Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge SILBERMAN.
Tyrоne Walker was convicted of possession of over five grams of cocaine base with the intent to distribute. His appeal focuses on his challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the conviction and the trial judge’s aiding and abetting instruction. We affirm.
I.
When District of Columbiа police arrived at 1123 First Terrace to execute a search warrant, they discovered crack cocaine, marijuana, weapons, and drug paraphernalia spread throughout the third floor of the house. The largest concentration was found in one of the bedroоms (bedroom three). The police there found $2,621 in cash and plastic bags filled with $1,760 worth of crack, all nestled under the mattress of a waterbed. On the closet shelf sat a Sucrets box containing marijuana stems and seeds, a blackjack, and empty ziplock bags. A small hand scale and an array оf empty bags littered the bedroom floor. Officer Derek Bell questioned appellant, who gave his name and referred to bedroom three as his bedroom.
The officers found appellant in one of the other bedrooms (bedroom one), along with Donnell Reed and Reed’s girlfriend. Live ammunition, $870 in cash, plastic bags, and an electronic scale — all in plain view — were scattered around appellant. Reed told police that he lived in the house and admitted that the items in that room belonged to him. On the floor of a neighboring bedroom (bedroom two), in which five additional peоple were present, police recovered loose rocks of crack cocaine and ziplock bags containing both marijuana and rocks of cocaine. In the third floor bathroom, police found 61 ziplock bags filled with cocaine, with a retail value of $1,220, floаting in the toilet and four more strewn about the floor near the bathtub.
Walker’s defense rested on his contention that he was merely an innocent occupant of the house, with no responsibility for, or any knowledge of, the incriminating items found inside his bedroom — a room he confessed was his when he stayed over at the house, but that he claimed other individuals used, including some of the individuals found in bedroom two. Walker admitted general knowledge of the drug activities in the house, but he pointed to the individuals found in bedroom two as the perpetrators.
The government pursued two alternative theories upon which the jury could convict Walker under 21 U.S.C. § 841 (1994). It was claimed that Walker resided in bedroom three, and consequently exercised dominion and control over the drugs and paraphernalia — obviously intended for distribution — in that room. Alternatively, the government posited that appellant was guilty under the samе provision, § 841, as Reed’s aider and *441 abettor. See 18 U.S.C. § 2 (1994). The jury-received instructions on both the principal and aider and abettor theories of liability. The jury rejected Walker’s defense and convicted him without specifying which of the government’s two theories of liability supported its verdict.
II.
Appellant first claims that thеre was insufficient evidence to support his conviction for possession with intent to distribute.- We apply the familiar deferential standard of review under which we determine “whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution,
any
rational trier of fact could havе found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Jackson v. Virginia,
It is undisputed that Walker “resided” in bedroom three. But appellant points out that it is also undisputed thаt at least four others used that room and that the drug paraphernalia found
in that room
was not in plain view so there was no reason for the jury to infer that he knew about the drugs, let alone possessed them with the intent to distribute. He relies particularly on two of our prior cases,
United States v. Thorne,
In
Thorne,
we held that evidencе that a defendant shared a bedroom with four others including his brother where drugs and drug paraphernalia were found in a closet was insufficient to support an inference that the defendant posséssed the drugs. We emphasized that the drugs were not in plain view so there was no reason to conсlude that the defendant knew about them.
See
We think our case is distinguishable in several critical respects. First, appellant was found in bedroom one (Reed’s room), surrounded by drug paraphernalia in the open. Drugs were found all over the floor of another bedroom and in the bathroom. Appellant could not claim, as did the defendants in Thorne and Watkins, that he was innocent of any knowledge of drugs and drug paraphernalia possession in the house.
Second, the evidence here was sufficient for the jury to conclude that appellant was the primary occupant of bedroom three. Appellant himself told jurors of his admission to the police that he lived at 1123 First Terrace. Officer Bell testified that Walker referred to bedroom three specifically as his room, and Walker’s mother told jurors that bedroom three belonged to Walker. Officers found identification for appellant, including a photo I.D., on top of the television set in bedroom three, a poster-size photo of appellant adorning the wall, and a shoe box holding Walker’s personal papers (including a District of Columbia non-driver identification card) in the room. Appellant’s name is even listed on the lease as one of the residents. Once a jury reaches the conclusion that Walker was the primary occupant of bedroom three the faсt that the drugs and drug paraphernalia are stored away in the room does not tend to exculpate him. For it would be rather illogical for a user of the room to leave any material in the bedroom of the primary occupant under the assumption that such material would remain undetеcted by the primary occupant — at least absent a showing that the material was hidden in places not normally utilized.
We therefore are confident that the evidence is sufficient as to the possession with intent to distribute charge. But appellant contends that we must also independently еvaluate the sufficiency of the aider and
*442
abettor evidence. It is not at all clear, to be sure, exactly .which evidence the government relies on to make out the charge of appellant’s aiding and abetting Reed’s possession. Appellant argues that the government may nоt claim that aiding and abetting is merely a subset of appellant’s possession.
See United States v. White,
Still,
Griffin
left intact, if somewhat battered, the Court’s earlier decision in
Yates v. United States,
At one point in his instruction to the jurors, the judge informed them that:
It is not necessary that the defendant have had the same intent that the principal offender had when the сrime was committed or that he have intended to commit the particular crime committed by the principal offender. (Emphases added).
Appellant rightly tells us that the trial court’s statement is at odds with language in some of our cases, in which we have stated that an aider and abettor must have thе “same intent” as a principal.
See United States v. Salamanca,
The government’s brief, although decidedly uncomfortable with and even critical of the footnote in
North
and our language in
Salamanca,
does not clearly indicate why appellant’s reliance of those cases is misplaced. That seems to be because the government reads
North
and
Salamanca’s
use of the phrase “same intent” as requiring an intent which is “matched” — which would mean that an aider and abettor must have
exactly
the same knowledge and disposition as the principal. But that is an overreading; no court has ever. so held, as it virtually would eliminate aider and abettor liability. Appellant, ironically, has it right when, in defense of our “same intent” language, he points to cases that have instead used the term shared intent,
see, e.g., Nye & Nissen v. United States,
The
North
case footnote upon which
Sala-manca
relied, although it usеd the cryptic and somewhat ambiguous phrase “same intent,” must be read as meaning no more than the traditional notion of
shared
intent because the note explicitly relied on
United
*443
States v. Sampol,
When the district judge told the jury that they need not find that appellant had the “same intent” as Reеd, we think, after examining his whole instruction, he was indicating only that the jury need not find a perfectly matched knowledge and intent. The trial judge began by telling jurors that an aider and abettor must “intentionally partieipate[ ] in the commission of a crime” and that they “must find that the defendant knowingly associated himself with thе person who committed the crime, that he participated in the crime as something he wished to bring about, and that he intended by his action to make it succeed.” The trial judge also told them that “some affirmative conduct by the defendant to help in planning and carrying out the crime is necessary.” Read in their entirety, then, the instructions did not remove the intent requirement from the jury’s purview, as appellant asserts, but instead gave the jury adequate guidance on the requisite intent for aiding and abetting. Even if we concede, as we must, that “same intent” is imprecise and ambiguous, the surrounding language clarifiеd the ambiguity.
See United States v. Childress,
* ■ * * * * *
Appellant’s remaining arguments are of little moment. Appellant claims the trial judge , abused Ms discretion in refusing to grant a mistrial after the government elicited allegedly improper hearsay. Officer Bell repeated a statement from Annette Reed, appellant’s mother, to justify Ms decision not to arrest her that rnght.
3
The trial judge struck the statement from the record and instructed the jury to disregard it. The next morning, the judge again reminded jurors not to consider the testimony. We have no cause to doubt that the jury followed the court’s curative instructions, therefore we do not believe the triаl judge abused Ms discretion in denying the motion for a mistrial.
See United States v. Burroughs,
Appellant also contends that the trial judge should have declared a mistrial or held a post-trial hearing after discovering that a juror failed to disclose information at
voir dire.
Appellant scrutinizes the response of
*444
the jury foreman, who denied having “been accused” of a crime оther than a traffic offense during the past 10 years. The foreman was charged with a misdemeanor 10 years and six months prior to responding to the question, but was not acquitted until nine years and nine months before
voir dire.
Because of the phrasing of the question, we doubt the juror’s answer was improper at all, let alone sufficiently defective for appellant to clear the heightened thresholds of review we apply to the district court’s denial of the request for a new trial,
see McDonough Power Equipment, Inc. v. Greenwood,
Accordingly, appellant’s conviction is therefore
Affirmed.
Notes
. Similarly, in
Salamanca,
although the opinion cites to the "same criminal intent" language from
North,
the court found insufficient evidence against Salamanca because he did not assist in the offense until
after
it was committed. The court noted that he was more likely an accessory after the fact,
see Salamanca,
. The latter clause in the judge’s charge — “[the. government need not show] that he have intended to commit the particular crime committed by the рrincipal offender” — might be thought more troubling than the "same intent” language that appellant focuses on, but we think that the jury would likely focus on the judge's reference to the
particular
criminal act. That is, we think the jury would recognize the judge’s effort to focus them on the fact that an aider and abettor "neеd not know [the substantive offense’s] - details,”
Sampol,
.Specifically, Officer Bell told jurors that Ms. Reed "explained to me that she had no knowledge that her sons were doing drugs upstairs.” The government argues that Ms. Reed’s statement affected Bell’s state of mind and was introduced solely to show its effect on him — not to prove its veraсity — because whether it was true or false, it affected Officer Bell’s beliefs. Used in that manner, contends the government, the statement did not constitute hearsay. This argument may well merit additional attention in the absence of a limiting instruction, but we believe the instruction stripped the statement of any prejudicial impact, regardless of its intended use at trial.
