Originally Posted by
Good Guy
DL, SSN, home address, etc., etc. All can be used to whittle the results down. I was almost denied a job because they said I had an active warrant out of Texas.
Now, back to the RS topic. RS is what a reasonable "officer" believes to be suspicious. Notice I say a reasonable "officer, not a reasonable "person". What an officer deems to be suspicious is based on each officers training and experience. So, RS can vary from situation to situation and officer to officer. I know you want a definitive answer to your question, but, like I said up thread, there is no black and white answer.
This is the definition I keep running across. Is it accurate?
Reasonable suspicion is a legal standard in United States law that a person has been, is, or is about to be engaged in criminal activity based on specific and articulable facts and inferences.