Following a joint trial, a jury found the appellant, Agustin Garcia-Maldonado, and his two co-defendants, Lucio Flores and Fedrico Venegas Lopez, guilty of trafficking in methamphetamine. Flores and Lopez also were found guilty of possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony. In Flores v. State,
Following a criminal conviction, we construe the evidence in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict. Sidner v. State,
As set forth in our opinion in Flores, when viewed in the light most favorable to the prosecution, the record in this case shows that on June 20, 2008,
police officers arrested an individual for allegedly trafficking in methamphetamine [and] then, the same day, sought his assistance as a confidential informant in other investigations. With an officer present, the confidential informant engaged in a telephone conversation via speaker phone with what sounded to the officer to be a Spanish-speaking male. After the conversation ended, the confidential informant, the officer and two other officers drove the confidential informant’s vehicle and an unmarked police vehicle to a motel, where the officers began a surveillance of the motel parking lot; the surveillance lasted about an hour. During the surveillance, the confidential informant engaged in another phone conversation with what sounded to an officer to be a Spanish-speaking male. After that phone call concluded, a green vehicle entered the parking lot. The driver of that vehicle, Garcia-Maldonad[o], parked it and remained inside.
Three to four minutes later, a black vehicle entered the parking lot and drove in front of the room where the informant was standing, approximately 150 feet away from the green vehicle. When the informant approached the black vehicle andmade contact with its occupants, officers moved in and pulled the occupants out of both vehicles.
Flores was the driver of the black vehicle, and Lopez was the passenger. Officers found a handgun on the driver’s side floorboard, and a handgun on Lopez’s person. They found no drugs in the black vehicle.
In the green vehicle, in a container under the driver’s seat, officers found 446.74 grams[, or approximately one pound,] of methamphetamine. Garcia-Maldonad[o] told one of the officers at the scene that the vehicle was not his, that he did not know what was in the vehicle, and that he was being paid to drive the vehicle. Police established that both vehicles were registered in names other than the defendants’ names. At trial, all three defendants used interpreters to translate what was being said in the proceedings from English to Spanish and vice versa.
[Flores and Lopez did not testify. In contrast,] GarciaMaldonad[o] testified that Flores had agreed to lend him [$500] if he did Flores a “favor,” which was to drive the vehicle. As Flores had instructed, Garcia-Maldonad[o] met him at a gas station to get the vehicle. There, Flores gave Garcia-Maldonad[o] keys to the vehicle, instructed him on where to drive and park, and then led him to the motel. Garcia-Maldonad[o] added that “sometimes they were behind me and sometimes they were in front of me,” and that he was able to arrive before Flores because he “got ahead of them” and knew where he “needed to go.”
A police officer with experience and specialized training in narcotics investigations testified that with an “advance [d] drug dealer, which is anything more than an ounce” of drugs, there is usually a second car, so that the dealers and the drugs are not in the same car. “[T]hey don’t want to mix both of them together, be taken down and . . . lose everything.”
(Footnote omitted.) Flores,
On appeal, Garcia-Maldonado contends that the evidence was insufficient to support his conviction for trafficking in methamphetamine. He argues that the State failed to prove that he knowingly-possessed the methamphetamine found underneath the driver’s seat of the green vehicle which he drove to the motel, and that his mere presence in the vehicle and spatial proximity to the drugs was insufficient to support a finding that he was in constructive possession of the contraband. We disagree.
“Any person who knowingly . . . has possession of 28 grams or more of methamphetamine ... commits the felony offense of trafficking in methamphetamine.” OCGA § 16-13-31 (e) (2008).
Applying these principles, we conclude that the jury was authorized to find that Garcia-Maldonado was in joint constructive possession of the methamphetamine found under the seat of the vehicle he was
Garcia-Maldonado, however, contends that the circumstantial evidence supported the reasonable alternative hypothesis that he did not knowingly transport the methamphetamine. See former OCGA § 24-4-6 (“To warrant a conviction on circumstantial evidence, the proved facts shall not only be consistent with the hypothesis of guilt, but shall exclude every other reasonable hypothesis save that of the guilt of the accused.”).
“Whether or not in a given case circumstances are sufficient to exclude every reasonable hypothesis save the guilt of the accused is primarily a question for determination by the jury.” (Citation and emphasis omitted.) Howard v. State,
Alternatively, “the knowledge element of a violation of a criminal statute can be proved by demonstrating either actual knowledge or deliberate ignorance of criminal activity.” (Citations and punctuation omitted.) Able v. State,
For these combined reasons, we conclude that a rational jury was entitled to find Garcia-Maldonado guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of trafficking in methamphetamine. Jackson,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The General Assembly amended subsection (e) of OCGA § 16-13-31, effective July 1, 2013, see Ga. L. 2013, p. 222, § 4/HB 349, to omit the word “knowingly,” but that amendment does not apply in the present case because the underlying offense occurred in 2008. See id. § 21 (“This Act shall become effective on July 1, 2013, and shall apply to offenses which occur on or after that date. Any offense occurring before July 1, 2013, shall be governed by the statute in effect at the time of such offense.”).
In Flores,
Because the present case was tried in June 2009, the new Georgia Evidence Code does not apply. See Ga. L. 2011, p. 99, § 101 (“This Act shall become effective on January 1, 2013, and shall apply to any motion made or hearing or trial commenced on or after such date.”).
