People of Michigan v. Dustin Ross Anderson

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 23, 2025
Docket369614
StatusPublished

This text of People of Michigan v. Dustin Ross Anderson (People of Michigan v. Dustin Ross Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People of Michigan v. Dustin Ross Anderson, (Mich. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, FOR PUBLICATION December 23, 2025 Plaintiff-Appellant, 9:10 AM

v No. 369614 Livingston Circuit Court DUSTIN ROSS ANDERSON, LC No. 2023-000336-AR

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: YATES, P.J., and BOONSTRA and YOUNG, JJ.

YOUNG, J, (dissenting).

I dissent because I would instead hold, as the circuit court likewise held, that this traffic stop was based on a hunch that Dustin Ross Anderson was under the influence of alcohol while operating his vehicle. As the majority acknowledges, a hunch is insufficient to rise to the level of reasonable suspicion. People v Pagano, 507 Mich 26, 32; 967 NW2d 590 (2021).

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On the evening of April 6, 2023, Officer Raymond Prater responded to a call regarding a “drunk person who had gotten injured.” Prater and another officer reported to the home-in- question where they saw Anderson; Anderson’s father was the injured individual. Anderson spoke to police at the home and “appear[ed] intoxicated.” Anderson “admitted to [Prater] and [his] partner that he and his friend and his father had been drinking,” and Prater observed Anderson “had some bloodshot, watery eyes, and a strong smell of intoxicants on his breath.” Prater believed Anderson to be unable to safely operate a motor vehicle at the time he interacted with him at the house.

-1- “Forty-five minutes to an hour later,”1 Prater “observed a vehicle traveling through the village.” He checked the plate on the vehicle and it was registered to Anderson. 2 Shortly thereafter, Prater conducted a traffic stop of the vehicle. Prater testified that the reason for pulling the vehicle over was three-fold: “the plate returned . . . to Mr. Anderson who we had previous contact with and showed signs of being intoxicated . . . the route he took through the village . . . and also, it appeared that he made an abrupt right-hand turn when he saw [a marked police vehicle].”

Prater later explained that what concerned him about the route through the village was the “backtracking” involved or, in other words, the route taken by the vehicle and not the operation of the vehicle. The district court found that over the course of the mile and a half the police trailed Anderson, no traffic violations were observed: “typically, we’re going to hear about swerving over the lines or speed changes, things going back and forth, but at least weaving within side the lines or going over the fog line or the center line. None of that is present.”

At the evidentiary hearing in the district court, the prosecutor played dash cam footage that Prater confirmed was “a fair and accurate representation of how the traffic stop went down[,]” including the preceding “abrupt turn.” I will do my best to describe that footage. Prater is driving down a road where the speed limit is 25 miles per hour. The video equipment does not provide the speed at which the police car is driving, but Prater did not testify as to any speeding by Anderson. From the video alone, judging by the objects that the police vehicle is passing, neither the police car nor the vehicle it is pursuing appear to be operating at a high speed. The turn Prater described as “an abrupt right turn” features Anderson putting on his signal in advance of making the (legal) right turn, activating his brake lights, and the vehicle slowing to a near-stop before completing the turn onto a two-way side street without incident (i.e. without veering into another lane, approaching a vehicle, driving on the grass, etc.).

In other words, there was nothing clearly erroneous about the district court’s factual conclusions from the video: that it saw “the turn signal go on” and did not observe “a fishtail or anything of that nature.” The district court concluded, “I just don’t find the abrupt right turn reasonable under these circumstances, so case is dismissed.”

In a de novo review on appeal, the circuit court reached the same conclusion:

From this Court’s own de novo review of the record below, without giving any deference to the lower tribunal, it is readily apparent that the stop performed by

1 The district court may have incorrectly found facts related to how much earlier Prater observed Anderson: “thinking the Defendant may have been intoxicated an hour prior to—or whatever, it was roughly an hour to an hour and a half . . . .” While it seems the district court’s focus was largely on the one hour, there is no record support for the hour-and-a-half conclusion. Prater’s testimony was, as quoted above, 45 minutes to one hour later. I agree with the circuit court regarding this error: “[it] is a minor distinction, and does not impact that ultimate outcome of this case.” 2 I pause here to acknowledge footnote 3 in the majority opinion, with which I agree.

-2- Officer Prater was not supported by reasonable suspicion. An hour before the stop, the Officer saw Defendant appear to be intoxicated, but did not follow up on it. The Officer even admitted on cross-examination that he was unaware of Defendant’s level of intoxication when he was at his father’s house around 10:39 p.m. Approximately forty-five to sixty minutes later, the Officer observed a vehicle that was registered to defendant in front of him, and so he followed it . . . . There is no evidence in the record of any civil infractions committed by defendant. No swerving, crossing the centerline, inappropriate lane changes, or the like. The Officer stopped the vehicle for making a turn, after appropriately using its signal, and after the vehicle drove a circuitous route around town. Those are not suspicious circumstances that support a reasonable and articulable basis to believe criminal activity was being committed. It is obvious from Officer Prater’s testimony and the testimony of Defendant that the Officer observed Defendant to be drunk at his father’s house, so the officer waited for Defendant, and followed him, looking for an excuse to pull him over. The officer had a hunch that defendant was still intoxicated when he was driving but Michigan [caselaw] is clear that a hunch is not a sufficient basis for a stop.

Reviewing the totality of the circumstances, I agree with both lower courts.

II. ANALYSIS

The majority faults both the district court and the circuit court for largely, if not entirely, ignoring the earlier-in-the-night interaction between Prater and Anderson. The majority states that Anderson’s “telltale signs of intoxication” an hour previous were “more than an inchoate or unparticularized suspicion or hunch.” Because neither the turn, which was not abrupt, nor the 1.5 miles of driving in accordance with the law amounts to reasonable suspicion to conduct a traffic stop,3 under the majority’s conclusion, then, observing someone driving who has admitted to consuming alcohol approximately an hour before amounts to reasonable suspicion that an individual is driving while intoxicated. I disagree.

A. THE MAJORITY DOES NOT CONTEMPLATE WHETHER THE BEHAVIORAL OBSERVATIONS COULD BE STALE UNDER THE CIRCUMSTANCES

A close-in-time observation is part of what makes a suspicion reasonable because, after all, it is a suspicion that “crime is afoot.” People v Champion, 452 Mich 92, 98; 549 NW2d 849 (1996) (emphasis added). Consider a case relied on by the majority, People v Rizzo, 243 Mich App 151; 622 NW2d 319 (2000). In Rizzo, a traffic stop was conducted on the basis of a damaged rear light; all parties conceded the stop on this basis was proper. Upon approaching the driver, the officer detected a “strong odor of intoxicants.” Id. at 153.

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Related

United States v. Scott Payne
181 F.3d 781 (Sixth Circuit, 1999)
People v. Rizzo
622 N.W.2d 319 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 2000)
People v. Galloway
675 N.W.2d 883 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 2004)
People v. Champion
549 N.W.2d 849 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1996)
Prado Navarette v. California
134 S. Ct. 1683 (Supreme Court, 2014)
State v. Barlow
543 S.W.3d 102 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2018)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
People of Michigan v. Dustin Ross Anderson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-of-michigan-v-dustin-ross-anderson-michctapp-2025.