BROWN, Judge.
Jade M. Cook appeals his conviction for possession of paraphernalia as a class A misdemeanor, as well as his sentence for a conviction of visiting a common nuisance, a class B misdemeanor. Cook raises three issues, which we revise and restate as:
We affirm.
On February 22, 2013, Howard County Sheriff's Department Deputies Todd Prifogle and Justin Markley were on duty in Kokomo, Indiana, where they visited a home to serve an arrest warrant on Billy Bess. As Deputy Markley approached the home, he could smell a "strange odor" emanating from the garage attached to the home. Transcript at 296. The deputies knocked at the door, and a woman named Lorrie Riche, who lived at the home with Bess, answered and informed them that Bess was not present. Riche allowed the deputies to enter the home to look for Bess. Once inside, another resident named Richard Berg approached the deputies and began shouting for Bess. Bess, who had been in the attached garage, entered the home through a door that led to the garage.
When Bess opened the door to the garage, Deputies Prifogle and Markley observed Cook standing in the garage behind Bess. The garage was filled with smoke and contained two bottles filled with bubbling liquid, and the bottles, smoke, and smell of the room indicated to the deputies that the garage was being used to manufacture methamphetamine. The deputies placed Bess and Cook under arrest. Upon Cook's arrest, Deputy Markley searched him and recovered a set of digital scales in his pocket.
In the garage, police found several other items consistent with the manufacture and use of methamphetamine, including: hypodermic needles, spoons, straws, a glass pipe, hydrochloric acid generators, Coleman fuel containing ammonia, coffee filters, glass jars, salt, funnels, cold packs containing ammonium nitrate, bottles of lye, pliers, a coffee grinder, rubber tubing, lithium batteries, ziplock bags, and empty pseudoephedrine boxes and blister packs. A field test performed on the straws found at the scene tested positive for methamphetamine. One liquid sample taken from bottles at the scene tested positive for methamphetamine.
On March 1, 2013, the State charged Cook with Count I, dealing in methamphetamine as a class B felony; Count II, possession of chemical reagents or precursors with intent to manufacture a controlled substance as a class D felony; Count III, possession of paraphernalia as a class A misdemeanor; and Count IV, visiting a common nuisance, a class B misdemeanor. On August 20, 2013, the State filed a motion to consolidate, on September 9, 2013, the court held a hearing on the State's motion, and the court ordered Cook's trial be consolidated with Bess's trial. On October 23, 2013, Bess by counsel filed a plea agreement with the court, and on November 20, 2013, Bess pled guilty to dealing in methamphetamine as a class B felony.
On February 21, 2014, the court commenced a jury trial in which evidence consistent with the foregoing was presented. At trial, the State called Kokomo Police Officer Derek Root, who assisted the Howard County Sheriff's Department in the investigation and specifically took photographs of the scene. During Officer Root's testimony, the State presented and the court admitted into evidence State's Exhibit 18, a photograph which depicted, among other things, hypodermic needles, which Officer Root testified were recovered from the drawer of a dresser located in the garage. The State also presented and the court admitted two other photographs depicting hypodermic needles as State's Exhibits 19 and 20, and Officer Root testified that such needles were recovered from the garage but could not "one hundred percent guarantee they were in the dresser at the time [they] collected them."
Cook testified that he was not at Bess's residence to manufacture methamphetamine but "went over there to get high and get some drugs, to get meth."
On February 26, 2014, the jury found Cook guilty of possession of paraphernalia and visiting a common nuisance and not guilty of dealing in methamphetamine and possession of chemical reagents or precursors with intent to manufacture a controlled substance. After dismissing the jury, the court proceeded to sentencing, noting that Cook "has 738 days of credit time and a maximum sentence of 548 days or so. . . ."
The first issue is whether the evidence is sufficient to sustain Cook's conviction for possession of paraphernalia as a class A misdemeanor. When reviewing claims of insufficiency of the evidence, we do not reweigh the evidence or judge the credibility of witnesses.
The offense of possession of paraphernalia as a class A misdemeanor is governed by Ind. Code § 35-48-4-8.3(a) which, at the time of Cook's offense, provided that:
(Subsequently amended by Pub. L. No. 158-2013, § 635 (eff. July 1, 2014)). The State alleged in its charging information that Cook "did knowingly or intentionally possess. . . . hypodermic needles; that [Cook] intended to use for introducing into [his] body a controlled substance, to-wit: methamphetamine. . . ." Appellant's Appendix at 17. Thus, in order to convict Cook of possession of paraphernalia as a class A misdemeanor, the State was required to prove that Cook knowingly or intentionally possessed hypodermic needles that he intended to use for introducing methamphetamine into his body.
A conviction for possession of contraband may rest upon either actual possession or constructive possession.
Cook argues that "[t]here is no `probative evidence' in the Record that [he] possessed `hypodermic needles', let alone with the intent to use them `for introducing into (his) body . . . methamphetamines' as charged in Count 3. None." Appellant's Brief at 3-4 (citation omitted). He argues that "the evidence is to the contrary" because Cook "admitted going to a common nuisance to get high
The State argues that it proved Cook constructively possessed the hypodermic needles using the additional circumstances expressed in
Our review of the record reveals that the State met its burden of proof on this issue. It is undisputed that Cook did not have exclusive control of the premises, and accordingly we may examine the additional circumstances listed above in determining whether evidence was presented from which the jury could infer that Cook had knowledge of the presence of the hypodermic needles. Cook was found in the garage which contained a working methamphetamine laboratory, and the needles were found in the garage. Also, to the extent that the list of additional circumstances is not an exhaustive list, we note that the jury heard evidence including that a set of digital scales was found on Cook's person upon his arrest and that he admitted at trial that he was high on methamphetamine at the time he was arrested and had visited Bess's residence in order to obtain the drug. Accordingly, we find that the jury could have inferred that Cook knew about and could exercise control over the needles.
Cook also claims that the State failed to prove he intended to use the needles to introduce methamphetamine into his body. Intent is a mental state that the trier of fact often must infer from the surrounding circumstances.
Based on the evidence, we conclude that the State presented evidence of a probative nature from which a reasonable jury could find Cook guilty of possession of paraphernalia as a class A misdemeanor.
The next issue is whether the court erred in sentencing Cook to "a period of 183 days" executed for his conviction of visiting a common nuisance as a class B misdemeanor. Appellant's Appendix at 37. As the State points out, however, Cook has already completed serving this sentence. Indeed, as noted above, Cook was incarcerated during the pendency of his jury trial which included a charge of dealing in methamphetamine as a class B felony, and he accumulated credit time in excess of the maximum sentence stemming from his two eventual convictions. The court sentenced him immediately following the jury's verdicts on the four charges against him, and he was released on his own recognizance. It is well settled that once a criminal defendant serves his sentence, "the issue of the validity of the sentence is rendered moot."
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm Cook's conviction for possession of paraphernalia as a class A misdemeanor, as well as his sentence for a conviction of visiting a common nuisance, a class B misdemeanor.
Affirmed.
BARNES, J., and BRADFORD, J., concur.