On the afternoon of October 10, 2004, two park rangers approached a stationary pickup truck in a parking lot inside Acadia National Park. Looking inside, they observed William McFarland sitting in the driver’s seat with his upper body “slumped over into the middle of the vehicle.” A key was in the ignition and the front hood was warm. The rangers had trouble arousing the slumbering McFarland, but once awake, he produced the vehicle’s registration. When asked what he was doing, McFarland responded that he had merely been taking a nap. Smelling an alcoholic beverage on his breath, the rangers asked McFarland to step out of the truck. Upon receiving McFarland’s consent, they searched the truck and discovered, among other things, a bag of marijuana and two largely consumed bottles of hard alcohol. All of the drugs and alcohol had been within McFarland’s reach. A wobbly McFarland failed three field sobriety tests, and a subsequent intoxilyzer test confirmed that his blood-alcohol level was 0.31 percent.
McFarland was charged with being “knowingly and willfully in actual physical control of a motor vehicle in a park area ... while he had a blood-alcohol level in excess of 0.08% and while he was under the influence of alcohol to a degree that rendered [him] incapable of safe operation of said vehicle,” see 36 C.F.R. § 4.23(a), a Class B Misdemeanor. 1 Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3401, a trial was held before a magistrate judge, who concluded that the government had proven, beyond a reasonable doubt, that McFarland had been in actual physical control of the truck while he was intoxicated. The magistrate judge inferred, based on the warmth of the hood, that the truck had been operated shortly before the rangers arrived. Combining that inference with the facts that McFarland had been found seated behind the wheel of the truck with the key in the ignition, the magistrate judge entered judgment against McFarland.
The district court affirmed.
See United States v. McFarland,
Our standard for reviewing the record is the same as that applied by the district court.
See United States v. Bursey,
McFarland advances three arguments on appeal. First, he challenges the lower courts’ interpretation of the regulation. He argues, essentially, that a sleeping person can never be in “actual” physical control of a vehicle. Second, he argues that the government failed to present sufficient evidence to establish that he was “knowingly and willfully in actual physical control” of the vehicle while intoxicated. Finally, he argues that the rule of lenity should apply because the term “actual physical control” failed to give him sufficient warning that his conduct was illegal.
There is little case law concerning 36 C.F.R. § 4.23, and only one court opinion has discussed the meaning of “actual physical control.”
See United States v. Coleman,
*32
We need not choose between these competing lines of cases here because McFarland is the paradigmatic “trout in the milk.” Henry D. Thoreau,
Journal,
Nov. 11, 1850. Given the evidence, the magistrate judge as fact finder was free to infer how McFarland came to be inebriated and asleep in the front seat of his pickup truck with the key in the ignition.
4
The logical and obvious answer is that he placed himself in that position. Logic permitted the magistrate judge to conclude that McFarland was awake and acting voluntarily when he entered his truck, when he consumed the alcohol, and when he placed the key in the ignition. Although it is unresolved whether McFarland became intoxicated within or without the truck, that question is of no consequence. Because there is no evidence to contradict the inference that McFarland placed himself at the scene, the magistrate judge reasonably could have concluded that, at some point before he fell asleep, McFarland was both
drunk and awake,
sitting in the front of his truck, with the key in the ignition.
5
See United States v. Escobar-de Jesus,
That is all the regulation requires. If “actual physical control” is to mean anything short of “operation,” it must exist when the vehicle’s owner is conscious and seated in the driver’s seat with the key in the ignition.
See Coleman,
We also reject McFarland’s arguments that the government failed to produce sufficient evidence of his state of mind, and that “actual physical control” has an ambiguous application in his case. In the absence of any alternative explanation, the evidence that McFarland was found drunk and asleep behind the wheel of his truck with the key in the ignition was also suffi
*33
cient to support a finding that he knowingly and willfully placed himself in that position.
See United States v. Bay State Ambulance and Hosp. Rental Serv., Inc.,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Although 36 C.F.R. § 4.23(a) does not appear to require a
mens rea
showing, the government charged that McFarland’s violation was done “knowingly” and "willfully.” Because McFarland was charged under this higher standard the sufficiency of the evidence is assessed accordingly.
See United States v. Zanghi,
. McFarland was also convicted of possessing marijuana in a national park, see 36 C.F.R. § 2.35(b)(2), but he has not appealed that conviction.
. The government contends that the cases McFarland cites are inapposite because they *32 involved statutes forbidding only "operation” of a motor vehicle. Indeed, unlike 36 C.F.R. § 4.23, some of the statutes use "actual physical control” as a conjunctive with, or as a part of the definition of, "operation.” But because we do not view the various state approaches as necessary to our analysis, we bypass a lengthy discussion of those cases.
. The evidence did not suggest any alternative explanation, such as that a third-party or parties were present or were potentially responsible for McFarland's intoxication, his placement in the truck, or the placement of his keys in the ignition.
. One line in the appellant’s brief suggests that McFarland may have gone to sleep after consuming the alcoholic beverage and before he became intoxicated. Whatever force this suggestion might have if it had been sufficiently argued, the evidence, as we have noted, is to the contrary. The hood of the truck was still warm, suggesting recent operation, and, when tested later, McFarland's blood alcohol content was .31%. While McFarland's counsel suggested at oral argument that the test may have shown a rising blood alcohol content, the totality of the evidence before the magistrate judge easily supported an inference of intoxication prior to McFarland’s falling asleep.
