Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge GARLAND.
After a trial by jury, Antwain Dykes was found guilty of possession with intent to distribute cocaine base, possession of a firearm during a drug trafficking offense, and possession of marijuana. He challenges his convictions on two grounds. First, Dykes appeals the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress drugs and a firearm that the police found on his person in the course of a Terry stop. Second, Dykes challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his conviction for possession of marijuana that the police found in a subsequent search of his apartment. We reject both arguments and affirm the convictions.
I
On the evening of July 30, 2002, three unmarked cars of the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) pulled into a parking lot at 2408 Elvans Road, S.E., Washington, D.C., in response to complaints of illegal drug trafficking in the area. Several people were standing nearby, among them Dykes and Theodore Duncan, who were next to each other. When the police entered the parking lot, Duncan threw an object — later determined to be narcotics— to the ground and ran away. As Duncan fled, Dykes began to walk away from the police cars.
The police then got out of their cars. Each officer wore multiple items of identification — either MPD raid jackets and medallions, or badges and orange MPD emblems. Upon looking back and seeing the officers leave their vehicles, Dykes began to run away at a fast pace. After Dykes had run twenty to thirty feet, Investigator Jeff Folts forced him to the ground.
Once on the ground, Dykes immediately lay on his stomach with his hands positioned underneath him, near his waistband. Concerned that Dykes might have a weapon, Officer Eric Schuler repeatedly ordered him to show his hands, but he did not comply. Officers pulled on Dykes’ arms to remove his hands from beneath his body. After thirty to forty seconds, the officers succeeded in extracting Dykes’ hands, at which point they handcuffed him. When the officers rolled Dykes over and sat him up, they immediately saw a pistol in his waistband. They seized the pistol, placed Dykes under arrest, and searched his person. In his pockets were a ziplock bag of marijuana and thirteen ziplock bags of cocaine base. Dykes admitted to , the police that he had been smoking marijuana when they arrived, and that he had had the gun for years.
*719 On August 8, 2002, MPD officers executed a search warrant at Dykes’ apartment, close to the parking lot that had been the site of his arrest. Dykes’ mother and several of his brothers were present, but Dykes was not. The police later testified that Dykes’ mother told them that the first bedroom was Dykes’ and that no one else lived in it. 5/15/03 Tr. at 149. According to the police, she further said that “he doesn’t like anyone in his room when he’s not there, so nobody else stays in the room but him,” and that “if anything was in there, ... it was his.” Id. At trial, however, Dykes’ mother testified that Dykes shared the bedroom with two of his brothers, and that she had told this to the police at the time of the search. Dykes’ girlfriend likewise testified that Dykes shared the bedroom with his brothers.
On the floor of the bedroom, the police found a shoe box containing cocaine base and a digital scale with cocaine residue. In the bedroom closet was a tin can containing marijuana. Also in the bedroom were a shotgun shell and small-caliber ammunition. Inside a bedroom cabinet, the police found personal papers bearing Dykes’ name and address, including court papers dated July 31, 2002.
Dykes was indicted on four counts of violating federal law. For the drugs and pistol found on his person on July 30, 2002, Dykes was charged with unlawful possession with intent to distribute cocaine base, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and (b)(1)(C), and possession of a firearm during a drug trafficking offense, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1). For the drugs found in the bedroom on August 8, 2002, Dykes was charged with unlawful possession with intent to distribute fifty grams or more of cocaine base, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) and (b)(l)(A)(iii), and possession of marijuana, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 844(a).
Dykes filed a motion to suppress the drugs and gun found on his person, which the district court denied. Thereafter, a jury found Dykes guilty on all counts except the charge relating to the cocaine base found in the bedroom. On appeal, he challenges both the denial of his motion to suppress, and the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his conviction for possession of the marijuana found in the bedroom.
II
Dykes contends that the police violated the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition of unreasonable searches and seizures when they forced him to the ground and handcuffed him. The stop was unconstitutional, Dykes argues, because at the time it was made, the police lacked probable cause to believe that he had committed a crime. In
Terry v. Ohio,
There is no question but that the officers had reasonable suspicion to stop Dykes. In
Illinois v. Wardlow,
Dykes protests that, even if the officers had reasonable suspicion, the nature of the seizure' — -in which he was forced to the ground and ultimately handcuffed — went beyond the permissible scope of a
Terry
stop. The Supreme Court has “recognized that the right to make an arrest or investigatory stop necessarily carries with it the right to use some degree of physical coercion or threat thereof to effect it.”
Graham v. Connor,
Here, the officers used force in two ways, each of which was reasonable. First, because Dykes was in full flight from officers who were justified in stopping him, tackling him
1
was a reasonable method of effectuating the stop.
See United States v. Laing,
When an officer is justified in believing that the individual whose suspicious behavior he is investigating at close range is armed and presently dangerous to the officer or to others, it would appear to *721 be clearly unreasonable to deny the officer the power to take necessary measures to determine whether the person is in fact carrying a weapon and to neutralize the threat of physical harm.
III
Dykes’ remaining challenge is to the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his conviction for possession of the marijuana found in the search of the bedroom. Our review here is limited: We must accept the jury’s guilty verdict if we conclude that
“any
rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.”
United States v. Arrington,
As we explained in
United States v. Morris,
a case remarkably similar to this one, possession “can be either actual or constructive.”
There was ample evidence that Dykes lived in the apartment that the police searched, and specifically in the bedroom where they found the marijuana. As to the apartment, Dykes’ name was on the lease. As to the bedroom, personal papers bearing his name and address, including court papers dated July 31, 2002, were found inside a bedroom cabinet.
See Morris,
Dykes counters that there was evidence that he shared the bedroom with his brothers. We have previously recognized that “[t]he inference that a person who occupies an apartment has dominion and control over its contents applies even when that person shares the premises with others,” although it is plainly not as strong an inference in that circumstance.
Id.
at 620;
*722
see United States v. Edelin,
Finally, Dykes questions how the jury could have acquitted him on the charge of possessing the cocaine base found in the bedroom, but convicted him of possessing the marijuana found in the same room. We do not know what went through the jurors’ minds. Perhaps they were persuaded by defense counsel’s argument that the cocaine base found in the bedroom could not have been Dykes’ because it was of a different purity than that of the drugs found on his person at the time of his arrest. Or perhaps the verdicts were simply inconsistent. But even if the latter were so, a “criminal defendant convicted by a jury on one count [cannot] attack that conviction because it was inconsistent with the jury’s verdict of acquittal on another count.”
United States v. Powell,
The most that can be said in such [a] case[] is that the verdict shows that either in the acquittal or the conviction the jury did not speak their real conclusions, but that does not show that they were not convinced of the defendant’s guilt. We interpret the acquittal as no more than their assumption of a power which they had no right to exercise, but to which they were disposed through lenity.
*723
The proscription against reviewing the inconsistency of verdicts does not leave the defendant bereft of “protection against jury irrationality or error.”
Powell,
IV
The officers’ stop of Dykes and subsequent seizure of narcotics and a firearm from his person were lawful under the Fourth Amendment. In addition, the evidence that he possessed the marijuana found in the bedroom was sufficient to support his conviction for that crime.' Accordingly, the defendant’s convictions are
Affirmed.
Notes
. Although there was conflicting testimony as to whether Investigator Folts tackled Dykes or merely collided with him, the district court concluded that it was the former. Suppression Hr’g Tr. at 57. Because that conclusion was not clearly erroneous, we proceed upon it here.
.
See also United States v. Bonner,
.
See also Laing,
. On appeal, Dykes contends that his mother's testimony was supported by Investigator Anthony Commodore's statement that there was clothing of different sizes in the bedroom closet. But Investigator Commodore did not so testify. See 5/14/03 Tr. at 140-41.
.
See United States v. Cassell, 292
F.3d 788, 793 (D.C.Cir.2002) (holding, in a constructive possession case, that “where a defendant is charged with unlawful possession of something, evidence that he possessed the same or similar things at other times is often quite relevant to his knowledge and intent with regard to the crime charged” (internal quotation mark omitted));
United States v. Toms,
