After Pedro Alejo 1 wаs stopped for moving violations, sixteen pounds of methamphetamine were found in the car he was driving. He was charged with one count of possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 841(b)(1)(A), convicted after a jury trial, and sentenced to serve 168 months. On appeal Alejo argues that the district court 2 erred in denying his motion to suppress evidence, his Batson challenge, his motion for acquittal, and his request for a minor role sentencing reduction. We affirm.
Alejo was stopped on an interstate highway in Nebraskа on May 17,1997, after state trooper Gerald Schenck observed his vehicle follow another too closely and pass unsafely. Schenck initiated the stop by turning on the overhead lights of his squad car, causing a video camera within his cаr to begin recording; a wireless microphone was also clipped on the trooper’s lapel. After Alejo pulled over, Schenck approached the driver’s door and requested license and registration information. Schenck spoke to Alejo in English. Alejo produced an Indiana driver’s license bearing the name Daniel Alejo and an incomplete bill of sale for the car which showed Daniel Alejo as the buyer. Alejo explained that he had originated his trip by flying from Indiana to California where he had purchased the car for $2000 and that he was on his way back to Indiana. Trooper Schenck indicated that he planned to issue Alejo two warning citations and returned to his vehicle to сomplete them. He also ran a criminal history check on Daniel Alejo, the named person on the driver’s license presented to him. The information he received indicated that Daniel Alejo had a prior conviction for trаnsporting illegal aliens and that he had also used the name Jose O. Martinez.
The trooper went back to appellant’s car, returned the license, and asked more questions about the vehicle purchase. Alejo respondеd that he had purchased the car from a friend. Schenck found this inconsistent with Alejo’s previous comments and proceeded to ask several more questions about the *1046 seller of the vehicle. Alejo finally said he didn’t know the name of the person who sold him the ear.
Schenck then asked Alejo for permission to search the car. Alejo said “OK.” Schenck asked if Alejo could read either Spanish or English, and Alejo responded that he could only read Spanish. Schenck then returned to his vehicle for a consent form written in Spanish. Schenck told Alejo to make sure he understood the form, but he did not advise him that he could refuse to sign it and did not read it out loud to him. Alejo signed the consent form without further conversation.
Schenck asked Alejo to step out of the vehicle, and he began to inspect it. After a brief search of the interior, he went back to his squad ear to get Nero, the service dog riding with him. The dog alerted near the trunk of Alejo’s car. Whеn Schenck opened the trunk, he noticed it was very clean except for a few metal shavings under the carpet. He went on to discover a metal plate and wires running behind the back seat, and two nylon gym bags tucked into a compartment built between the trunk wall and the back seat. The bags contained what was later determined to be approximately sixteen pounds of methamphetamine. Alejo was taken into custody and interviewed in English. He admitted that his real name was Pedro Alejo, that Daniel Alejo was his brother, and that he had used a driver’s license in his brother’s name because his own had been suspended.
I.
Alejo appeals his conviction and his sentence, and seeks a new trial or resentencing. He claims the search violated the Fourth Amendment and that it was clear error for the court to find he had consented to it, that his constitutional rights were also violated when the prosecutor struck the only person of color from thе jury venire panel, that there was not sufficient evidence to support a finding that he knowingly possessed the methamphetamine, and that he should have received a minor role reduction under U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Manual § 3B1.2 [U.S.S.G.].
A.
The district court adopted the finding of the magistrate judge
3
that Alejo had voluntarily consented to the search. Alejo asserts the court erred in denying his motion to suppress the evidence seized from his car. He argues it was error for the court to find he cоnsented to the search because he did not understand English or read Spanish well enough to give his voluntary and intelligent consent. The magistrate found that Alejo was able to read the consent form, albeit slowly, and had lived and worked in Indiana for twеnty years. He found that Alejo understood English enough to converse with the trooper and to give his knowing consent. Although Schenck was “less than accommodating,” the magistrate found that Alejo had not been coerced or his will overborne. A dеcision not to suppress evidence will be upheld unless it rests upon clearly erroneous findings of fact or reflects an erroneous view of the applicable law.
United States v. Berry,
A consensual search does not violate the Fourth Amendment if thе consent was voluntarily given without coercion,
United States v. Cortez,
*1047 A careful review of the videotape of the stop in this case shows that the findings belоw were not clearly erroneous. Alejo verbally agreed to let Schenck search his car, and he signed a Spanish language consent form after indicating that he could read Spanish. Schenck spoke to Alejo in a normal tоne of voice and did not display a weapon or remove Alejo from his car. Alejo did not appear intoxicated or lacking in intelligence. It is also relevant that Alejo had some prior experience with the legal system involving the suspension of his driving privileges.
Alejo argues that the trooper did not have reasonable suspicion to continue to detain him after completing the citations and returning his license. Alejo’s nervousness and apparent inconsistent answers to Schenck’s questions, certain details appearing on the bill of sale Alejo had presented, and the information obtained from the license check gave rise to reasonable suspicion sufficient to permit further questioning.
See United States v. Ramos,
B.
Alejo contends that his constitutional rights were also violated by the government’s use of a peremptory strike to remove the only person of color from the jury panel.
See Batson v. Kentucky,
Batson
challenges are analyzed in three steps. A party opposed to the government’s use of a peremptory strike must make out a prima facie case of discrimination. Then the burden shifts to the government to produce a race-neutral explanation.
Purkett v. Elem,
When Alejo raised his
Batson
challenge, the court asked the government to explain the basis of its challenge. The court accepted as race-neutral the prosecutor’s explanation that the juror had been struck because of her marital status and age and because her body position and eye contact during voir dire suggested an attitudе unfavorable to the government. The court concluded that the government’s actiohs^were not discriminatory, and there was no evidence that similarly situated white jurors were not stricken. The district court was “in the best position to evaluate the truthfulness of [the] asserted explanation,”
United States v. Jenkins,
C.
Alejo also objects to the denial of his motion for judgment of acquittal, because of insufficient evidence that he knowingly possessed the methamphetamine. The government responds that it produced sufficient evidence to support the finding that Alejo was aware of the drugs in the car. A denial of a motion for judgment of acquittal should be reversed “only where the evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the government, is such that a reasonably minded jury must have a reasonable doubt as to the existence of the essential elements of the crime charged.”
United States v. Mundt,
The element of knowing possession is normally established through circumstantial evidence because of the difficulty in obtaining direct evidence of an individuаl’s knowledge.
See United States v. Ojeda,
D.
Finally, Alejo asserts it was error for the court to deny him a sentencing reduction under U.S.S.G. § 3B1.2. A defendant who establishes that he was a “minor participant” in the offense can bе granted a two-level reduction.
Id.
A district court’s findings regarding the role played by a defendant in the offense are reviewed for clear error.
United States v. Snoddy,
II.
For the reasons discussed, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. This appеars to be appellant's legal name as opposed to the other names listed in the caption. Daniel Alejo was the name on the driver's license appellant produced, and the name Jose O. Martinez came uр in a criminal history check performed at the scene of the traffic stop.
. The Honorable Richard G. Kopf, United States District Judge for the District of Nebraska.
. The Honorable David L. Piester, United States Magistrate Judge.
. The parties disagree about when the prosecutor learned that the juror was a Native American, but for purposes of our analysis we adopt Alejo's position.
