Following a jury-waived trial, the defendant was convicted of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute. G. L. c. 94C, § 32A(a). He appeals on the ground that the
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evidence against him, together with the inferences that could reasonably be drawn therefrom, was insufficient to permit the fact finder to infer the existence of the essential elements of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt.
Commonwealth
v.
Latimore,
On the basis of the Commonwealth’s evidence, the trial judge could have found the following. Pursuant to a search warrant, the Marlborough police knocked on a door of an apartment and identified themselves. They heard noises inside, but no one answered the door. Entering forcibly, they apprehended LaPerle, who was then endeavoring to leave through another door. They read to him both the search warrant and Miranda warnings. He then told the police that “what he had was on the table,” pointing to a covered vase found to contain a quantity of marihuana cigarette butts. The police arrested him and searched the apartment.
On top of a chest in the kitchen, the police found a mirror on the surface of which rested a short straw and razor blades. On that mirror was a perceptible “white residue” that a State laboratory subsequently identified as cocaine. On top of a chest there was a wooden box in which the police found two packages described as “cocaine wrapping papers” as well as a small vial and a miniature spoon. Upon the latter two items the State laboratory detected a residue of cocaine. In a hallway closet police came upon a box that contained two bottles of a substance identified as cutting powder (labeled “Superior Cut” and “Superior Sparkle Cut”) and a precision scale. The pan of that scale contained a residue that, on laboratory analysis, proved to be cocaine. The total weight of the residue found in the apartment was not determined. According to a State chemist, the amount was visible to the naked eye but probably was not susceptible to measurement on an instrument less sensitive than an analytical balance.
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1.
Possession.
From the following facts the judge could have inferred that LaPerle knowingly and intentionally possessed cocaine. The defendant was present in the apartment at the time police executed the search warrant. See
Commonwealth
v.
Rivera,
Proof of possession of a controlled substance may be established by circumstantial evidence, and the inferences that can be drawn therefrom.
Commonwealth
v.
Cohen,
2.
Knowledge.
When the police arrived, LaPerle attempted to flee. Some of the residue was visible on a mirror “right on top of’ a chest. Some residue was present on objects stored out of sight. Added to this was the presence of paraphernalia from which the judge could infer the use or distribution of cocaine: the vial, miniature spoon, short straw, razor blades, cutting powder, wrapping papers and precision scale. Knowledge “may be, and generally is, proved by circumstantial evidence; and it may be inferred from a great variety of circum
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stances.”
Commonwealth
v.
Altenhaus,
3.
Distribution.
The evidence of LaPerle’s intent to distribute cocaine consisted of the two bottles of cutting powder, the wrapping papers, and the scale, upon the pan of which there was a residue of cocaine. Intent is a factual matter that may be proved by circumstantial evidence.
Commonwealth
v.
Ellis,
On the basis of the evidence the trial judge commented that the “scale was kept not to measure out individual portions for personal use, something which could be done, ... by reasonable inference of an ordinarily intelligent and sagacious mind, by eye, but rather for sale, because the amount to be sold makes a difference.” The prosecution was singularly passive in putting questions to Detective Brodeur, the prosecution’s only witness, about what inferences he, as an experienced narcotics investigator, drew from the paraphernalia seized. See
Commonwealth
v.
Sendele,
The defendant asserts that under
Commonwealth
v.
O’Brien,
At oral argument much was made of the contention that there can be no intent to distribute a “residue” of cocaine. This argument erroneously presupposes that G. L. c. 94C, § 32A(a), requires possession of cocaine with intent to distribute
the quantity possessed.
The statute, however, contains no such requirement.
2
The quantity of a controlled substance alone may be sufficient circumstantial evidence to raise an inference of intent to distribute. See
Commonwealth
v.
Rugaber,
In this case we have the existence of a residue of cocaine on several items associated with cocaine use or distribution. We have the pan of the scale, containing residue, a quantity of cutting powder far in excess of the amount, if any, needed to “cut” the residue, as well as two packages of wrapping papers. This evidence, taken as a whole, permits inferences that a merchantable amount of cocaine had previously been present, and that LaPerle had intended to distribute it.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
While it does not appear from the oral argument, briefs, or the transcript that the question of LaPerle’s dominion or control over the cocaine was a seriously contested issue, we think it would have been a better practice for the Commonwealth to introduce direct evidence that LaPerle resided in the apartment. Cf. Commonwealth v. Andrews, supra.
We do not view language in
Commonwealth
v.
Nichols,
