OPINION
This case comes before us on the appeal of the defendant, Rafael Mercado, from a judgment of conviction of possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver entered in the Superior Court after a trial by jury. We affirm the conviction. The facts pertinent to the defendant’s appeal are as follows.
On September 13, 1988, at approximately 3:25 p.m., Trooper John Blessing observed a light-brown Oldsmobile, which appeared to be speeding, traveling on Route 95 North with two occupants. Clocking the vehicle at sixty miles per hour on his radar gun, Trooper Blessing directed the driver to pull the vehicle over.
As Trooper Blessing approached the vehicle, he noticed its New York license plates. Proceeding to the driver’s window, Trooper Blessing requested the driver’s license and registration. The driver, Raquel Cintron (Cintron), produced her Rhode Island driver’s license, which Trooper Blessing examined, but she was unable to produce the vehicle’s registration. Cintron did, however, produce a New Jersey certificate of title that showed Susan Ortiz (Ortiz) of 64 Watson Street, Central Falls, Rhode Island, as the owner of the vehicle. Trooper Blessing noticed that Ortiz’s address was the same' as that of Cintron. After reviewing both documents, Trooper Blessing asked defendant, who was the passenger in the vehicle, for some identification. The defendant indicated that although he did not have any identification with him, his name was Osirus Mercado and gave a date of birth. At that point Trooper Blessing asked where Cintron and defendant were heading. The defendant stated that they were heading to Providence, Rhode Island from New York City, New York.
Trooper Blessing had become suspicious because the occupants were from Rhode Island, the license plates were from New York, title had been issued in New Jersey, no registration was produced, and defendant had no identification. Computer checking the names of Raquel Cintron and Osirus Mercado, Trooper Blessing did not find any outstanding arrest warrants. Suspecting that the car might be stolen, Trooper Blessing attempted to check the New York license plate, but the computers storing such information were not operating at that time.
Trooper Blessing issued a speeding ticket to Cintron, and, still concerned with the lack of registration documents, he asked Cintron and defendant who owned the vehicle. Both Cintron and defendant stated that a friend of Cintron’s owned the vehicle, but neither would reveal the name of that friend. Trooper Blessing found that suspicious since the New Jersey certificate of title indicated that the owner lived at the same address as Cin-tron.
With the consent of Cintron, Trooper Blessing searched the vehicle and found in the glove compartment a beeper and an electronic latch for the trunk. Trooper Blessing discovered the trunk latch had been disabled and was inoperable. When asked by Trooper Blessing to open the trunk, Cintron took the ignition key, which was not on a key ring and was the only key she had, and unsuccess *262 fully attempted to open the trank. The inoperable trunk latch, beeper and single key further aroused Trooper Blessing’s suspicions. Concerned with the registration and identity of defendant, Trooper Blessing ordered defendant to ride in the cruiser with him back to the police barracks and Cintron to follow in the Oldsmobile.
At the barracks, in the course of a conversation with a fellow officer who knew Osirus Mercado, Trooper Blessing was told that although defendant closely resembled Osirus, defendant was not Osirus. Confronted with this information, defendant admitted that his name was Rafael Mercado, not Osirus Mercado.
Checking the name Rafael Mercado, Trooper Blessing discovered an outstanding arrest warrant. Trooper Blessing also discovered that defendant lived at the same address as Cintron and Ortiz, the owner of the vehicle. The defendant was arrested and taken to a holding room where he was questioned in more detail. Trooper Blessing again asked defendant about the origin and ownership of the vehicle. Admitting that Cintron was his girlfriend, defendant claimed that they had driven his mother’s car from Rhode Island to New York earlier in the day. He claimed that they had dropped off his mother’s car in New York and returned to Rhode Island in the Oldsmobile. Trooper Blessing also questioned Cintron about the origin and ownership of the car and asked her for additional identification. As Cintron, reached into her purse, Trooper Blessing noticed a parking pass issued at 8:57 a.m. that same day for a parking lot at T.F. Green Airport in Warwick, Rhode Island.
After his conversations with defendant and Cintron, Trooper Blessing’s suspicions were raised further, and he decided to make an exterior examination of the Oldsmobile. A dog trained in drag detection conducted a sniff test of the vehicle and indicated that narcotics of some sort appeared to be in the vehicle’s trank. A search warrant was immediately sought and granted, and a local garage mechanic was called to open the trank of the ear. Two large cardboard boxes, which contained approximately 25,000 packets of heroin, were discovered in the trank. Cintron and defendant were charged with possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver.
At the close of the state’s case against defendant, 1 he moved for judgment of acquittal. The trial justice denied the motion. After the jury returned a verdict of guilty of possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver, defendant moved for a new trial on the grounds that the verdict was against the law, the evidence, and the law and evidence. The trial justice also denied this motion. The defendant filed a timely notice of appeal.
In his brief defendant asserts two issues in support of his appeal. He bases both issues upon a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, claiming that the state failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant had constructively possessed heroin with an intent to deliver.
2
As we explained in
State v. Collazo,
To review properly the denial of these motions, we must keep in mind the principles governing constructive-possession cases. This court has traditionally required two elements to establish constructive possession: (1) a defendant’s knowledge of the presence of an item and (2) an intent to exercise control over the item.
See, e.g., State v. Jenison,
Constructive possession may be exclusive or joint.
State v. Bennett,
I
Motion for Judgment of Acquittal
We first consider the denial of defendant’s motion for judgment of acquittal. In reviewing the denial of such a motion, this court applies the same standard as the trial justice below.
Henshaw,
The defendant argues that the evidence, however viewed in regard to him, does not establish or give rise to an inference that defendant constructively possessed the heroin. In support of his argument he relies heavily upon the so-called mere-presence line of cases. 3
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the state, the trial justice found that defendant’s presence and his statements, the large quantity of heroin discovered, the relationship between defendant and Cintron, their travel itinerary, and the physical evidence as it related to the Oldsmobile collectively gave rise to a strong inference that defendant traveled to New York with his girlfriend in order to assist her in transporting a large shipment of heroin back to Rhode Island. From the totality of the circumstances the trial justice stated that the jury could certainly infer that defendant had constructively possessed the heroin. Accordingly the trial justice concluded that the state had presented sufficient evidence to allow the case to proceed to the jury and denied defendant’s motion for judgment of acquittal.
We agree with the trial justice that under a totality-of-the-eircumstances test, the evidence and reasonable inferences drawn therefrom were sufficient to prove defendant’s constructive possession beyond a reasonable doubt and warranted letting the case proceed to the jury. We base our decision upon the same factors as the trial justice and find that a comprehensive web of strong circumstantial evidence existed to establish defendant’s knowledge of the heroin and his intent to control it.
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As for the element of knowledge, defendant was present in a private place, the Oldsmobile, in which a significant amount of heroin had been secreted. It is reasonable to conclude that defendant would not have been allowed in the Oldsmobile as a passenger unless he knew of the valuable cargo contained therein and was conscious of the risks and ramifications involved with transporting that cargo. The reasonable inference flowing from defendant’s presence in the Oldsmobile is that he had knowledge of the presence of the heroin.
See Gilman,
In addition, when one considers that defendant and the car owner lived at the same address, his professed ignorance of the identity of the ear owner gives rise to two alternative inferences, both of which indicate his knowledge of the heroin. Either defendant was lying to conceal the car owner’s role in the drug transaction, or the owner did not in fact live at defendant’s address and defendant was deliberately ignorant of the owner’s true identity in order to insulate himself and the owner.
See United States v. Alvarez,
Turning to the element of control, defendant and Cintron knew each other well and lived at the same address. They drove defendant’s mother’s car to New York to retrieve the Oldsmobile with the heroin, and they made the return trip to Rhode Island that same day together. The defendant also lied about his identity and denied knowing the identity of the car owner. See
State v. Colbert,
We think that it strains credulity to believe, as defendant urges, that defendant was simply an inadvertent guest who had gone for a ride to New York and returned in an old car in which someone had by coincidence left half a million dollars’ worth of heroin. Given its street value, it is unrealistic to think that such a large quantity of heroin could simply be misplaced in a locked trunk.
Cf. State v. Louro,
We also reject defendant’s contention that he could not have constructively possessed the heroin because he did not drive the vehicle or have any physical control over or access to the locked trunk. The fundamental premise of constructive possession, whether exclusive or joint, is that one lacks direct physical possession of an item.
See Jenison,
Furthermore, we reject defendant’s contention that the state relied on an impermissible “pyramiding of inferences” to establish its prima facie case.
4
On the basis of our
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discussion above, we conclude that “rather than deducing guilt from an ambiguous circumstantial fact, the state established a pattern of corroborating circumstances.”
Caruolo,
We hold that defendant’s presence in a private place such as the Oldsmobile, when colored by the surrounding circumstances, gives rise to a compelling inference that defendant knew the heroin was in the trunk and intended to exert control over it. See id. Viewing the totality of the circumstances, we are of the opinion that there was sufficient evidence, in light of the direct evidence and the web of circumstantial evidence, for the jury to find that defendant was not an inadvertent guest in the car but rather a conscious joint possessor of the heroin. Accordingly we affirm the trial justice’s denial of defendant’s motion for judgment of acquittal.
II
Motion for New Trial
We next consider defendant’s claim that the trial justice improperly denied his motion for a new trial. The defendant contends that the evidence presented was insufficient to prove his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt and that, therefore, the verdict was against the weight of the evidence.
A trial justice may grant the new-trial motion if, relying on his or her independent assessment of the weight and the credibility of the evidence, he or she determines that the verdict is against the preponderance of the evidence.
Henshaw,
In passing upon a trial justice’s ruling on a motion for a new trial, we accord great weight to the trial justice’s finding of fact and shall disturb such a finding only if the trial justice overlooked or misconceived material evidence or was otherwise clearly wrong.
Caruolo,
The defendant bears the burden of persuading us of the alleged error committed by the trial justice.
State v. Howard,
We remind defendant that we do not distinguish between direct and circumstantial evidence.
State v. Rose,
We note that in ruling on the defendant’s motion, the trial justice thoroughly reviewed the evidence and reasonable inferences drawn therefrom. Concluding that sufficient evidence existed and that his factual findings agreed with those of the jury, the trial justice stated that “if the jury had returned anything but a guilty verdict in this case, it would have been a travesty of justice.” We conclude that the trial justice carefully and correctly applied the proper standard in his review of the evidence and in ruling upon the motion for new trial. He did not overlook or misconceive any material evidence, nor was he otherwise clearly wrong.
For the reasons stated, the defendant’s appeal is denied and dismissed. The judgment of conviction is affirmed, and the papers of the case are remanded to the Superi- or Court.
Notes
. The trials of defendant and Cintron were severed.
. The defendant does not challenge the intent-to-deliver element of his conviction. Nor does defendant challenge any aspect of the stop or search of the Oldsmobile or any evidence derived as the fruit thereof.
. This line of cases includes
State v. Porto,
. In certain cases and under certain conditions, we have prohibited the “pyramiding of inferences,” or the drawing of a secondary inference from an initial inference, to establish an element of an offense.
Waldman v. Shipyard Marina, Inc.,
