This case involves drug trafficking and related gun possession. After a second full trial- — -the first resulted in a hung jury — defendant-appellant Nestor Maldonado-Garcia was found guilty on one count of possession of marijuana with intent to distribute and two related firearms counts. In this venue, the appellant’s counselled brief advances two assignments of error. First, the brief asseverates that the government’s evidence was insufficient to establish that the appellant knowingly possessed the firearm found in the truck he was driving. Second, the brief calumnizes the trial court’s exclusion of testimоnial evidence pertaining to the violent death of a prior lessee of the truck. Counsel pressed both points vigorously -at oral argument. 1 The appellant also has filed a pro se supplemental brief, in which he raises a golconda of other arguments. Finding all of thеse arguments unpersuasive, we affirm the judgment below.
We rehearse the facts in the light most hospitable to the verdict, consistent with record support.
United States v. Vega Molina,
In late July of 2003, California-based employees of a shipping company, Caribbean Transport Services (CTS), became suspiсious of a shipment addressed to LL Industries in Aguadilla, Puerto Rico. 2 CTS immediately notified the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). After performing field tests, DEA agents confirmed that the suspect crates contained bundles of marijuana. With the assistance of CTS staffers, the agents returned the bundles of marijuana tо the crates in which they had been packed and allowed the shipment to go forward. At the DEA’s bidding, however, the shipment was rerouted from Aguadilla to San Juan.
The crates reached San Juan on July 28, 2003. The DEA arranged for surveillance upon their arrival. That evening, an unidentified male cаller telephoned CTS several times, inquiring about the shipment and the associated freight charges. Shortly after a CTS representative told the caller that the shipment was in house, the appellant arrived at the CTS facility in a Ford dump truck. He presented a copy of the shiрping invoice for the crates, paid the outstanding freight charges with money orders drawn in the exact amount, and used an alias when endorsing the money orders.
After CTS employees loaded the crates onto the truck, the appellant climbed into the driver’s seat and began tо depart. At that point, DEA agents blocked his only means of egress. In addition, a DEA agent, Rafael Mattai, pursued the truck on foot. Seeing the roadblock, the appellant veered in an apparent attempt to evade the agents. The attempt failed, and the aрpellant brought the truck to a halt.
DEA agents converged on the truck and arrested the appellant. As the agents were handcuffing him, Fano Samuel Cruz Santiago (Cruz), a local police officer assigned to work with the DEA, saw a .357 Magnum revolver on the floor of the cab, near the truсk’s stick-shift. Cruz testified that the firearm was easily accessible from the driver’s seat, within the driver’s immediate reach, and in plain view. After com *230 pleting the arrest, the agents seized the drugs, the gun, and the truck.
In the days following the arrest, the DEA returned the truck to its owner, Wender Rentas. Rentas testified at trial that he was the appellant’s employer; that he regularly lent his truck to the appellant without any special formality; and that the appellant had ready access to the truck. Rentas further testified that, on July 28, the truck was parked at his house. The appellant drove thеre that afternoon (sometime after 4:00 p.m.) to return another vehicle. The inference was compelling that the appellant commandeered the truck at around that time. In all events, the appellant arrived at the CTS facility sometime after 7:30 p.m. that evening, oрerating the dump truck.
A federal grand jury indicted the appellant. The three-count indictment charged possession of 234 kilograms of marijuana with intent to distribute (count 1); possession of a firearm during the commission of a drug-trafficking crime (count 2); and possession of a firearm having an oblitеrated serial number (count 3). 3 See 21 U.S.C. § 841; 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A); id. § 922(k). Counts 2 and 3 each contained a scienter element (knowing possession).
After hearing all the evidence, the jury deadlocked. The district court declared a mistrial. A retrial ensued. At the close of the government’s case in chief, the appеllant moved for judgment of acquittal. See Fed.R.Crim.P. 29(a). The district court denied the motion. The appellant did not renew the motion at the end of the his case. See id. The court submitted all three counts to the jury, which returned a guilty verdict across the board. The appellant again failed to renew his motion for judgment of acquittal within the seven days following the verdict. See Fed. R.Crim.P. 29(c)(1). The district court imposed a 123-month incarcerative sentence. This timely appeal followed.
The gravamen of the appellant’s first claim of error is that the government’s proof regarding the prеsence of the gun in the cab of the truck was insufficient to establish an element of the offenses of conviction- — -knowing possession- — -beyond a reasonable doubt and that, therefore, the firearms convictions should be reversed. This claim suffers from a self-inflicted wound: the appellant failed to renew his Rule 29 motion either at the close of all the evidence or following the jury verdict.
See
Fed.R.Crim.P. 29. These omissions combine to constitute a waiver of the appellant’s earlier Rule 29 motion.
See United States v. Hadfield,
*231
In reviewing a сhallenge to evi-dentiary sufficiency, we consider the evidence in the light most congenial to the verdict and determine whether this body of proof as a whole, including all reasonable inferences extractable therefrom, has sufficient bite to ground a rational conсlusion that the government proved each and all of the elements of the charged crime beyond a reasonable doubt.
United States v. Lara,
With respect to the firearms offenses' — the appellant wisely does not attempt to challenge the sufficiency of the evidence on the drug-trafficking count — it is important to remember that the term “possession” encompasses not only actual possession but also constructive possession.
United States v. Vargas,
The evidence adduced in this case was sufficient to permit a rational juror to conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that the аppellant constructively possessed the gun found in the truck. After all, the evidence supported a finding that the appellant had sole possession of the truck for some appreciable period of time during the late afternoon and evening of July 28; that he was the lоne occupant of the vehicle throughout that interval; ■ that the revolver was located in the stick-shift area of the truck’s cab, with the handle facing toward the driver’s seat; that it was within easy reach of the driver (the appellant); and that it was in plain sight. This testimony, if credited, sufficed to show constructive possession — and the jury had the right to credit it.
See, e.g., United States v. O’Brien,
If more is needed — and we doubt that it is — direct testimony may be buttressed by inferences that reasonably can be drawn from the totality of the circumstances.
See Staula,
To say more on this point would be supererogatory. The bottоm line is that we detect no injustice — -let alone a clear and gross injustice — in firearms convictions hinged upon a finding that the appellant knowingly possessed the gun.
This brings us to the evidentiary issue. A district court’s decision to admit or exclude evidence is ordinarily reviewed for abuse of disсretion.
United States v. Flemmi,
The appellant asserts that the district court abused its discretion in excluding testimony anent the violent death of an individual who rented the Ford dump truck on the Friday and Saturday prior to his (the appellant’s) use of the truck on Monday, July 28. He strives to persuade us that the district court should have honored his proffer 6 because this evidence makes it more likely that someone else (i.e., the prior lessee) placed the gun in the truck and, thus, that the appellant did not know the gun was there. We are not convinced.
There are two major problems with the appellant’s position. The first problem is that the appellant offered no evidence that the prior lessee owned a gun, carried a gun, was observed with a gun, or used a gun at any time. The second and perhaps more salient problem is that the proffered testimony had no bearing on the key issue in the case: whether the appellant knew that the gun was in the truck and constructively possessed it at the time he retrieved the drugs. On this record, the fact that someone else may have рlaced the gun in the truck would not alter, or even cast doubt upon, the appellant’s constructive possession of it.
See Lamare,
At the expense of carting coal to Newcastle, we add that, in this instance, the district court afforded the appellant an ample oppоrtunity to develop his theory of the case. The court allowed him to submit evidence that someone else had rented and driven the truck on the weekend preceding the date of arrest. The court merely drew a line at that point and refused, on relevancy grounds, to admit the further evidence of the prior lessee’s violent death (unconnected to his use of the truck). Even assuming, for argument’s sake, that this evidence had some slight bearing on the issue of constructive possession, it is too much of a stretch to say that the district court abused its discretion in exсluding the proffer.
The appellant’s supplemental brief need not occupy us for long. In it, he advances three contentions. None has merit.
First, the appellant’s reliance on the decision in
Bailey v. United States,
The appellant’s second claim— that his sentence was flawed by reason of constitutional infirmities in the federal sentencing guidelines — is baseless.
See United States v. Booker,
We need go no further. For the reasons elucidated above, we conclude that, for aught that appears, the appellant was fairly tried, justly convicted, and lawfully sentenced.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The appellant’s counselled brief also asserted a challenge with respect to the chain of custody of the seized drugs. Appellant’s counsel explicitly abandoned this challenge during oral argument, however, and we make no further mention of it.
. Subsequent investigation revealed both that LL Industries was a nonexistent firm and that the shipment sported a bogus address.
. The appellant concedes that the serial number of the gun had been obliterated and that the gun had traveled in interstate commerce.
. In
Unitherm Food Systems, Inc. v. Swift-Eckrich, Inc.,
- — ■ U.S. -■,
. Given the evidence of the money orders, the use of an alias, and the appellant’s attempt to evade arrest, the jury had ample reason to conclude that the appellant’s involvement with the drugs was far from innocent.
. In his counselled brief, the appellant attempts to embellish upon this evidence, suggesting, for example, that the prior lessee was involved in some unspecified drug-trafficking activities. The transcript belies these embellishments; the only evidence actually proffered below was evidence of the prior lessee's violent death.
