Dеfendant Erwin Sanchez appeals his conviction for possessing cocaine with intent to distribute in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and (b)(1)(B). He asserts two grounds for reversal: first, that the district court wrongly refused to suppress a quantity of cocaine seized in violation of his Fourth Amendment rights, and, second, thаt the court erred in denying his motion for acquittal because the evidence was insufficient to prove knowing possession of the cocaine. We affirm.
I. Background
On the afternoon of March 20, 1990, defendant Sanchez was stopped for speeding as he drove a black Camarо along Interstate Route 95 in Rhode Island. State Trooper Underhill approached the car on the driver’s side while Detective Denniston went to the passenger’s side. In response to Underhill’s request, defendant produced *112 his valid New York driver’s license and retrieved the vehicle registration from inside the center armrest. The car was registered in Massachusetts to Rafaela Penta.
Trooper Underhill then questioned Sanchez about the car. The defendant reported that the car was owned by “Penta,” but he did not know her full name, address or telеphone number. He claimed that a friend in New York named “Nana” lent him the car, but he did not know Nana’s full name, address or phone number either. Underhill testified that Sanchez appeared extremely nervous throughout the questioning and, with his suspicions aroused by the exchange, the troоper asked Sanchez to get out of the car.
The defendant then was questioned again by Underhill and Denniston together. Sanchez repeated that the car was loaned to him in New York by a friend named Nana, and that it belonged to Nana’s girlfriend, Penta. He told the officers thаt he was driving to the Dartmouth, Massachusetts area to meet a friend named Robin, with whom he planned to stay for three days. Although he did not know Robin’s last name, address or telephone number, he claimed to know how to find his house. Sanchez had no extra clothes with him, and told the officеrs he planned to borrow some from Robin. The only “luggage” in the car was a bag in the back containing old cheese, a bottle of liquor and photographs.
At some point, the officers retrieved a slip of paper with a phone number from the front seat of the Camаro, and arranged for someone at the state police barracks to call the number. The call was answered by someone who identified himself only as “Eduardo,” and who hung up when asked about Sanchez and the Camaro. Computer checks on Sanchez’s license and the car registration revealed nothing suspicious.
With Sanchez’s consent, Denniston did a cursory search of the car, which turned up nothing unusual. The officers nevertheless decided to bring the car to the police barracks for further investigation. Sanchez drove the Camarо with Denniston in the passenger seat, and Underhill followed in the cruiser. Shortly after their arrival at the barracks, Sanchez signed a form consenting to another search of the car. Underhill’s drug detection canine alerted near the car, and a subsequent search led to discovery of a kilogram of cocaine hidden behind a rear panel. Sanchez then was arrested.
Sanchez sought to suppress the cocaine on the ground that it was obtained in violation of his fourth amendment rights. He argued that the officers lacked probable causе to bring either him or the car back to the police barracks and, consequently, that the drugs should have been excluded from evidence as the fruit of his unlawful arrest and the car’s unlawful seizure.
The district court denied the suppression motion, concluding that Sanchez had failed to establish a reasonable expectation of privacy in either the Camaro or the cocaine and thus lacked standing to challenge the search of the car. Sanchez appeals that ruling and also seeks reversal of his conviction based on а paucity of evidence showing that he knowingly possessed the concealed cocaine.
II. Suppression of the Cocaine
In reviewing a district court’s denial of a suppression motion, we must uphold its findings of fact unless they are clearly erroneous,
United States v. Cruz Jimenez,
Because Fourth Amendment rights are personal and may not be asserted vicariously, the first inquiry in examining a fourth amendment claim is whether the defendant had a legitimate expectation of privacy in the area searched or the item seized.
Rakas v. Illinois,
We have in the past listed various factors that are relevant to the standing determination:
ownership, possession, and/or control; historical use of the property searched or the thing seized; ability to regulate access; the totality of the surrounding circumstances; the existence or nonexistence of a subjective anticipation of privacy; and the objective reasonableness of such an expectancy under the facts of a given case.
United States v. Aguirre,
In rejecting defendant’s claim, the district court relied heavily on Sanchez’s failure to show that he had the owner’s permission to use the car. The court accepted defendant’s repeated assertion that he had been given the car by Nana, whose girlfriend, Penta, was the owner. The court thus found that “at best the defendant was operating the vehicle with the authority of a person who himself had been given the authority to operate the vehicle by somebody else.” 3 The court further noted the lack of evidence showing that Sanchez had used the car previously or had control or responsibility for the vehicle “other than the fact he was driving it when he wаs stopped.”
We consider this to be a close case. In his favor, Sanchez appropriately emphasizes his possession of the car, his ability as the sole occupant to control or exclude others’ use of the vehicle, and the fact that he was driving аlone on a long trip at a great distance from the vehicle’s owner. The fact that he was alone distinguishes this case from
United States v. Lochan,
Despite this difference from Lochan, we believe the circumstances, on balance, tip slightly in favor of the same result. As in Lochan, Sanchez had only a casual posses *114 sion of the car. He did not own it, nor, as the district court observed, was there evidence that he had used the car on other occasions. He gained possession from a friend about whom he knew very little — not even his last name. Although Sanchez’s control of the vehicle presumably was greater than Lochаn’s because Sanchez was driving unaccompanied by the car’s owner, this factor is offset by the fact that Sanchez did not have direct authority from the owner to use the vehicle. In addition, Sanchez claimed no interest in the drugs contained within the car. 4 Nor did he exhibit an expеctation of privacy in the bag of items stored in the hatchback area, which he displayed to the officers on his own initiative.
Had Sanchez demonstrated a more intimate relationship with the car’s owner or a history of regular use of the Camaro— from which a presumption of permission could-be drawn — we would have been likely to conclude that the totality of the circumstances established a legitimate expectation of privacy.
5
A pattern of permission, together with his sole control on a long trip, would have minimized the informаl and temporary nature of this specific acquisition of the car. On the present record, however, the factors fall short, leaving Sanchez unable to meet his burden of proof.
See United States v. Arango,
We therefore conclude that the district court correctly found that Sanchez lacked a sufficient expeсtation of privacy in the car to entitle him to challenge its seizure and search.
III. Judgment of Acquittal
Defendant moved for judgment of acquittal claiming that the government’s evidence was insufficient to prove that he knowingly possessed the cocaine found in the car.. We review the district сourt’s denial of the motion using the identical standard employed to measure the sufficiency of evidence supporting a guilty verdict.
United States v. St. Michael’s Credit Union,
We need not dwell on this issue because the evidence clearly was ample. Sanchez was both alone and driving the car in which the cocaine was hidden, permitting an inference that hе knew about and possessed the drug.
See United States v. Barnes,
Although a finding of guilt in these circumstances was not inevitable, we conclude that the evidence was sufficient to support the jury’s finding that Sanchez knowingly possessed the cocaine.
Aсcordingly, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Technically, the concept of "standing” has not had a place in Fourth Amendment jurisprudence for more than a decade, since the Supreme Court in
Rakas
v.
Illinois,
. The government conceded at oral argument that the officers had no probable cause to detain Sanchez or the car. His own illegal seizure does not help his effort to suppress the cocaine, however, because the evidence resulted from the seizure and search of the car and not from his personal detention.
.Detective Denniston testified at the suppression hearing that after his arrest, in conversation in Spanish with an immigration officer, Sanchez stated that he had permission from Penta to use the car. The district court apparently gave little weight to this alternative version of how Sanchez got the car and we find no clear error in its decision to do so. We note, moreover, that at orаl argument, defendant’s counsel stated that Sanchez had obtained the car from Nana.
. Sanchez could have testified at the suppression hearing that he had some interest in the cocaine without concern that that testimony would be used as direct evidence agаinst him at trial.
United States v. Garcia-Rosa,
. For example, in
United States v. Williams,
. It is settled law "that a prosecutor may simultaneоusly maintain that a defendant criminally possessed the seized good, but was not subject to a Fourth Amendment deprivation, without legal contradiction,”
United States v. Salvucci,
[t]he seeming contradiction between finding that control over a motor vehicle by a nonowner driver gives rise to an inference of knowledge of the vehicle’s contents and finding that the driver does not have an expectation of privacy in the vehicle or its contents is irrelevant.
Lochan,
