| Aрpellant appeals from his conviction by jury trial of maintaining a drug premises.
I. Facts
According to testimony at the jury trial, appellant rented a room at a Motel 6 in Conway for his friend Steve Menzie because Menzie did not have a valid form of identification. After renting the room, appellant took his three-year-оld son and seven-1 ¿month-old daughter to the room. Appellant’s estranged wife -contacted him requesting to see the children and visited with them at the hotel room.
When Officer Danny Worley and two other officers arrived, appellant answered the door and verified that the room was rented in his name. Menzie and another man were in the room with appellant and his children. As Officer Worley explained that he was there to conduct а welfare check, he noticed what appeared to be an assault rifle near the nightstand behind appellant. Appellant explained that it was an airsoft gun and gave Officer Worley
| ¡¡After Officer Worley read appellant his Miranda rights,' appellant executed a consent-to-search form authorizing the officers to search the motel room. During his search, Officer Worley found a box underneath the bed containing drugs and drug parаphernalia along with two pipes on the floor next to the box. He also found another box on a shelf that also contained drug paraphernalia. One glass pipe contained .1331 grams of marijuana, and one contained methamphetamine residue. A glass smoking device contаined .3198 grams of marijuana. Two clear bags were found: one contained a crystal-like substance, one bag of which was found to contain a total of .4060 grams of methamphetamine, and the other contained a .counterfeit substance.
Appellant was subsequently charged by felony informаtion on May 4, 2015, with one count each of maintaining drug premises, a Class C Felony; possession with purpose to deliver, delivery or manufacture of counterfeit substance, a Class C felony; possession of methamphetamine with purpose to deliver, a Class C felony; possession of drug paraphernalia to ingest, inhale, etc., a Class D felony; and possession of drug paraphernalia, a Class A Misdemeanor. He was also charged therein with two counts of endangering welfare of a minor—II, a Class A misdemeanor. Through multiple filed amended felony in-formations, the last being filed on July 6, 2016, the рossession with purpose to deliver, delivery or manufacture of counterfeit substance charge was dropped and replaced with one count of possession of a controlled substance—schedule I/II, methamphetamine, a Class D felony; and one count of failure to аppear, a Class C felony, was added.
|4A trial on the matter was held on August 25, 2016, following which a jury found appellant guilty of all remaining charges
II. Sufficiency
The prohibition against dоuble jeopardy requires that we review the sufficiency of evidence before we examine trial error.
Appellant argues that there was insufficient evidence to support his conviction for maintaining a premise, specifically arguing that the location was not kept or maintained by him, and that there was no evidence that the location was used for others to use or obtain drugs. We cannot agree.
It is unlawful for any person knowingly to keep or maintain any store, shop, warehouse, dwelling, building or other struсture or place or premise that is resorted to by a person for the purpose of using or obtaining a controlled substance or that .is used for keeping a controlled substance.
■ |fA. Keep or Maintain
Appellant argues that the phrase “keep or maintain” is onе that “direct[s] a constant and prolonged effort to set up some place, structure or premises for using, obtaining or keeping drugs.” Neither statute nor caselaw defines the phrase “keep or maintain”; furthermore, no minimum-time-period requirement for occupancy or possessiоn of the drug premises is given in the statute.
Where there is joint occupancy of the premises where contraband is found, some additional factors must be present linking the accused to the contraband.
|7Before this court, appellant argues that he did not keep or maintain a structure; “[a]t most he borrowed [the hotel room] for a night.” Appеllant’s assertion that he borrowed the room at most is an issue of credibility. It is the responsibility of the fact-finder, not the appellate court, to weigh the evidence and to make credibility determinations.
B. Purpose of Use for Others
Appellant then argues that appel-lee failed to prove that the purpose of the room was | sfor others to resort to for drug usage or to obtain drugs. Appellant argues that- the statute “requires proof thаt the very purpose of the premises is drug use, distribution or storage” and not a “presumption that wherever a drug'happens to be, the property on which it sits is a drug premises.” We disagree.
Officer Tom Kennedy testified that some of the contraband found in the hotel room—specifically the marijuana pipe, “baggies,” syringes, spoons, and Q-tips—were paraphernalia either for the use of a drug or for the distribution or hale of a drug. Tara Lucas, of-the- Arkansas Statd Crime Lab, testified that some of the seized items contained either marijuana or methamphetamine or residue of the sаme. Appellant admitted that he had been a drug addict, using marijuana and methamphetamine, but denied having used the latter since June of 2015. This denial was in direct contradiction to his almost immediately following statement that he had a small amount of methamphetamine on him at the time of his arrest for рersonal use. He deriied using any controlled substance, that anyone else’ used a control substance, or that he saw the contraband-containing boxes or the pipes that were discovered in the hotel room. A jury need not lay aside its common sense in evaluating the ordinary affairs оf life, -and it may infer a defendant’s guilt from improbable explanations of incriminating conduct.
III. Mistrial .
Appellant also argues that the circuit court- erred in failing to grant his motion for a mistrial based on appellee’s questioning of a witness, which improperly-shifted the burden of proof. Appellant argues that the circuit court’s admonition was insufficient to cure any prejudice to him because “[t]he evidentiary hole [appellant’s] lawyer pointed out was at the heart of his defense”—the “evidentiary hole” being appellee’s failure to check the evidence, which he defines as a “glaring error.” We disagree.
A mistrial is an extreme remedy that should not be declared unless there has been error so ■ prejudicial that justice cannot be served by continuing the trial or when the fundamental fairness of the trial itself has been manifestly affected.
During the trial, appellee asked Officer Danny Worley if he received a request from appellant to send any of the evidence for fingеrprinting. Officer Worley stated that appellant did not make such a request. Appellant’s counsel requested that the question be repeated, and he objected ,to the question as it .was being repeated. Noting that he did not hear the question the first time, before Officer Worley answered it, appellant’s counsel argued that appellee was attempting to shift the burden of proof to appellant when the burden of proof did not belong to him, but to appellee. Appellee responded arguing that the Arkansas State Crime Lab is a referral agency to which defense attorneys are allowed to and routinely do refer. . It argued that it was not shifting the burden of proof, but arguing that appellant had the ability to request that the evidence be analyzed for fingerprints, but did not do so. The circuit court sustained appellant’s objection, finding that appellee’s questioning shifted the burden to appellant to prove or disprove something that is an element of the case.
1 t jAppellant then asked for a mistrial, which the circuit court denied. Appellant then requested an instruction to the jury to disregard the question and its answer, and an instruction that appellаnt had no burden to prove any evidence. The circuit court agreed to give an admonition and stated to the jury “[ljadies and gentlemen, there was an objection to the last question.
Notwithstanding his motion for a mistrial, appellant received the admonition he requested. His failure to object to the sufficiency of the admonition is viewed by this court with the presumption that he found it satisfactory.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Appellant was convicted of six other charges; however, he does not appeal from those convictions.
. Appellant had sole custody 'of the children.
. The possession of drug paraphernalia charge was nolle prossed.
. Stover v. State,
. Loggins v. State,
. King v. State,
. Owens v. State,
. Velasco v. State,
. King, supra (citing Heydenrich v. State,
. Loggins,
. Curtis v. State,
. Hoodenpyle v. State,
. Loggins v. State,
. Id.
. Appellant admitted as much in' his own testimony.
. Singleton v. State,
. Hoodenpyle,
. Id. at 9,
. Velasco,
. Id. (citing Holt v. State,
. Thompson v. State,
. Id. (citing Strawhacker v. State,
. Id. (citing Taylor v. State,
. Williams v. State,
. Id. (citing Plessy v. State,
. See Zachary v. State,
. It appears that the circuit court also failed to hear the first recitation, of the question or the answer as it initially stated that it was not going to allow the question to be asked before being informed that it had already been asked.
