*309 Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge ROGERS.
Appellant Darvis Orlando Dingle appeals his conviction by a jury of possession of cocaine base with intent to distribute, 21 U.S.C. § 841(a), on the principal ground that the evidence was insufficient to establish that he either possessed any drugs, or aided and abetted his codefendant in possessing drugs. He also challenges the district court’s failure sua sponte to instruct on the lesser included offense of possession and its drug-quantity attribution at sentencing. We hold that the evidence was sufficient to convict Dingle as an aider and abettor, and that his challenges to the instructions and his sentence are meritless; accordingly, we affirm.
I.
Dingle was arrested after the police executed a search warrant for an apartment at 1435 Sheridan Street in Northwest Washington. Dingle, who did not own or live in the apartment, was found there along with his co-defendant, Gregory Boykin, and a small quantity of drugs. During the search, the police observed Boykin throwing a larger quantity of drugs out the window of the apartment. At the first trial, the jury convicted Boykin, but was unable to reach a verdict as to Dingle and the district court declared a mistrial. On retrial, a second jury convicted Dingle, and the district court sentenced him to 100 months’ imprisonment.
The government’s evidence at the second trial established that a team of officers led by Detective Milton Norris went to the door of the apartment, where Norris knocked and announced, “Police, search warrant.” At that point, Norris heard footsteps inside that sounded as though a person were running toward the rear of the apartment. Norris tried to open the door, but it was locked. At that point, he instructed another officer to force the door open with a sledgehammer. The officer struck the door once, and a voice inside the apartment said, ‘Wait a minute, wait a minute,” or words to that effect. According to Norris, the voice was fading away, as though the speaker were moving away from the door. At about the same time, officers outside the building observed a man, later identified as Boykin, tossing something out of the apartment window.
The officers forced the door open with the sledgehammer. When they entered the apartment, which was well-kept and lightly furnished, Dingle was standing near the doorway next to a small bar, and Boykin was coming out of the back bedroom. Scattered on the floor of the living room, in the hallway between the living room and the bedroom, and on a window ledge in the bedroom, were several ziplock bags containing small amounts of cocaine base. The police also found a plastic wrapping containing 3.5 grams of cocaine base on the bed in the bedroom, and a number of empty ziplock bags in a dresser drawer in the bedroom. Outside the bedroom window, the police found a plastic wrapping containing 43.04 grams of cocaine base and smaller quantities of cocaine base in ziplock bags. In addition, a razor blade and plate, both coated with cocaine residue, were on the bar next to Dingle. The police also recovered a pager and $645 on Dingle’s person.
The government’s narcotics expert testified that crack cocaine is typically packaged in small ziplock bags for street-level distribution. He explained that drug dealers typically break cocaine down into individual dosage units using a razor blade or other cutting implement, and that experienced drug dealers typically do not need a scale to separate cocaine into individual doses. Prior to being packaged in individual doses, crack cocaine is often stored in “bulk” form in a larger plastic bag or container. The expert further explained that drug dealers will pay others to use their residences to perform this packaging process. Finally, he explained that it is common for drug buyers and sellers to contact one another using a pager. In the expert’s opinion, the evidence found in the apartment was consistent with a drug distribution operation, based on the quantity of drugs found and the manner of packaging.
Dingle testified that he went to the apartment to visit some friends, Donald Stewart and Brenda Kellogg, and their one-and-a-half-year-old daughter, who lived in the apartment. He described Stewart and Kellogg as “real good friends,” whom he had *310 known for five years and visited two to three times a week. When he arrived, both the front door of the apartment building and the door to the apartment were unlocked. The apartment lights were on, and the radio was playing, so Dingle went inside. He decided to “play a game on Mr. Stewart” by locking the door to “teach[ ] him a lesson.” After a time, Boykin knocked on the door, and Dingle, who recognized Boykin as a friend of Kellogg, let him inside the apartment. Boy-kin went back toward the bedroom, and Dingle sat down on a bar stool in the Jiving room. Dingle then heard the police knock at the door, and said, ‘Who is it?” The officers identified themselves, and he said, ‘Wait a minute,” and unlatched the door. Once the door was unlatched, the officers knocked it open.
Dingle also claimed that he was planning to pay the $645 to his wife, to whom he owed about $700 in child support. He testified that he had borrowed $300 from his father, and earned the rest doing “side jobs” cleaning carpets. He claimed that he had the pager so that his family and his employers could contact him.
In rebuttal, Officer Gerard Burke testified that the police did not find a baby’s crib, toys, furniture, or clothes, or any women’s clothes in the apartment. While the police did find a bill with Donald Stewart’s name in the apartment, they were unable to locate Stewart himself; Burke had unsuccessfully attempted to contact Stewart both at the time of Dingle’s arrest and during the trial. He also testified that the door to the apartment building had been left open by undercover officers so that the police could execute the search warrant.
II.
In assessing the sufficiency of the evidence, the court views the evidence in the light most favorable to the government, drawing all reasonable inferences in its favor.
See, e.g., United States v. Walker,
Dingle contends that there was insufficient evidence to convict him of possession with intent to distribute cocaine base because the government showed merely that he was present with Boykin in a small apartment where drugs were found. The government responds that there was sufficient evidence to convict Dingle of either constructively possessing the drugs in the apartment jointly with Boykin, or aiding and abetting Boykin in possessing the drugs. Of course, the “[m]ere presence of the accused on the premises, or simply his proximity to the drug,”
United States v. Staten,
The evidence is clearly sufficient to establish that Dingle knew of the drugs since
*311
several ziploek bags containing cocaine base were in plain view on the living room floor near where he was standing. The only question is whether there was sufficient evidence that Dingle took any action that would indicate either an ability to exercise dominion and control over the drugs, or an effort to assist Boykin in possessing the drugs. The court has considered a defendant’s ownership of or residence in premises where drugs are found in plain view to be sufficient evidence of dominion and control to establish constructive possession.
See, e.g., Walker,
99 F.Sd at 441;
United States v. Jenkins,
The government focuses on the fact that Dingle, by his own admission, shouted “wait a minute, wait a minute,” when the police started to break down the door. The government characterizes this as an attempt by Dingle to stall the police to give Boykin the opportunity to dispose of the drugs.
Cf. United States v. Washington,
Dingle’s reliance on
United States v. Zeigler,
*312
The evidence against Dingle is comparable to the evidence in
Washington.
Washington was riding in the front passenger seat of a car as it attempted to elude police.
Furthermore, the jury was entitled to take into account the government’s rebuttal evidence in assessing Dingle’s claim of innocent presence.
See Foster,
In
Zeigler,
the court held that any negative inferences that a jury may draw from the demeanor of a defendant who testifies should not ordinarily be considered in a sufficiency analysis.
With or without considering the implausibility of Dingle’s explanation for his presence in the apartment, the jury could reasonably conclude that he aided and abetted Boykin in the possession of drugs with the intent to distribute them. Thus, because we hold that the evidence was sufficient to support Dingle’s conviction on that basis, the court need not consider whether the jury could also have reasonably found that Dingle had constructive possession of the drugs.
Griffin v. United States,
III.
Dingle’s remaining contentions do not require extensive discussion. His contention that the district court erred by failing
sua sponte
to give an instruction on the lesser included offense of simple possession is meritless. Because Dingle neither asked for such an instruction nor objected to the district court’s failure to give one, our review is for plain error, and we find none. Fed. R.Crim. P. 30, 52;
United States v. Campbell,
Finally, Dingle’s contention that the district court erred in attributing to him, for purposes of sentencing, the entire quantity of drugs that Boykin threw out the window, in addition to the much smaller quantities found on the living room floor, is meritless. The evidence was sufficient to establish that Dingle aided and abetted Boykin; he is therefore responsible for the same quantity of drugs that Boykin possessed. 18 U.S.C. § 2; U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Manual §§ IB1.3, 2X2.1 (1995);
see also United States v. Nieto,
Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of conviction.
Notes
. While many people possess pagers or cash for legitimate reasons,
see United States v. Brown,
