It is a misdemeanor in the District of Columbia, punishable by up to 90 days’ imprisonment and a $500 fine, to “possess in an open container an alcoholic beverage in ... [a] vehicle in or upon any street....” D.C.Code §§ 25-1001(a)(2), (d) (2001). The question in this appeal is whether police had probable cause to arrest an automobile passenger for that offense, along with the driver, upon finding them sitting next to an open can of malt liquor during a routine traffic stop. We answer that question in the affirmative. We therefore uphold the search of the passenger incident to his arrest and the resulting seizure of drugs and drug paraphernalia from his jacket pocket.
*305 I.
Appellant Anthony Perkins was the front seat passenger in a Toyota Camry stopped by Metropolitan Police Officers Jelani Prather and Joseph Barnes on January 16, 2005, for running a red light. Approaching the car on the passenger side, Officer Prather saw an open 24-ounce can of Steel Reserve 211 malt liquor balanced against the gear shift on the center console, midway between the driver and appellant. The officers recovered the can and found it to be half-full. Both passenger and driver, the car’s only occupants, denied possessing the malt liquor; each claimed that it belonged to the other. The police arrested both men for violating D.C.Code § 25-1001.
Officer Prather then searched appellant and found what proved to be crack cocaine in his jacket pocket, along with several small plastic bags and a razor blade. Appellant was indicted for unlawful possession of cocaine with the intent to distribute it and unlawful possession of drug paraphernalia, in violation of D.C.Code §§ 48-904.01(a)(1) and 48-1108(a) (2001). He moved to suppress the physical evidence seized from him, asserting that the police lacked probable cause to arrest him. The trial court denied the motion. After trial, the jury returned a guilty verdict on both counts of the indictment.
II.
The search of appellant’s person was lawful if it was incident to a lawful arrest.
See Chimel v. California,
Whether the police had probable cause on a given set of historical facts is a question of law subject to
de novo
review on appeal.
Ornelas v. United States,
“The substance of all the definitions of probable cause is a reasonable
*306
ground for belief of guilt.”
Brinegar,
“Probable cause must be supported by more than mere suspicion but need not be based on evidence sufficient to sustain a conviction.”
Blackmon v. United States,
When a passenger in a vehicle is found sitting next to unconcealed contraband, that is evidence of constructive possession, even if it may not be sufficient, without more, to support a finding of the passenger’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. “The law of constructive possession requires a showing that the defendant (1) knew of the presence of the contraband, (2) had the power to exercise dominion and control over it, and (3) intended to exercise dominion and control over it.”
Blackmon,
Presumptively, therefore, appellant’s close proximity to an open malt liquor can sitting exposed to view on the center console of the car in which he was a front-seat passenger established probable cause to arrest him. And other than appellant’s own denial, which must be discounted, nothing in the circumstances was sufficient to sever appellant’s apparent connection to the alcoholic beverage.
4
It may well be true, as appellant argues, that for all the arresting officers knew, the can just as easily could have belonged to the driver alone — though joint possession was hardly out of the question, since driver and passenger surely could have been sharing a beverage in a 24-ounce can. But even if we posit that joint possession of a single can of malt liquor was unlikely, the absence of certainty that it was the passenger and not the driver who controlled the contraband does not defeat the modest showing required for probable cause to arrest the passenger (as well as the driver). In
Pringle, supra,
the Supreme Court made it clear that the Fourth Amendment’s requirement that probable cause be “particularized” with respect to the person arrested,
see Ybarra,
In
Pringle,
police found cocaine hidden behind the upright back-seat armrest of a car stopped for speeding. When none of the car’s three occupants owned up to the drugs, the police arrested all of them for possession, even though some (or conceivably even all) of them could have been unaware that any contraband was secreted
*308
in the vehicle. Pringle, who was the front seat passenger, later confessed that the cocaine was his. A unanimous Supreme Court upheld Pringle’s arrest, deeming it “an entirely reasonable inference ... that any or all three of the occupants had knowledge of, and exercised dominion and control over, the cocaine.”
Even the fact that the contraband in
Pringle
was hidden rather than in plain view was not enough to persuade the Court that probable cause to arrest the front seat passenger was lacking. An automobile passenger, the Court reasoned, “will often be engaged in a common enterprise with the driver, and have the same interest in concealing the fruits or the evidence of their wrongdoing.”
Id.
at 373,
We would not employ comparable reasoning to infer a common enterprise between the driver and passenger in the case at bar; that is, we would not say that one illegally possessing an open container of malt liquor in his car would be unlikely to admit an innocent person as a passenger. Nonetheless, in this case there was probable cause to arrest appellant for a different reason: unlike in Pringle, the contraband here not only was easily accessible to appellant, it was in plain sight, and appellant must have been aware of it.
Our conclusion that appellant’s proximity as an automobile passenger to unconcealed contraband was enough to warrant his arrest is not at odds with this court’s decision in
In re T.H.,
T.H.
was a close case, in which one panel member dissented,
see
Similarly, when questioned by the police, the two occupants of the vehicle in this case did not agree that the malt liquor belonged to a third person. Rather, appellant and the driver each told the police that the beverage belonged to the other alone. As those self-serving, contradictory statements could not both have been true (and might be taken as indicating at least one speaker’s consciousness of guilt), they did nothing to dispel the inference of constructive possession on the part of either declarant. And finally, the open container in this case was not located outside the passenger compartment, as in T.H., but inside that compartment, equidistant between the driver and the front seat passenger on the center console — only inches away from either of them.
The question of probable cause aside, appellant also argues that his arrest was improper because the open container violation was minor and the police could have issued him a citation in lieu of taking him into custody. Appellant charges that the police used the alcoholic beverage infraction as a pretext in order to arrest him and conduct an otherwise unjustified search for drugs and weapons. We find no merit in this claim. Appellant’s arrest for a comparatively minor misdemeanor was statutorily authorized.
See
D.C.Code § 23-581(a)(1)(B) (2001 and Supp.2006) (providing that a law enforcement officer may make a warrantless arrest of “a person who he has probable cause to believe has committed or is committing an offense in his presence”). The arrest also was constitutional, for “[t]he standard of probable cause applies to all arrests, without the need to balance the interests and circumstances involved in particular situations. If an officer has probable cause to believe that an individual has committed even a very minor criminal offense in his presence, he may, without violating the Fourth Amendment, arrest the offender.”
Atwater v. City of Lago Vista,
III.
We hold that the police had probable cause to arrest appellant for violating the open container law in their presence, based on his proximity as a front seat passenger in an automobile to an open can of malt liquor lying next to him in plain sight on the center console of the vehicle. The search incident to appellant’s arrest, which resulted in the seizure of crack cocaine and drug paraphernalia found in appellant’s jacket pocket, therefore was lawful. Accordingly, we affirm appellant’s convictions.
Notes
. Of course, the facts and all reasonable inferences therefrom must be viewed on appeal in favor of sustaining the trial court’s ruling, and findings of historical fact may not be disturbed unless the appellate court determines them to be clearly erroneous. Ornelas, supra; (Leonard) Watson, supra. We have summarized the facts of this case in accordance with those principles.
. Rivas involved bags of cocaine lying on the console of a car between the driver and the front seat passenger, but the nature of the contraband makes little difference-close proximity in an automobile to any form of exposed contraband is probative of constructive possession.
. In
Ulster County,
the Supreme Court upheld a state statute providing that the presence of a firearm in an automobile is presumptive evidence of its illegal possession by all persons then occupying the vehicle. In evaluating the application of the presumption on the facts before it, the Court found the case "tantamount to one in which the guns were lying on the floor or the seat of the car in the plain view of the three other occupants of the automobile.”
. To the contrary, the driver asserted that the can was appellant’s. We do not rely on that fact to uphold appellant’s arrest, however. In our view, the officers had probable cause to arrest both the driver and the passenger, regardless of their cross-accusations.
. It might be objected that, while citizens are presumed for many purposes to know the law that governs their conduct, the open-container law may not be a matter of common knowledge. But even if we entertain the possibility that appellant did not know that possession of the open can of malt liquor was against the law, such lack of knowledge does not necessarily translate into a reduced likelihood that appellant was in possession of the can.
. There is no evidence in this case that the open container law was selectively enforced against appellant on the basis of race or any other impermissible consideration.
See generally Fedorov v. United States,
