OPINION
COCHRAN, J.,
delivered the opinion of the Court
in which MEYERS, PRICE, WOMACK, JOHNSON and HOLCOMB, JJ., joined.
In this case, we examine the distinction between a citizen-police “encounter” and a citizen-police “detention.” A “detention” implicates the Fourth Amendment’s search and seizure restrictions and requires articulable suspicion to support even a temporary seizure, while an “encounter” is not subject to any Fourth Amendment requirements or restrictions.1 We conclude that, under the totality of the circumstances test set out in Florida v. Bostick,2 the trial judge did not err in finding that the officer’s conduct in this case resulted in a Fourth Amendment detention. We therefore reverse the judgment of the court of appeals, which had held that the trial court improperly granted appellee’s motion to suppress.3
I.
Appellee was charged with the misdemeanor offenses of possession of marijuana and carrying a weapon. At the hearing on the motion to suppress, the State and appellee agreed that the only issue to be litigated was whether the facts supported the finding of a Fourth Amendment detention or a consensual citizen-police encounter.4
Officer Okland testified that he had been with the Conroe Police Department for [239]*239eighteen months. He was on routine patrol in the 300 block of South Pacific at about 4:00 a.m. on December 26th, when he saw a green Ford truck parked at the end of the block.5 Officer Okland stated that the 300 block of South Pacific is a dead-end street, with two houses on the right, railroad tracks on the left, and high grass and woods at the end of the street.6 Officer Okland testified that this was a “high-crime” area for drugs and prostitution,7 but when he was shown a written police call sheet, he did not dispute that there had been only two drug arrests in the prior six months and no prostitution arrests in that area.8 The officer saw that the truck’s dome light was on and two people were inside the truck. He decided to investigate.
Officer Okland turned on his patrol car spotlight “to make sure that they weren’t doing harm to me.” He was “letting them know it was a police officer behind them.” But then he said, “If I had wanted them to know it was a police officer I would have turned my overhead lights on, to indicate I was detaining them. But I just wanted to see what they were doing in there.” He was still driving up behind the truck at the time he put on his spotlight. Officer Ok-land parked his patrol car about ten feet behind the truck and to its left, and he turned on his dashboard-mounted camera to record the investigation. He then saw movement on the driver’s side area of the truck.9 He got out of his patrol car and began advancing toward the truck, holding a long flashlight in both hands at shoulder level as he walked forward. When Officer [240]*240Okland played his flashlight across the driver’s side of the truck, appellee got out of that side and met the officer in the middle of the road.
The trial judge questioned Officer Ok-land further: “[A]nd you got your spotlight on and you want me to believe that with a spotlight on, they could drive away?” Officer Okland said, “Yes,” although he agreed that he had “[n]ever had anybody who has had his spotlight turned on them drive away.” The trial judge continued to question the officer about the location of his patrol car which appeared to block appellee’s truck at the end of the street:
Court: They were stopped. You just came up upon them.
Officer: They would have to back up and I would have to move for them to—
Court: Then you had them blocked in where they couldn’t move?
Officer: They could have backed up.
Court: They could have backed up?
Officer: I would have moved. I wouldn’t have let them hit me.
Court: Oh, could they have backed up and gotten out of the parked area they were in with you not having to move your vehicle?
Officer: No sir.
Court: So you were so close to them that they couldn’t do anything but stay there, is that right?
Officer: Well, I was a good ten — or about a car length away from their vehicle when I stopped.
Officer Okland then suggested that ap-pellee could have backed up and driven on the wrong side of the roadway and around his patrol car, but the video indicates that the officer’s car was parked well to the left side of the road.10 The trial judge asked a final question:
Court: And what we have here is, you’re telling me that if this person would have simply backed up, even though your overhead or your spotlight was on, or whatever was on, and you’re pulled up within ten feet of this other vehicle, they were free to leave? That’s what you want me to believe?
Officer: Yes, sir.
Mr. Garcia-Cantu, appellee, also testified. He said that he saw Officer Okland pulling up behind him, but he couldn’t see anything more except a big spotlight, “a big white light.” The officer didn’t tell him that he could leave, and he didn’t believe that he was free to leave. Mr. Garcia-Cantu said that he lives about two blocks away, on the other side of the railroad tracks, and this is his neighborhood. He has friends who live on that block, and he was just waiting for his friend who was inside the house.11
After hearing all of the testimony, the trial judge granted Mr. Garcia-Cantu’s motion to suppress without making explicit factual findings, and the State appealed that ruling.
The court of appeals stated that “the record reveals the trial court required that Okland articulate a reasonable suspicion of criminal activity to justify his approach to Garcia-Cantu’s truck and that Okland’s use of the spotlight was sufficient to amount to a detention.”12 The court of [241]*241appeals noted that this Court has previously held that a police officer’s use of a spotlight was insufficient to amount to a Fourth Amendment detention.13 The court of appeals concluded,
We also find the trial court abused its discretion in determining under these circumstances that spotlighting Garcia-Cantu’s truck resulted in Garcia-Cantu’s detention.14
We granted appellee’s petition to determine, inter alia, whether Officer Okland’s actions constituted a detention requiring reasonable suspicion under Bostick’s “totality of the circumstances” test.
II.
A. Standard of Review
In reviewing a trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress, appellate courts must view all of the evidence in the light most favorable to the trial court’s ruling.15
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OPINION
COCHRAN, J.,
delivered the opinion of the Court
in which MEYERS, PRICE, WOMACK, JOHNSON and HOLCOMB, JJ., joined.
In this case, we examine the distinction between a citizen-police “encounter” and a citizen-police “detention.” A “detention” implicates the Fourth Amendment’s search and seizure restrictions and requires articulable suspicion to support even a temporary seizure, while an “encounter” is not subject to any Fourth Amendment requirements or restrictions.1 We conclude that, under the totality of the circumstances test set out in Florida v. Bostick,2 the trial judge did not err in finding that the officer’s conduct in this case resulted in a Fourth Amendment detention. We therefore reverse the judgment of the court of appeals, which had held that the trial court improperly granted appellee’s motion to suppress.3
I.
Appellee was charged with the misdemeanor offenses of possession of marijuana and carrying a weapon. At the hearing on the motion to suppress, the State and appellee agreed that the only issue to be litigated was whether the facts supported the finding of a Fourth Amendment detention or a consensual citizen-police encounter.4
Officer Okland testified that he had been with the Conroe Police Department for [239]*239eighteen months. He was on routine patrol in the 300 block of South Pacific at about 4:00 a.m. on December 26th, when he saw a green Ford truck parked at the end of the block.5 Officer Okland stated that the 300 block of South Pacific is a dead-end street, with two houses on the right, railroad tracks on the left, and high grass and woods at the end of the street.6 Officer Okland testified that this was a “high-crime” area for drugs and prostitution,7 but when he was shown a written police call sheet, he did not dispute that there had been only two drug arrests in the prior six months and no prostitution arrests in that area.8 The officer saw that the truck’s dome light was on and two people were inside the truck. He decided to investigate.
Officer Okland turned on his patrol car spotlight “to make sure that they weren’t doing harm to me.” He was “letting them know it was a police officer behind them.” But then he said, “If I had wanted them to know it was a police officer I would have turned my overhead lights on, to indicate I was detaining them. But I just wanted to see what they were doing in there.” He was still driving up behind the truck at the time he put on his spotlight. Officer Ok-land parked his patrol car about ten feet behind the truck and to its left, and he turned on his dashboard-mounted camera to record the investigation. He then saw movement on the driver’s side area of the truck.9 He got out of his patrol car and began advancing toward the truck, holding a long flashlight in both hands at shoulder level as he walked forward. When Officer [240]*240Okland played his flashlight across the driver’s side of the truck, appellee got out of that side and met the officer in the middle of the road.
The trial judge questioned Officer Ok-land further: “[A]nd you got your spotlight on and you want me to believe that with a spotlight on, they could drive away?” Officer Okland said, “Yes,” although he agreed that he had “[n]ever had anybody who has had his spotlight turned on them drive away.” The trial judge continued to question the officer about the location of his patrol car which appeared to block appellee’s truck at the end of the street:
Court: They were stopped. You just came up upon them.
Officer: They would have to back up and I would have to move for them to—
Court: Then you had them blocked in where they couldn’t move?
Officer: They could have backed up.
Court: They could have backed up?
Officer: I would have moved. I wouldn’t have let them hit me.
Court: Oh, could they have backed up and gotten out of the parked area they were in with you not having to move your vehicle?
Officer: No sir.
Court: So you were so close to them that they couldn’t do anything but stay there, is that right?
Officer: Well, I was a good ten — or about a car length away from their vehicle when I stopped.
Officer Okland then suggested that ap-pellee could have backed up and driven on the wrong side of the roadway and around his patrol car, but the video indicates that the officer’s car was parked well to the left side of the road.10 The trial judge asked a final question:
Court: And what we have here is, you’re telling me that if this person would have simply backed up, even though your overhead or your spotlight was on, or whatever was on, and you’re pulled up within ten feet of this other vehicle, they were free to leave? That’s what you want me to believe?
Officer: Yes, sir.
Mr. Garcia-Cantu, appellee, also testified. He said that he saw Officer Okland pulling up behind him, but he couldn’t see anything more except a big spotlight, “a big white light.” The officer didn’t tell him that he could leave, and he didn’t believe that he was free to leave. Mr. Garcia-Cantu said that he lives about two blocks away, on the other side of the railroad tracks, and this is his neighborhood. He has friends who live on that block, and he was just waiting for his friend who was inside the house.11
After hearing all of the testimony, the trial judge granted Mr. Garcia-Cantu’s motion to suppress without making explicit factual findings, and the State appealed that ruling.
The court of appeals stated that “the record reveals the trial court required that Okland articulate a reasonable suspicion of criminal activity to justify his approach to Garcia-Cantu’s truck and that Okland’s use of the spotlight was sufficient to amount to a detention.”12 The court of [241]*241appeals noted that this Court has previously held that a police officer’s use of a spotlight was insufficient to amount to a Fourth Amendment detention.13 The court of appeals concluded,
We also find the trial court abused its discretion in determining under these circumstances that spotlighting Garcia-Cantu’s truck resulted in Garcia-Cantu’s detention.14
We granted appellee’s petition to determine, inter alia, whether Officer Okland’s actions constituted a detention requiring reasonable suspicion under Bostick’s “totality of the circumstances” test.
II.
A. Standard of Review
In reviewing a trial court’s ruling on a motion to suppress, appellate courts must view all of the evidence in the light most favorable to the trial court’s ruling.15 When the trial court does not make explicit findings of fact, the appellate court infers the necessary factual findings that support the trial court’s ruling if the record evidence (viewed in the light most favorable to the ruling) supports these implied fact findings.16 Thus, we afford almost total deference to a trial judge’s determination of the historical facts that the record supports, especially when his implicit factfinding is based on an evaluation of credibility and demeanor.17 This same highly deferential standard applies regardless of whether the trial court has granted or denied a motion to suppress evidence.18 Thus, the party that prevailed in the trial court is afforded the strongest legitimate view of the evidence and all reasonable inferences that may be drawn from that evidence. But the question of whether a given set of historical facts amount to a consensual police-citizen encounter or a detention under the Fourth Amendment is subject to de novo review because that is an issue of law-the application of legal principles to a specific set of facts.19
[242]*242B. Citizen-Police Encounters and Fourth Amendment Detentions
As the Supreme Court has aptly-noted, “encounters between citizens and police officers are incredibly rich in diversity.” 20 They run the gamut from “wholly friendly exchanges of pleasantries” to “hostile confrontations of armed men, involving arrests, injuries, or loss of life.”21 Given this wide diversity of police-citizen interaction, not every encounter between the two is subject to Fourth Amendment scrutiny. It is only when an officer, “by means of physical force or show of authority, has in some way restrained the liberty of a citizen,” will courts conclude that a Fourth Amendment “seizure” has occurred.22 Such a seizure occurs when, “taking into account all of the circumstances surrounding the encounter, the police conduct would have ‘communicated to a reasonable person that he was not at liberty to ignore the police presence and go about his business.’ ”23
In Florida v. Bostick,24 the Supreme Court reiterated that an encounter between a police officer and a citizen “will not trigger Fourth Amendment scrutiny unless it loses its consensual nature.”25 In Bostick, the United States Supreme Court granted certiorari to determine whether the Florida Supreme Court’s per se rule that police officers who boarded buses at scheduled stops and questioned passengers without articulable reasons for doing so necessarily “seized” those passengers within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment.26 The Supreme Court rejected the lower court’s per se rule because it “rested its decision on a single fact — that the encounter took place on a bus — rather than on the totality of the circumstances.”27
Thus, Bostick mandates that
a court must consider all of the circumstances surrounding the encounter to determine whether the police conduct would have communicated to a reasonable person that the person was not free to decline the officers’ requests or otherwise terminate the encounter.28
While the “cramped confines” of a bus was certainly one relevant factor for the Florida courts to consider in evaluating whether a particular interaction between an officer and a citizen was a consensual encounter29 or a Fourth Amendment detention, that [243]*243single factor will not “be dispositive in every case.”30 The test is both objective and fact specific; “the ‘reasonable person’ test presupposes an innocent person.”31
Police officers are as free as any other citizen to knock on someone’s door and ask to talk with them, to approach citizens on the street or in their cars and to ask for information or their cooperation. Police officers may be as aggressive as the pushy Fuller-brush man at the front door, the insistent panhandler on the street, or the grimacing street-corner car-window squeegee man. All of these social interactions may involve embarrassment and inconvenience, but they do not involve official coercion. It is only when the police officer “engages in conduct which a reasonable man would view as threatening or offensive even if performed by another private citizen,” does such an encounter become a seizure.32 It is the display of official authority and the implication that this authority cannot be ignored, avoided, or terminated, that results in a Fourth Amendment seizure. At bottom, the issue is whether the surroundings and the words or actions of the officer and his associates communicate the message of “We Who Must Be Obeyed.”
As Professor LaFave has noted, this approach is useful when examining police contacts with citizens seated in parked cars.33
The mere approach and questioning of such persons does not constitute a seizure. The result is not otherwise when the officer utilizes some generally accepted means of gaining the attention of the vehicle occupant or encouraging him to eliminate any barrier to conversation. The officer may tap on the window and perhaps even open the door if the occupant is asleep. A request that the suspect open the door or roll down the window would seem equally permissible, but the same would not be true of an order that he do so. Likewise, the encounter becomes a seizure if the officer orders the suspect to “freeze” or to get out of the car. So too, other police action which one would not expect if the encounter was between two private citizens — boxing the car in, approaching it on all sides by many officers, pointing a gun at the suspect and ordering him to place his hands on the steering wheel, or use of flashing lights as a show of authority — will likely convert the event into a Fourth Amendment seizure.34
Each citizen-police encounter must be factually evaluated on its own terms; there are no per se rules.35 “The [244]*244test is necessarily imprecise, because it is designed to assess the coercive effect of police conduct, taken as a whole, rather than to focus on particular details of that conduct in isolation. Moreover, what constitutes a restraint on liberty prompting a person to conclude that he is not free to ‘leave’ will vary, not only with the particular police conduct at issue, but also with the setting in which the conduct occurs.”36 The officer’s conduct is the primary focus, but time, place, and attendant circumstances matter as well. “A court must step into the shoes of the defendant and determine from a common, objective perspective whether the defendant would have felt free to leave.”37
III.
With that general background, we turn to the present case. Here, the court of appeals relied upon one single fact and found it dispositive. It concluded that Officer Okland’s use of his spotlight did not effect a Fourth Amendment seizure.38 It quoted from an Idaho Supreme Court decision: “A rule that an officer’s use of a spotlight creates a per se detention would discourage office[r]s from using such lights when necessary for their safety or the safety of others.”39 Indeed, that is correct: Bostick stands for the proposition that per se rules generally do not determine whether any specific citizen-police encounter amounted to a Fourth Amendment detention. Instead, trial and appellate courts must view “the totality of the circumstances” of the encounter in the light most favorable to the trial judge’s implicit (or explicit) factual findings. The question of when an encounter between police officers and a person in a car constitutes a “seizure” depends on specific facts as to the manner of the encounter, the degree of authority displayed, and all other circumstances surrounding the incident. Just as with the determination of probable cause, a piecemeal or “divide and conquer” approach is prohibited.40
In this case, the totality of the circumstances, viewed in the light most favorable to the trial judge’s ruling, show:
1. Officer Okland decided to “investigate” the presence of appellee’s truck parked at the dead-end portion of the 300 block of South Pacific.41
[245]*245The video recording supports the trial judge’s implicit finding that Officer Okland used an authoritative, commanding voice and demeanor that brooked no disagreement into his official investigation. Although reasonable fact finders could disagree, we must give great deference to the trial judge’s assessment of the facts.
2. It was 4:00 a.m. on December 26th, Christmas night.42
8. Officer Okland turned on his patrol-car spotlight to light up appellee’s truck even before he stopped his car, and he activated his dashboard camera to record the encounter.43
[246]*2464. He parked his patrol car about ten feet behind and to the left of appel-lee’s truck. The testimony, photographs, and video recording all support the trial judge’s implicit factual finding that Officer Okland “boxed in” appellee’s parked truck, preventing him from voluntarily leaving.44
[247]*2475. Officer Okland got out of his patrol car, holding his large flashlight in [248]*248both hands at shoulder-level, and started to approach the driver’s side of appellee’s truck in a manner that could fairly be described as authoritative.45
6.Appellee then got out of his truck and started to walk toward Officer Okland, who immediately asked, “What are you doing here?”46
Although these words are not, by themselves, sufficient to convert an otherwise consensual encounter into a detention, much depends upon the tone and level of voice, as well as the questioner’s demeanor. The trial judge could have concluded that, based upon Officer Okland’s tone and demeanor on the witness stand, as well as his tone and demeanor as seen and heard on the video recording, that the officer’s questioning was more in the nature of an official command rather than a friendly or neutral inquiry.47
7. Officer Okland then played his flashlight across the female passenger’s side of the truck to track the passenger’s exit from the truck. She came around to where the officer and appel-lee were standing at the rear of the truck.
8. Officer Okland then played his flash-fight into and across appellee’s eyes as if he were looking for signs of intoxication. He did the same to appellee’s friend who came out of the house.
9. Officer Okland then asked appellee, “You got any I.D. on you?” Apparently appellee said that it was in the truck because Officer Okland immediately went back to the driver’s side [249]*249and looked inside the truck. He then came back to the rear of the truck and told appellee to go get his I.D. out of the truck. Appellee did so.
10. Appellee testified that he did not subjectively feel free to leave or terminate the encounter.
That fact is not particularly relevant because the test is whether a reasonable person in the citizen’s position would have felt free to leave.48 However, given the facts that Officer Ok-land initiated the incident by blocking appellee’s exit with his patrol car, turning on his spotlight, approaching appellee’s truck with a long flashlight playing over the driver’s side, immediately saying, “What are you doing here?”, using his flashlight to wave the passenger back to the rear of the truck, and, standing toe-to-toe with appellee, shining his flashlight into ap-pellee’s eyes, it is hard to conclude that any reasonable person would feel free to drive or walk away or to terminate the questioning.
Viewing the totality of these particular circumstances in the light most favorable to the trial court’s ruling, we hold that the trial court did not err in concluding that a reasonable person in appellee’s position would not have felt free to leave or terminate this encounter with Officer Okland.
The State argues that the evidence was “undisputed” in many respects in which file trial court obviously did find it disputed. For example, the State argues: “It is also undisputed that the location of Off. Okland’s patrol car approximately one car length behind Appellee’s truck did not prevent Appellee’s egress.”49 “[T]he incontrovertible evidence shows that Appellee was free to leave in his vehicle if he so chose.... Off. Okland testified only that Appellee could not back straight out of his parking place without hitting the patrol car.”50 The trial judge, however, was not required to believe this particular testimony, and his skeptical questioning of Officer Okland supports the inference that he did not. The State also argues that “the record unequivocally shows that Appellee had two other available means of driving away from the scene.”51 He could have turned around in a driveway that is partway down the street or he could have made a U-turn over the railroad right-of-way.52 Had the trial court ruled against appellee, we would have to defer to the trial judge’s implicit factual finding that these methods of egress were possibilities (although the photographs and videotape do not necessarily support them), but the trial court implicitly found that appellee was blocked in by Officer Okland and the patrol car, and that appellee could not move his car.
In sum, the State does not quarrel with the law or its application; it simply has a different view of the evidence and of the inferences to be drawn from that evidence. Had the trial court agreed with the State’s [250]*250view of the evidence and ruled against appellee because “the incontrovertible evidence show[ed] that Appellee was free to leave in his vehicle if he so chose,” we could uphold such a fact finding based upon the totality of the circumstances and the credibility of the witnesses.53
The court of appeals erred in focusing upon one single fact-Offieer Okland’s use of a spotlight-instead of the totality of the circumstances. We conclude that, viewed in the light most favorable to the trial judge’s ruling, the totality of the circumstances support his conclusion that appel-lee was detained by Officer Okland for purposes of the Fourth Amendment. We therefore reverse the judgment of the court of appeals, uphold the trial court’s suppression ruling, and remand the case for further proceedings in the trial court.
KELLER, P.J., filed a dissenting opinion in which KEASLER and HERVEY, JJ., joined.
KEASLER, J., filed a dissenting opinion in which KELLER, P.J., and HERVEY, J., joined.
KELLER, P.J., filed a dissenting opinion in which KEASLER and HERVEY, JJ., joined.
To understand this case, we must first understand the nature of the trial court’s ruling. Appellee’s complaint at trial was that Officer Okland’s approach of the vehicle constituted a “stop” without reasonable suspicion in violation of the Fourth Amendment:
At this point, Your Honor — well, we’re objecting to the stop, and the approaching vehicle, at least the objection made in this case. That’s all we need to argue about here today, if they had a valid reason for stopping and making their investigation and search that they conducted. Anything that happened after-wards is sort of irrelevant to our argument here.
When the State sought to introduce the video of the encounter, appellee reiterated the nature of his complaint as relating only to the very beginning: “No objection, just that all we need is the first frame, or — yeah, the first frame to show where the vehicle was parked, and I have no objection to that.” In sustaining a later objection at the hearing, the trial court confirmed that the suppression issue was limited to the initial contact between Officer Okland and appellee:
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Objection, your honor, to any testimony that followed the stop. What we’re questioning is the stop, and not anything that happened afterwards.
[THE COURT]: Yeah, that will be sustained.
The Court recites ten circumstances that it believes support the trial court’s ruling, but only one of those circumstances comes close to supporting a finding that the initial contact between Officer Okland and appellee constituted the onset of a detention for Fourth Amendment purposes. Officer Okland’s subjective decision to investigate, the time of day (very early morning), the use of a spotlight and a flashlight while it was dark outside,1 and [251]*251asking individuals what they were doing in a particular location do not support the existence of a detention. As any private citizen may do, a police officer may approach an individual at any time of the day and ask questions. While subsequent events can turn a consensual encounter into a detention, appellee specifically limited his complaint to the beginning of the encounter, so the officer’s subsequent requests for identification (which could possibly have been supported by reasonable suspicion arising after the initial contact) do not enter into the analysis. And while the Court recites appellee’s subjective perception that he was not free to leave, the Court concedes that this subjective perception “is not particularly relevant.”
The Court claims that the video recording supports an implicit finding that Officer Okland used “an authoritative, commanding voice and demeanor that brooked no disagreement into his official investigation.” 2 The first thirty seconds of the video is silent, and in the remainder of the video Officer Okland’s voice sounds simply like someone engaged in casual conversation. I disagree with the Court’s conclusion that the video supports a finding that the officer used an “authoritative, commanding voice and demeanor,” and without some support in the record, I do not think such a finding can be implied.
What remains is the fourth “implicit finding” recited by the Court: that Officer Okland had “boxed in” appellee’s parked truck. This factor would be significant if there had been any evidence that appellee wanted to drive away, but there was not. Appellee was parked when Officer Okland approached him and was waiting patiently for someone in the house nearby. Moreover, when Officer Okland approached, appellee voluntarily exited his vehicle. Under those circumstances, appellee was essentially a pedestrian, and he was “not clearly stopped in any sense, ab initio except of his own volition.”3 The cases cited by the Court for the proposition that “boxing in” a suspect’s car constitutes a detention are all distinguishable for one reason or another, and in any event, they are not binding authority.
With these comments, I respectfully dissent.