Madrid Elsworth Williams was convicted in a bench trial of possession of cocaine with the intent to distribute in violation of Code § 18.2-248 and sentenced to five years in prison, three years and six months suspended.- Williams appeals his conviction on the grounds that (1) the evidence used against him was unlawfully seized because the police improperly impounded his car, (2) the evidence was insufficient to prove he possessed the cocaine, and (3) the evidence was insufficient to establish his intent to distribute the cocaine. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
*728 I. Background
On appeal, we view the evidence, and all reasonable inferences that may be drawn from the evidence, in a light most favorable to the Commonwealth as the party prevailing below.
Garcia v. Commonwealth,
McLean asked Williams to produce his driver’s license and the vehicle’s registration. Williams searched the glove compartment for “a few seconds,” but he could produce nеither the vehicle’s registration nor a driver’s license. McLean asked Williams if he would accompany him to his patrol car where he could verbally obtain Williams’s information. Williams complied.
McLean ran the information Williams produced through dispatch and learned that Williams’s license was suspended. Williams stated that the car belonged to his girlfriend, but McLean could not recall whether he provided a name. “I think he just said ‘girlfriend,’ “ McLean testified. McLean and Williams remained in the car while McLean completed the appropriate summonses.”
When Officer James Spaven arrived on the scene, McLean asked him to prepare the vehicle for towing and impoundment. Spaven performed an inventory search of the vehicle and discovered а “Newports” cigarette box in the glove compartment. The cigarette box contained twenty-four individually packaged rocks of crack cocaine. No ingestion devices were found in the car. Spaven showed McLean the evidence, who then informed Williams that he was under arrest for possession of cocaine. Williams responded, “Oh, man, thanks for not charging me with PWID [рossession with intent to distribute].”
At trial, McLean gave the following reasons for impounding the vehicle: “If there is not a licensed driver inside the *729 vehicle, then we tow it for several reasons, safety of the contents of the vehicle, plus at the time this vehicle had a broken-out window, and this neighborhood is not a safe place to leave the vehicle in.” McLean also said that he could nоt determine the owner of the vehicle because Williams could not produce the vehicle’s registration information.
The Commonwealth called Detective R.M. Holly as an expert in the use, packaging, and distribution of narcotics. Holly testified that the certificate of analysis established that the cocaine found in the cigarette box weighed 1.95 grams. Heavy users, Holly explained, would use approximately half a gram per day. In his opinion, the cocaine recovered from the car was inconsistent with personal use because users could “get twice as much for the amount of money” if the drugs were purchased in block form. “The fact that [the cocaine was] individually wrapped” also informed Holly’s opinion that it was intended for “something other than personal use.”
Williams testified in his own defense. Williams claimed that he provided the vehicle’s registration card, with the name of his girlfriend listed as the owner, to McLean. Williams said he told McLean the car belonged to her and that he asked the officer to call her. Williams denied saying “thanks for not charging me with PWID” until he was brought before a magistrate. Although Williams stated that he was unaware of the narcotics in the glove compartment, he admitted that he smoked the cigarette brand “Newports.”
Before trial, Williams filed a motion to suppress the evidence on the ground that the police improperly impounded his car. The trial court denied the motion. Williams renewed his objection to the impoundment by a motion to strike at the close of all the evidence. Williams also argued that the evidence was insufficient to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that he possessed the cocaine and that he intended to distribute it. The trial court denied the motion to strike and convicted Williams as charged. This appeal followed.
*730 II. The Vehicle Impoundment Was Proper
Williams contends the vehicle he was driving was illegally impounded and that the fruits of the inventory search were improperly admitted into evidence.
1
On appeal of the trial court’s denial of Williams’s motion to suppress, this Court views the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the party prevailing below, and grants to it all reasonable inferences that may be drawn from the evidence.
King v. Commonwealth,
Searches and seizures conducted without a warrant are presumptively invalid.
Minnesota v. Dickerson,
*731
Under the community caretaker exception, the police may conduct a warrantless inventory search of a vehicle provided the following conditions are met: 1) the vehicle must be lawfully impounded; 2) the impoundment and subsequent search must be conducted pursuant to standard police procedures; and 3) the impoundment and subsequent search must not be a pretextual surrogate for an improper investigatory motive.
King,
Here, the inventory search was conducted pursuant to standard procedures and no evidence establishes that the police had an investigatory motive. The sole remaining question is whether the police properly impounded the vehicle.
See Servis,
We must consider “not whether there was a need for the police to impound [the] vehicle but, rather, whether the police officer’s decision to impound was reasonable under the circumstances.”
United States v. Brown,
This Court in
King
found the police impоundment of the defendant’s vehicle was unreasonable and improper under the following facts. King was stopped for speeding on a heavily congested highway in Virginia.
Id.
at 307,
Williams contends the decision in
King
compels reversal here. We disagree. The police stopped Williams in the vehicle, which had a broken window, at three o’clock in the morning in a neighborhood described as an unsafe place to leave the property. Williams could produce neither a registration card evidencing ownership nor a license for him to drive. The trial court did not believe Williams’s contention that he told police the car belonged to his girlfriend.
See Sandoval v. Commonwealth,
Other jurisdictions, in which the courts have addressed the question, have come to the same conclusion we reach here. In
State v. Peterson,
Williams also contends that the vehicle’s impoundment was invalid because the police failed to ask him whether he could arrange tо have the car moved to another location. Williams’s reliance on our decision in
King
for the stated proposition is misplaced.
King
does not support the argument Williams makes, and we decline to adopt the principle he espouses. 3 LaFave,
supra,
at 527 (“[T]o be reasonable under the Fourth Amendment, the arresting officer should be required ... to comply with any reasonable alternative disposition
requested.”
(emphasis added)). The fact that the police
*734
officer “made no inquiry” of the owner in
King
about alternative arrangements for safeguarding the car,
We, therefore, affirm the trial court’s decision that the impoundment was lawful because, under the circumstances of the instant case, we find that the officer’s action to safeguard the vehicle by impounding it was entirely reasonable.
III. The Evidence Was Sufficient to Prove Williams Possessed the Cocaine Found in the Glove Compartment
Williams argues the evidencе was insufficient to support a finding that he possessed the cocaine recovered from the glove compartment. We disagree.
A. Standard of Review
When reviewing a sufficiency of the evidence claim on appeal, the function of this Court is to evaluate whether
“any
rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Kelly v. Commonwealth,
B. Williams Constructively Possessed the Cocaine
“In order to сonvict a person of illegal possession of an illicit drug, the Commonwealth must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused was aware of the presence and character of the drug and that the accused consciously possessed it.”
Walton v. Commonwealth,
[P]roof of constructive possessiоn will suffice. Constructive possession may be established when there are “ ‘acts, statements, or conduct of the accused or other facts or circumstances which tend to show that the [accused] was aware of both the presence and character of the substance and that it was subject to his dominion and control.’ ”
Id.
at 426,
*736
The trial court’s finding that Williams was aware that drugs were present in the car is amply supported by the evidence. The police discovered the “Newports” cigarette box containing twenty-four individually wrapped baggies of cocaine “sitting right on the edge [of the glove compartment] as soon as you opened” it. The box was open with plastic baggies “sticking out of it.” The glove compartment was within Williams’s reach. Indeed, the evidence showed that Williams opened the glove compartment in search of the registration. Williams’s testimony also established that he smoked the “Newports” brand of cigarettes found in the glove compartment. Furthermore, when Williams was arrested and charged with a possession offense, he thanked Officer McLean for not charging him with “PWID.” The trial court properly and reasonably cоncluded from the evidence, viewed in its totality, that Williams was aware of the presence and character of the drugs and that he exercised dominion and control of the drugs.
See Copeland v. Commonwealth,
IV. The Evidence Was Sufficient to Prove Williams Possessed the Cocaine with the Intent to Distribute
Williams’s final argument asserts that the evidence failed to establish he intended to distribute the cocaine. We find that the amount of the cocaine found in Williams’s possession, considered together with its packaging and Williams’s statement to the police at the time of his arrest, proved his intent to distribute beyond a reasonable doubt.
The standard of review for this sufficiency claim remains the same.
See supra
Part III.A. “Because direct proof of [the] intent [to distribute] is often impossible, it must be shown by circumstantial evidence.”
Servis,
Detective Holly, an expert qualified to testify to the use, packaging, and distribution of narcotics, stated that the cocaine from the glove box was inconsistent with personal use because it was not in “block form” and the “rocks” were individually wrapped. Holly explained that a personal user would not possess cocaine in the individually wrapped packages found in Williams’s possession beсause a user “could get almost twice as much drugs” were it bought in block form. Holly also noted that the individually wrapped packages, containing what appeared to be a ten-dollar rock in each, supported his opinion that the drugs were inconsistent with personal use. Expert opinion “can be considered by the fact finder together with other evidence to determine whether the Commonwealth’s evidence proved beyond a reasonable doubt the intent to distribute.”
Askew v. Commonwealth,
V. Conclusion
We hold that the police properly impounded the vehicle which Williams was driving bеcause he could produce neither *738 proof of ownership nor a valid driver’s license when he was stopped in the early morning hours in a vehicle with a broken window in an area that was not suitable for the vehicle’s safekeeping. We also find that the evidence presented at his trial was sufficient to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Williams possessed coсaine with the intent to distribute it. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The Commonwealth contends that Williams cannot claim standing to challenge the vehicle's impoundment because the record fails to establish that he had a legitimate expectation of privacy in the glove compartment. For the purposes of this appeal, we assume without deciding that Williams has standing to challenge the vehicle's impoundment.
