OPINION
Martinez and Sidle, who was charged and tried under the name Stephens, were convicted under two counts of an indictment charging them and one Marie Dab-ney, jointly, with importing 117 grams of cocaine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 952(a) and 960(a)(1), and with possession of the same quantity with intent to distribute it, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). Each received concurrent sentences on the two counts. In addition, Sidle was convicted under two counts charging him alone with importing a “measurable quantity” of cocaine, and with possession of the same quantity, in violation оf 21 U.S.C. § 844(a). He received concurrent sentences under these counts and these sentences were less than, but made concurrent with the sentences under the two counts involving the 117 grams. Dabney, being a fugitive, was not tried.
I. Facts
Appellant Martinez drove a Lincoln Continental sedan across the border from Mexico to Nogales, Arizona. In the front passenger seat next to him was one Julia Davis. In the back seat were appellant Sidle on the left behind Martinez, and Dabney on the right behind Davis. The car was searched at the border customs and immigration station. In a facial tissue box on and in the center *337 of the dashboard agents found a “zi-plock” plastic bag containing 117 grains of cocaine. In Sidle’s pocket they found a small gilt or gold cocaine spoon on a gold or gilt chain. The spoon, which is very small, appeared to have a residue on it. The car was leased to Dabney; it was not the usual rental agency car. Davis had $1,000 in cash on her person. When asked about the spoon, Sidle said that it was Dabney’s. Dabney said that the spoon was hers, that she did not want to see the other three go to jail and was willing to take the blame, and that she loved cocaine. Neither Martinez nor Sidle admitted knowledge that cocaine was in the car.
No fingerprints were taken from the plastic bag containing the cocaine or from the facial tissue box. A government chemist testified that “it appeared that there was something on the bowl of the spoon” but that it was not possible to “make out what it was” until it was placed under a micrоscope. The chemist also testified that “an inexperienced person glancing briefly at something like that, not knowing what to expect, probably would not readily distinguish there was something there. If someone who is familiar with things like this, for whatever they are more or less generally thought to be used for, inexperienced [sic — experienced?] in working with things like that, and were suspected prohibited or controlled materials, there was enough there that an experienced person would in a brief examination be аble to detect that there were things there.” In order to determine what the residue on the spoon was, the chemist rinsed it off the spoon and employed chemical tests. He did not determine the amount of material on the spoon. He testified that there was less than one-tenth of a gram (less than V28oth of an ounce), but did not say how much less.
Sidle did not take the stand, but Martinez did. Martinez’s story was that Sidle, whom he had known for about three months, and the two women, whom he had never met, came to his house and asked him to go to Mеxico as their chauffeur and translator. Martinez speaks fluent Spanish. The object of the trip was to “party” for a couple of weeks, with Dabney and Davis “treating.” On cross-examination, Martinez said that for the entire “few days” while the four were in Mexico until the day they were arrested, they were together. However, he claimed that on that day the four of them were in a Canal Street bar drinking when the two women asked for the car keys and left. He said that they left at about noon and returned at about one or оne-thirty (p.m.), and asked Martinez and Sidle to take them back to the United States. According to Martinez, the four then left the bar and “rode around town for a little bit more and then from there we went out to the border.” Asked at what time they arrived at the border, Martinez replied that “[i]t was pretty dark. It was getting dark. I guess we got to the border about 4:00 or 3:00 o’clock.” Martinez also admitted that he had once tried cocaine “about three years ago” but said that he hadn’t liked it and had returned to drinking. However, he denied familiarity with the appearance of cocaine. On cross-examination, he admitted that he knew that cocaine “looks like sugar” and is a “white powder.”
II. Martinez’s Appeal (No. 74 — 2825)
A. Denial of motion for acquittal when the government rested.
Martinez argues that it was error to deny his motion for a directed verdict of acquittal following the close of the government’s case, because there was no¿evidence of his knowledge that the cocaine was in the car. However, Martinez elected to proceed with the presentation of proof in his own behalf and thereby waived his right to challenge the denial of this motion on appeal. United States v. Figueroa-Paz, 9 Cir., 1972,
*338 B. The aiding and abetting instruction.
Martínez claims that it was error for the judge to give an aiding and abetting instruction because aiding and abetting was not specifically charged in the indictment. He is wrong. United States v. Roselli, 9 Cir., 1970,
C. Sufficiency of the evidence.
Martinez argues that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdicts of conviction. The case is a thin one. We have found no decision of ours affirming a conviction on facts as weak as these. On the other hand, we have found none reversing on similar facts.
1. Inferring knowledge from the fact of driving the car.
Running through a number of our recent cases, many of them short per curia, are statements substantially like the following:
This court has held that when one drives a car laden with contraband, there is a substantial basis from which the trier of fact may infer that the driver has knowing possession of the contraband. United States v. Zamora-Corona, 9 Cir., 1972,465 F.2d 427 , 428 (per curiam).
On its face this appears to be an easy. “bright line” rule of law, dispositive of Martinez’s argument. However, a review of our cases shows that the rule is based on the idea that a driver exercises dominion and control over his vehicle and its contents, from which dominion and control “knowing possession” of the contraband that it contains may be inferred. The facts of our cases fall into four categories: those in which the driver was the only occupant of the vehicle, 1 those in which the driver was the owner of the vehicle, 2 those in which the driver had borrowed the vehicle from someone not present in the car at the time of the arrest, 3 and those in which, for some other reason, it could be said that the driver was in complete control of the vehicle. 4 Sometimes, as might be expected, these categories overlap. 5
*339 Here the only circumstance tending to indicate that Martinez controlled the car was the fact that he was driving. “Title” to the car, as lessee, was in Dabney’s name, not Martinez’s name, and Martinez, at 21, was significantly younger than the other occupants. Dabney was 33 and Sidle was 42. Davis, the fourth occupant, had a thousand dollars in cash, which apparently was what the group was subsisting on. No significant amount of cash was found on Martinez or Sidle, and Martinez was apparently unemployed. It is a dubious proposition to say that the driver has dominion and control of the car and its contents on these facts, and that therefore knowing possession can be inferred.
Most of the cases cited in the previous footnotes also involved concealment of contraband in secret compartments, locked trunks, beneath or behind seats, or in other more or less elaborate hiding places in the physical structure of the vehicle. Where such a vehicle is stopped and contains other passengers, it is reаsonable to infer that it was the driver, when he had control of the car before the trip, who did the preparation necessary for the concealment. But where the contraband is found on the person of a passenger, or in a loose object like a tissue box, not obviously in anyone’s possession, no such preparation is necessary, and the inference of the driver’s knowing possession from his control of the car seems substantially less reasonable, especially, as here, when there are three other passengers in the car.
In Murray v. United States, 9 Cir., 1968,
*340 2. Inferring knowledge from a joint venture.
We have held that, regardless of which defendant is driving, where a foray into Mexico results from a joint design, knowledge of the presence of contraband in a contraband laden vehicle may be inferred as to all occupants. United States v. Campbell, 9 Cir.,
These cases are difficult to reconcile with Murray,
supra.
In
Murray
we rejected the theory of joint venture-joint possession, even though it was not disputed that the brothers went to Mexico together, and that the trip was Lonnie’s idea. Is going to Mexico with good friends a joint venture, but going with one’s brother not a joint venture? The opinion in
Murray,
In the case at bar, the
only
evidence of a joint venture came from the mouth of Martinez. He testified that he hаd known Sidle for about three months, but that he had never met the two women before the day they all left for Mexico. This case resembles United States v. Bonds, 9 Cir., 1970,
there was no evidence that Bonds was a long-time friend of his codefendant or that they jointly planned the trip for similar purposes. Instead, the evidence indicates that Bonds was a friend of the codefendant’s son and was simply invited along for the ride. On this evidence we do not believe that “the jurors reasonably could decide that they would not hesitate to act in their own serious affairs upon factual assumptions as probable as the conclusion” that Bonds planned and executed the smuggling as a joint venture with his codefendant. United States v. Nelson,419 F.2d 1237 , 1245 (9th Cir. 1969). Id. at 164.
Here the government presented no evidence that the trip was jointly planned. The only evidence of thаt was Martinez’s uncontradicted testimony that he had gone along with the group as a chauffeur and translator, and this story is supported by the facts that Dabney supplied the car and Davis had the cash. While the jury was not required to believe this story, it is the only evidence of a joint venture. We find it very difficult to believe that Martinez participated in the planning of the trip as an equal partici
*341
pant. In this respect, this case resembles United States v. Steward,
supra,
and United States v. Gardner, 9 Cir., 1973,
3. Inferring knowledge from false statements.
There is, however, more evidence, albeit not much more, and it, tоo, comes from Martinez. Disbelief of a defendant’s own testimony may provide at least a partial basis for a jury’s conclusion that the opposite of the testimony is the truth. United States v.
in certain restricted circumstances— where, for example, a witness’ story is implausible — disbelief of testimony can support the truth of what the witness denies. Chase, supra, at 573 (Choy, J.).
But such disbelief can provide only partial support: there must also be “other objective evidence on the record which buttresses the fact finder’s drawing of the opposite inference,”
id.,
n. 4, citing
Cisneros, supra,
Here Martinez’s story about driving around for four and one-half hours was nothing if not implausible, and in addition the jury had other reasons to doubt his credibility: he lied about his familiarity with the appearance of cocaine, and testified that he arrived at the border at three or four o’clock when it was getting dark, a statement that is not only self-contradictory, but was contradicted by every customs officer that testified. Martinez admitted that the four occupants were together in Nogales at all times during their visit except for the one to one and one-half hours when he and Sidle were left in the bar by the two women, who “went for a ride.” His claim that he had no knowledge of the cocaine thus depends on the assumption that during that one and one-half hours, the two women, who he knew did not speak Spanish and did not know their way around the streets of Nogales, went out and obtained the contraband. This too seems implausible. Moreover, Martinez had a strong motive to exculpate himself. It remains true, however, that there is little оther objective evidence in the record to buttress a fact finder in drawing the opposite inference, as Chase, supra, requires.
4. Conclusions as to sufficiency of the evidence.
Under our decisions, the fact that Martinez was driving, although not sufficient, standing alone, to support a finding of knowledge in this case, is a fact that the jury could consider. Similarly, the evidence of a joint venture could also be considered. The jury could find that Martinez told the truth as to the fact of a joint venture, but not about its purpose. When his other false testimony is added, we think that the jury could infer from all of the forеgoing, and beyond a reasonable doubt, that he knew that the cocaine was in the box that was in and on the dashboard.
D. The instruction about the inference of knowledge.
The judge told the jury that if it found that either defendant did not know that the cocaine was in the car, the jury must acquit him. It also, over objection, gave the following instruction:
The law also is such, Ladies and Gentlemen, that when one drives a car laden with contraband, there is substantial basis from which the trier of fact, that is the jury, may infer that the driver has knowing possession of the contraband. And you are instructed that if you find that thе defendant, Juan Andres Sotelo Martinez, was the driver of the Lincoln Continental automobile involved in this case, and if you find that cocaine was found inside such automobile, then you may infer from these two facts as well as all the other facts in the case that the de *342 fendant, Juan Andres Sotelo Martínez, knew the cocaine was in the automobile, but you must find actual knowledge that the cocaine was in the vehicle at the time it was driven into the United States, because that is an essential element of one of the offenses charged, that of importation.
You may not find the defendant guilty unless you find beyond a reasonable doubt that he knew the cocaine was in the vehicle at the time it was driven into the United States.
Counsel’s primary objection was that the court did not tell the jury that it need not draw the inference.
We think that, in a case such as this one, where the driving of the car is not, as we have explained, sufficient, standing alone, to support the inference of knowledge, the instruction was both erroneous and prejudicial. This is pаrtly for the reason stated by counsel, but also because it permitted the jury to draw the inference solely from the fact of driving the car. It is true that the second sentence refers, in passing, to “all the other evidence in the case,” but the first sentence does not.
There will be many cases in which the instruction would be . perfectly proper. Here, however, we conclude that it improperly emphasized the driving of the car. An instruction, in this case, referring to the fact of driving of the car, if given at all, should make it сlear that that fact, standing alone, is not enough to support an inference of knowledge, but that it is one fact which, together with the evidence of joint venture and Martinez’s own testimony, if the jury finds that he lied, can be considered by the jury in deciding whether or not he had the requisite knowledge. We also conclude that, where the case is as close as this one is, the jury, if it is told that it may draw the inference from certain evidence, should also be told that it is not required to draw the inference.
We conclude that Martinez should have a new trial. The instruction given could well have tipped the scales on the side of conviction.
III. Sidle’s Appeal (No. 74-2826)
Sidle makes several arguments.
A. Sufficiency of the evidence.
Sidle argues that his motion for acquittal should have been granted because the evidence against him was insufficient.
1. Counts I and II.
As to Counts I and II, which relate to the 117 grams found in the facial tissue box, the evidence against him, as it relates to his knowledge, is in one respect weaker than the evidence against Martinez. Sidle was neither the driver nor the owner of the car. In other respects, however, the evidence against him is stronger. The jury could find that he was the instigator of the joint venture. Moreover, he had the cocaine spoon, with its residue of cocaine, on his person. From this, plus Dabney’s statement that the spoon and the 117 grams were hers, a jury could infer that he knew about the 117 grams, especially when it also appears that he was the instigator of the junket. We conclude that the evidence against him was sufficient under counts I and II.
See
Bettis v. United States, 9 Cir., 1969,
2. Counts V and VI.
These counts charge importation and possession of a “measurable quantity” of сocaine, i. e., the residue on the spoon. The government failed to prove what it charged. The chemist’s testimony shows that the quantity of cocaine was not measured or measurable. All that the chemist could say was that there was identifiable cocaine. He did not know the quantity of the residue, much less the quantity of cocaine in the residue. We doubt that the charge *343 would ever have been presented were it not for the cocaine in the tissue box.
B. The court’s questions to witnesses and comments.
We have examined the instances to which Sidle cаlls our attention. None merits discussion. The error, if any, was so minor as to be of no importance. The court’s conduct of the trial was exemplary.
C. The prosecutor’s closing argument.
In his closing argument, the prosecutor, in discussing the “knowledge” issue, said:
What about the defendant Stephens? [Sidle] All right. We have got him with the cocaine spoon in his pocket. There was some discussion about there not being any evidence of any prior involvement or [sic] drugs, at least, on these particular defendants. Now, remember when [Agent] Timilty was on the stand? They asked him: Mr. Tim-ilty, do you have any information from any source whatsoever that either of these defendants was ever involved before? Now, Mr. Timilty started to answer that question but then they started another one at him and said: Was there any TECS hit? Granted, the only TECS hit was on Dabney, but I don’t want to leave you with the impression that there is no other evidence. It simply was not presented
At this point the court sustained Martinez’s counsel’s objection, and gave the following cautionary instruction:
Ladies and gentlemen, there is no evidence of any other involvement and you are instructed to disregard any inference that there — and not to make any inference, should disregard the remark and you should make no inference that there is, because we have absolutely no evidence that there is and you must accept the state of the evidence as it is.
The crucial issue in the case against Sidle, with respect to both the cocaine spoon and the tissue box counts, was his knowledge — (a) that the spoon was a cocaine spoon; (b) that there was а cocaine residue on the spoon; and (c) that the 117 grams of cocaine were in the tissue box. Prior involvement could well persuade a jury to draw an inference of knowledge as to each of these matters. There was no evidence of such involvement, and Martinez testified that he had never known Sidle to use drugs during their three-month acquaintance. The prosecutor’s argument, directly before the case was submitted to the jury, told the jury that the government had evidence that Sidle had had prior expеrience. This was highly improper. Sidle’s possession of the cocaine spoon and residue permitted the jury to infer knowledge of both the residue and the gross quantity of cocaine, but the jury was not required to draw these inferences. Given the closeness of the issue, the prosecutor’s comment was extremely prejudicial. We do not think that the court’s prompt cautionary instruction could “unring the bell.” We have difficulty in viewing the argument as other than deliberate.
The government argues that the argument was permissible as a retaliatory comment aimed at defense counsel’s argument that if the government had any evidence of prior drug involvement it would have been presented. The defense argument may have been ill advised, but it would not justify the improper argument in retaliation.
The case against Sidle was thin. We conclude that the prosecutor’s argument, under the circumstances of this case, requires a new trial.
See:
United States v. Benson, 3 Cir., 1973,
We have considered other arguments presented by Sidle, but find them to be without merit.
In No. 74-2825, the judgment is reversed and the case is remanded for a new trial.
*344 In No. 74 — 2826, the judgment is reversed and the case is remanded for a new trial on Counts I and II. Counts V and VI will be dismissed.
Notes
. United States v. Castillo-Burgos, 9 Cir., 1974,
. United States v. Trujillo-Tirado, 9 Cir., 1971,
. United States v. Campbell, 9 Cir., 1974,
. United States v. Seidman, 9 Cir., Sept. 18, 1974,
. The only case that we have found that does not readily fit in one of the four categories is United States v. Durgin, 9 Cir., 1971,
. See
also
United States v. Steward, 2 Cir., 1971,
