the Texas Legislature envisioned when it explicitly authorized a citizen’s arrest for an offense against the public peace.78 Thus, [44]*44Mr. Moore was legally authorized to make a citizen’s arrest of appellant under Article 14.01(a).
B. Mr. Moore Did Not Violate Appellant’s Legitimate Privacy Rights While Making an Authorized Citizen’s Arrest.
Appellant claims that Mr. Moore violated a traffic law by following appellant down West Alabama, a one-way street, in the wrong direction and by driving “recklessly” in his attempt to stop appellant from driving recklessly while intoxicated. Appellant argues that, because Mr. Moore violated the same traffic laws that appellant was violating, his conduct was illegal and hence any evidence obtained as a result of Mr. Moore’s emulation of appellant’s driving was inadmissible under Article 38.23.
This is an argument that the United States Supreme Court recently rejected with regard to the pursuit of a reckless driver by police officers: “[W]e are loathe to lay down a rule requiring the police to allow fleeing suspects to get away whenever they drive so recklessly that they put other people’s lives in danger.”79 The Supreme Court pointed to the obvious perverse incentives of such a rule: a “fleeing motorist would know that escape is within his grasp, if only he accelerates to 90 miles an hour, crosses the double-yellow line a few times, and runs a few red lights.”80 Instead, the Court adopted “a more sensible rule: A police officer’s attempt to end a dangerous high-speed car chase that threatens the lives of innocent bystanders does not violate the Fourth Amendment, even if it places the fleeing motorist at risk of serious injury or death.”81
Appellant poses the issue as one involving a citizen’s violation of “a traffic law” for purposes of Article 38.23,82 but that misconceives the real issue. The issue is whether an officer or private citizen, engaged in an authorized pursuit of a fleeing suspect, may violate certain laws in order to follow or stop that suspect.83
[45]*45Appellant admits that a police officer would have been justified in violating traffic laws had an officer been attempting to arrest appellant.84 Thus, according to appellant, had Officer Obie been standing in Mr. Moore’s shoes, he would have been authorized to follow appellant the wrong way down a one-way street. But following the original rationale and purpose of Article 727a outlined above, if a peace officer may search or seize the defendant under the particular circumstances, the evidence obtained by a private citizen who does so is not barred by the Texas exclusionary statute.85
Of course, there might be situations in which the conduct of the police officer or citizen in making an arrest is constitutionally unreasonable under the circumstances.86 But in this case, Mr. Moore did not increase the risk to public safety and welfare by attempting to stop appellant in the manner that he did. Quite the contrary, the evidence shows that by following appellant down the one-way street with his overhead lights flashing, he warned the oncoming traffic of the danger appellant posed to other drivers.87
For purposes of Article 38.23(a), the issue is whether Mr. Moore was legally authorized to make a citizen’s arrest under these particular circumstances, and whether he effectuated that arrest in a reasonable manner — a manner that a peace officer, standing in the citizen’s shoes, could have legally done under the Fourth Amendment — and without significantly increasing the risk of danger and harm to the public welfare.88
[46]*46Granting the appropriate deference to the trial court’s determination of historical facts, we conclude, as did the court of appeals, that “the trial court did not abuse its discretion in finding that Moore possessed probable cause to arrest appellant for DWI ... [and] that Moore’s traffic violations did not implicate Article 38.23.”89 We therefore affirm the judgment of the court of appeals.
PRICE, J., filed a concurring opinion in which JOHNSON, J., joined.
KELLER, P.J., concurs.