OPINION
¶ 1 Ernesto Flores was charged with possession of narcotic drugs for sale and transportation of narcotic drugs for sale, each a class 2 felony. The trial court suppressed certain statements Flores made; it then ruled that, without those statements, no corpus delicti of the crimes existed. Upon the State’s motion, the court dismissed the case without prejudice, and the State appealed. For the following reasons, we affirm.
*222 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
¶ 2 The facts are undisputed. While Flores was riding a bicycle in Phoenix, a police officer recognized him from prior contacts and determined that Flores had an outstanding misdemeanor warrant. The officer arrested Flores and, in an unchallenged search incident to the arrest, discovered two small, unpackaged rocks of crack cocaine under Flores’ hat and $1.53 in Flores’ pocket. When questioned, Flores said that he was not going to smoke the crack but that he was holding it for someone named “Chango.” He said that Chango had given him the drugs for delivery to whomever Chango directed.
¶ 3 Flores was charged with the possession and the transportation of the cocaine, both for the purpose of sale. He moved to suppress his statements to the officer for lack of corpus delicti, arguing that the State had no evidence independent of his statements to support an inference that a crime involving a sale had occurred. Indeed, the State conceded that, without Flores’ statements, it did not have a “sales” case. Agreeing with Flores, the trial court wrote:
THE COURT DETERMINES that the statements of the Defendant, which would constitute actual confessions, are inadmissible since there is no independent evidence separate from the confessions to warrant a reasonable inference that the charged crimes have been committed. The charges in this matter are TRANSPORTATION OF NARCOTIC DRUGS FOR SALE and POSSESSION OF NARCOTIC DRUGS FOR SALE. The only independent evidence is the Defendant’s possession of drugs. The Drugs were of a small quantity, unwrapped, and there was no observation of the defendant having any dealings with any third party to support the inference that the drugs were to be sold or transported for sale.
DISCUSSION
V 4 The State contends that Flores’ possession of two rocks of crack cocaine was sufficient to establish the corpus delicti for the offenses, and, therefore, that the trial court erred in suppressing Flores’ statements. While we review the court’s decision for clear and manifest error, we review de novo the legal issue whether the State was required to present evidence other than Flores’ statements of his intent to sell or transport the drugs for sale to establish the corpus delicti.
See State v. DeCamp,
¶ 5 The purpose of the corpus-delicti rule is to prevent a conviction based solely on an individual’s uncorroborated confession, the concern being that such a confession could be false and the conviction thereby lack fundamental fairness.
State v. Jones,
¶ 6 The State maintains that
State v. Villa,
¶ 7 The
Arizona
Supreme Court has indicated that the corpus-delieti rule also does not apply to an element of the offense relating only to punishment.
State v. Cook,
¶8 The State argues that the charged offenses share, as a common lesser-ineluded offense, possession of drugs, and, therefore, Flores’ intent to sell or transport the drugs for sale is but an additional element that increases the degree of the offenses to a higher-level felony. From this premise it concludes that establishing the corpus delicti of the underlying offense of possession was sufficient to permit introduction of Flores’ statements as in Villa and that the corpusdelicti rule was satisfied, by the discovery of contraband in Flores’ possession.
¶ 9 Flores responds that the elements involving the sale or transfer for sale do not merely change the level of punishment but change the nature of the offense. We agree.
¶ 10 In Villa, the nature of the underlying offense of driving while intoxicated was not changed by the additional element of the license suspension; only the level of punishment was affected. Likewise, in Cook, whether the burglary occurred during the day or night affected only the punishment and did not alter the nature of the offense.
¶ 11 In contrast, the offenses of possession of drugs for sale and transportation of drugs for sale are qualitatively different from their lesser-ineluded offense of possession. The additional “sale” element does not only affect the level of the offense and the punishment to be applied, it changes the nature of the offense from possession for one’s own use to participation in the commercial trafficking in drugs. Consequently, the “sale” element does not fit the exception recognized in
Cook
and
Villa
to the requirement that each element of an offense be established by independent evidence or corroborated admissions.
See Jones,
¶ 12 The parties also cite cases from other jurisdictions to support their respective positions. The State cites
Commonwealth v. DiSabatino,
¶ 13 Flores cites
State v. Cobelli,
¶ 14 Cobelli claimed on appeal that the State had failed to prove the corpus delicti of an intent to deliver, and the court agreed. Id. at 1082-83. It found no inference of an intent to deliver, noting that Cobelli did not possess a significant amount of drugs or money and that he was not observed conducting any transactions. Id. at 1083. The court held that mere possession does not raise an inference of the intent to deliver, that Cobelli’s confession therefore was erroneously admitted and that the evidence was insufficient to support the conviction. Id. It remanded for entry of a judgment of guilt on the lesser-included offense of possession. Id.
¶ 15 The State argues that
DiSabatino
is more consistent with
Villa
and more compatible with Arizona law than
Cobelli.
We disagree. The courts in
Cook
and
Villa
found that a defendant’s confession could be used to prove an element of the offense when that element relates to the degree of the offense or to punishment.
Cook,
¶ 16 Furthermore, in discussing the corpus-delieti rule, the court in
DiSabatino
referred generally to proof that “a crime” has been committed, concluding that, once the crime of possession was shown to have been committed, the rule is satisfied and a defendant’s statement is admissible to show his intent regarding the other offense.
Id.
The Arizona Supreme Court, however, has articulated the rule as requiring a showing that the “crime charged” has been committed.
State v. Janise,
¶ 17 In Flores’ case, there was no question that sufficient proof was presented that “a crime” had occurred. But no proof was presented from which a reasonable inference could be drawn that the crimes charged— possession for sale and transportation for sale — had been committed.
¶ 18 The State adds that the reasoning in Cobelli is suspect because, in Arizona, the facts of that case would establish a reasonable inference of an intent to deliver. The important factor in Cobelli for the purpose of this case, however, is not whether an Arizona court would have reached the same conclusion whether the facts supported a reasonable inference but, rather, that the court required such a showing at all for that element.
¶ 19 A showing of facts permitting a reasonable inference for the “sale” element was necessary to establish the corpus delicti for the crimes charged. Unlike the defendants in Cobelli and DiSabatino, Flores did not even have the small amount of crack cocaine he was carrying packaged, let alone in the separate baggies usual for sale. He was carrying virtually no money. There is no evidence that “Chango” existed. No law- *225 enforcement officer observed or heard Flores engage in any conversations suggesting drug-trafficking and the area was not known for drug trafficking. In short, as the State itself recognizes, without Flores’ confession, there is no case of possession of narcotics for sale. As such, we find no error in the trial court’s conclusion that a showing of the element of “sale” was not made.
¶ 20 The State also argues that the trial court erred in suppressing Flores’ statements because they were admissible to show knowledge of possession on the lesser-included charge of possession of narcotic drugs. The State has waived this argument by failing to raise it in the trial court,
State v. Flannigan,
¶21 The State also argues that the trial court erred in addressing the corpusdelicti requirement in a pretrial motion to suppress. Again, the State failed to raise this argument in the trial court and so has waived it. Id.
¶ 22 Even had the State not waived the issue, there is no prejudice to the State in the trial court’s consideration of the matter when and as it did. While the State has until it rests its case at trial to establish the corpus delicti,
Jones,
CONCLUSION
¶ 23 Affirmed.
