Charles Shinn was jury tried and convicted of possession of a controlled substance and possession of drug paraphernalia in violation of §§ 195.202 and 195.233 RSMo 1994. Defendant was fined $1,000 for possession of a controlled substance and $500 for possessing drug paraphernalia. Defendant contends there was not sufficient evidence to sustain the convictions. We affirm.
On June 29,1994, a state trooper with the Missouri State Highway Patrol stopped a 1993 Infiniti for speeding. Defendant was a passenger in the car. It belonged to a person defendant identified as his girlfriend. He said he had borrowed the car to drive from Belleville, Illinois to Jefferson City, Missouri.
As the trooper approached the ear, he observed Mark Shamalian, the driver of the car, and defendant bending forward in the car “as if to hide something.” The trooper asked Shamalian to accompany him to the patrol car. Shamalian complied. Defendant remained in the 1993 Infiniti. It was parked in front of the patrol car. While the trooper was questioning Shamalian in the patrol ear, he noticed defendant again bend forward in his seat as if to “put something under the seat or do something” and “it was hard to see him.”
The trooper, suspected “there was a little something in [the car] that shouldn’t have been.” He obtained Shamalian’s consent to search the car. The trooper then approached defendant and asked if there was anything illegal in the car. Defendant appeared nervous. His answer was not responsive to the trooper’s question. Instead, defendant volunteered the car was not his but belonged to a' girlfriend. The trooper asked defendant if he could search the car and defendant consented. Under the front floor mat on the passenger side of the car, a vial with an attachment to it which appeared to be like a nasal inhaler or spray-type thing (cocaine pipe) was found. The vial contained a white powdery substance which was later identified as cocaine.
In his sole point on appeal, defendant contends the trial court erred in overruling his motion for judgment of acquittal because the evidence was insufficient to support the conviction. In reviewing defendant’s conviction, this court accepts as true all of the evidence favorable to the state, including all favorable inferences drawn from the evidence, and disregards all evidence and inferences to the contrary.
State v. Grim,
To prove possession of a controlled substance, the state must prove defendant knowingly and intentionally possessed the substance and knew its nature.
State v. Fuente,
We
find the state presented sufficient evidence from which reasonable jurors could
Defendant was visibly nervous, a condition which supported an inference of his awareness of the controlled substance.
State v. Hernandez,
The trooper also testified, without objection, that when he approached the car, he observed defendant and the driver bend over “as if to hide something.” Defendant repeated the movement in the area where cocaine was found when the trooper was questioning Shamalian in the patrol car. An act resembling an effort to conceal constitutes evidence reasonably implying consciousness of guilt. Id.
Defendant testified. He denied any knowledge the cocaine and cocaine pipe were in the car. He explained his movements in bending over in the car by saying he was attempting to hide Shamalian’s radar detector. This testimony did no more than create a fact dispute. Credibility and weight of testimony are for the juiy to determine. A jury may believe all, some or none of the testimony of a witness when considered with the facts, circumstances and other testimony in the case.
State v. McNeal,
Defendant contends this case is controlled by
State v. Bowyer,
The judgment is affirmed.
