Ramiro Vargas disputes the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his felony convictions for possessing and conspiring to possess cocaine with intent to distribute, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 841(a)(1) and 846. We affirm.
I
FACTS
On April 28, 1989, Rhode Island State Police executed a search warrant at 48 Brayton Avenue in Providence. When the police entered the apartment, appellant Ramiro Vargas was playing cards in the kitchen with alleged coconspirator Juan Restre-po and a female companion. The search disclosed approximately one kilogram of cocaine concealed with Restrepo’s passport behind a wooden baseboard in a bedroom. In the only other bedroom, the police found records of cocaine transactions on top of a bureau, and $2400 in cash in a jacket pocket. In open view in the kitchen, the police found a small brown notebook ledger which the jury could have concluded contained records of cocaine dealings.
At trial, the jury was presented with four important pieces of physical evidence tending to indicate that the apartment at 48 Brayton Avenue had been under appellant’s exclusive tenancy and occupancy for several weeks prior to the search: (i) an April 1989 rent receipt in appellant’s name, (ii) a public utility business record, bearing appellant’s signature, requesting electrical service to appellant as the sole occupant of the apartment at 48 Brayton Avenue, (iii) a Rhode Island Personal Identification Card bearing appellant’s signature and reflecting appellant’s address as 48 Brayton Avenue, and (iv) a State of Rhode Island Motor Vehicle Division instruction permit, issued April 24, 1989, bearing appellant’s signature, and reflecting appellant’s address as 48 Brayton Avenue.
Notwithstanding the contrary evidence, appellant testified that he was not in control of the apartment. He stated that he had come to the United States from his native Colombia in March of 1989, and had gone to live with his brother, Rodrigo Vargas, at 48 Brayton Avenue. He explained that he had no proper identification with which to secure employment, since he had entered the United States illegally. He testified that in order to obtain a driver’s license to present to prospective employers, he needed proof of residence; therefore he had Rodrigo obtain a rent receipt in appellant’s name and requested the electric company to put electrical service in his own name, even though he was not renting the apartment. Appellant further explained that he had no control over who was allowed in the apartment and that he had not invited Juan Restrepo or his female companion to visit on the day of the raid. The landlord contradicted appellant’s testimony. He testified that he rented the apartment to appellant in April 1989 after the previous tenant, Rodrigo Vargas, told the landlord that he was leaving and that appellant would be taking over the apartment. 1
Notwithstanding appellant’s testimony, the jury found him guilty as charged on both counts and the district court denied his motion for judgment of acquittal.
II
DISCUSSION
On a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, we accord considerable deference to the challenged verdict. Without weighing witness credibility,
United States v. Sanchez,
A. Substantive Offense
The substantive offense of conviction required proof beyond a reasonable doubt that the cocaine discovered behind the bedroom baseboard was knowingly possessed by the appellant for purposes of distribution.
See
21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). Possession may be actual or constructive,
Batista-Polanco,
We first consider whether a rational juror could have found, beyond a reasonable doubt, that appellant had constructive possession of the cocaine secreted behind the bedroom baseboard. There was sufficient evidence from which the jury could have found that appellant had been the only tenant and occupant of the apartment for anywhere from eight days to several weeks prior to the raid. It could have been found that appellant enjoyed either exclusive or joint dominion and control of the entire apartment during either of these periods.
See Barnes,
Second, there was ample circumstantial evidence that the cocaine discovered behind the baseboard was intended for distribution. The quantity of cocaine, one kilogram, was large enough to support a fair
*429
jury inference that it was not intended merely for personal consumption.
See United States v. Geer,
Third, it would be reasonable to infer that no non-occupant, other than a confidant of the tenant, would deposit a valuable cache of contraband in a bedroom of an unsuspecting tenant’s apartment from which retrieval would be much more difficult at best, and the risk of discovery and loss far greater, than if a more accessible and closely controlled location were used or the secret were shared with the tenant.
See United States v. Passos-Paternina,
B. Conspiracy
“ ‘A criminal conspiracy is a tacit or explicit agreement to perform an unlawful act’ ...,”
Batista-Polanco,
The conspiracy verdict was supported by sufficient evidence as well. Appellant’s connection with the cocaine distribution scheme was inferable from circumstantial evidence going well beyond “mere presence” in the apartment at the time of the raid.
See, e.g., Batista-Polanco,
As concerns Juan Restrepo’s participation in the alleged conspiracy, appellant testified that he had not invited Restrepo, or his female companion, to the apartment. In evaluating the credibility of this testimony, however, the jury would have had to compare it with the uncontroverted evidence that appellant and Restrepo were in appellant’s apartment at the time the police arrived, that drug records were discovered in open view, and that Restrepo’s passport and the cocaine were hidden together behind a bedroom baseboard.
We cannot say that no rational juror could have drawn the inference that appellant, the tenant, and his alleged coconspirator, Restrepo, the owner of the passport, agreed and intended to facilitate a scheme to distribute the cocaine secreted at 48 Brayton Avenue. On the contrary, such an inference convincingly explains the concealment of the cocaine and Restrepo’s passport in the same hiding place in appellant’s apartment. Considering the value of the cocaine and the importance of one’s passport, alternative inferences more favorable to appellant’s view of the case appear considerably less plausible, if not highly speculative on the present record.
4
Thus, there was no basis in the record for inferring that anyone but Restrepo had an interest in his passport or that anyone other than Res-trepo and/or appellant, the only tenant and occupant of the apartment, had knowledge of, and access to, the cache of cocaine and the passport hidden behind the bedroom baseboard. Accordingly, the jury rationally could have concluded from appellant’s testimony, the physical evidence, appellant’s tenancy, occupancy and presence at 48 Brayton Avenue, as well as from the “collocation of circumstances,”
Glasser,
Affirmed.
Notes
. The landlord testified that Rodrigo Vargas said that he did not know whether or not he would be returning to the apartment. According to appellant’s testimony, Rodrigo left the country on April 20, 1989 — eight days before the search. There was no other evidence as to Rodrigo’s plans or whereabouts.
. The only direct evidence that appellant did not enjoy exclusive control was his own testimony that he neither rented nor controlled the apartment. Although it would be sufficient to point out that the jury rejected appellant’s testimony,
see Batista-Polanco,
. The link between appellant and the hidden cocaine was significantly strengthened by the presence of drug records in open view, both in a bedroom and in the kitchen. Even if it were to be assumed that Juan Restrepo or Rodrigo Vargas was occupying the bedroom in which the cocaine was hidden, the presence of drug records in what then would have to be assumed to have been appellant’s bedroom, as well as in the kitchen, would support a reasonable inference that appellant, the tenant, was a knowing partner in the possession of the contraband.
See, e.g., Batista-Polanco,
. Certainly it would not have been impermissible for the jury to credit appellant's testimony that he did not know the cocaine and the passport were hidden in the apartment. Nevertheless, with or without appellant's testimony, which we must assume the jury rejected,
see Batista-Polanco,
. As the jury supportably found that appellant conspired with Restrepo, it is unnecessary to consider whether Rodrigo Vargas and appellant were coconspirators as well.
