DREW, J.
| T LaBarrie D. Watson appeals his two convictions: attempted manufacturing of cocaine and possession with intent to distribute cocaine.
I. ERRORS ASSIGNED IN THIS APPEAL
He urges that these errors were made at the trial level:
• there was insufficient evidence to support his convictions;
• his pro se motion to suppress should have been granted;
• the court improperly admitted copies of photographs of buy funds;
• his motion for new trial was improperly denied;
• his motion for reconsideration of sentence was improperly denied;
• he should have been granted a Franks1 hearing; and
• ineffective assistance of counsel.
We affirm both convictions. Each sentence is illegally lenient. We vacate these sentences and remand for resentencing. We direct the trial court to apportion part of each sentence be served without benefits.
II. FACTS
A. FACTUAL LAW ENFORCEMENT TESTIMONY
Six law officers2 testified about the facts of the investigation and the execution of [697]*697the search warrants. Their testimony was consistent.
12This case began in May 2011, after receipt of information about the distribution of crack cocaine at two premises in the 2500 and 2600 blocks of Darien Street. On several occasions, the officers had observed the defendant traveling between 2512 Darien Street, 2602 Darien Street, and 1441 Claiborne Avenue. He had been tied to the 2512 Darien Street address through past investigations. The 2602 Darien Street house was an empty trap house3 without water hookup. Confidential informants made multiple drug buys with prerecorded buy money at the two Darien Street houses.
Based on the foregoing, search warrants were secured for each house.
When the law officers arrived at 1441 Claiborne Avenue, they observed several security cameras; a pickup, known to be connected to the defendant; a parked carpet cleaning van; a partially open front door; and cleaning hoses running from the van through the front door. When the officers knocked, there was no response. They entered the 1,500-square foot residence and told the uniformed carpet cleaning employees to leave.
Watson peered out into the hallway from the rear bedroom, made eye contact, slunk back into the room and shut the door. He did not come out of the room until the officers identified themselves again. He was then handcuffed, searched and advised of his rights as per Miranda.4
Between $150 and $200 was seized from the truck, $85 of whidl was traceable to the controlled drug buys at the Darien gtreet locations
the main bedroom, three firearms were discovered:
|a> a .857 revolver between the box spring and the mattress:
• an AK-47 pistol under the left side of the bed; and
• a .22 caliber revolver in a drawer in the room.
The state submitted photographs of the currency and firearms.
Also seized from the master bedroom were:
• several television monitors of a surveillance system;
• $1,581 in a dresser drawer;5
• male clothing;
• photos of Watson and Keriea Hymes together;
• a prescription bottle6 in the defendant’s name;
• defendant’s driver’s license and I.D. card;7
• various receipts and pieces of mail addressed to the defendant.8
From the kitchen, the agents seized:
[698]*698• a flat dish containing a white rock-like substance in the pantry;
• a digital scale and a measuring cup, each with white powdery residue;
• packaging materials and small Apple Baggies;
• ammunition; and
14* slightly over 10 grams of cocaine.9
B. EXPERT LAW ENFORCEMENT TESTIMONY
Lt. Carl Townley of the Caddo Shreveport Narcotics Task Force testified as an expert regarding possession with intent to distribute drugs, as well as the packaging, sale and distribution of narcotics.10 Town-ley testified that based on his review of the evidence at 1441 Claiborne Avenue and accompanying reports, he believed that Watson had been cooking dope and possessing it with intent to distribute. He relied on these facts:
• a large amount of drugs was already cooked;
• a Pyrex container containing residue was in the sink;
• there was already a large quantity of crack cocaine;
• seven grams of cocaine (1/4 ounce) were found in a large Baggie;
• this amount of cocaine would make 70 individual dosage units;
• the product had not been cut up, yet there were probably 100 Baggies;
• this amount was inconsistent with personal use;
• there was no crack pipe;
• a lethal dose of cocaine is 8.1 grams within a 24-hour period;
• mid-level dealers supply street-level dealers, who stand on street corners selling little $10 bags (commonly called dime bags) of crack;
• mid-level dealers sell large amounts11 and use electronic scales;
|5» mid-level dealers do not peddle dime
bags on the street;
• mid-level dealers get trap houses and small-timers to sell their drugs;
• the officers followed Watson, placing him at each location;
• serial numbers on currency are similar to fingerprints;
• buy money is essential in controlled drug buys;
• drug dealers do not keep property in their own name; and
• family and girlfriends often keep the property in their names.
C. DEFENSE TESTIMONY
Kerica Hymes testified that:
• the day before the searches, she gave birth to Watson’s child;
• she lived alone at 1441 Claiborne Avenue in Shreveport;
• Watson did not and has never lived with her;
• Watson was a friend of the family;
• she was in the hospital for several days before giving birth;
• she wanted the carpets cleaned before she and the baby came home;
[699]*699• Watson was at her home only to open the door for the carpet cleaners;
• he was going to bring back her key, and he seldom spent the night;
• she told Watson’s lawyer that the money and drugs belonged to her;
• Watson did not know that she had drugs and money in the house;
• she had given Watson $500 for the carpet cleaner and baby supplies;
• she had never seen Watson make crack cocaine in her house;
• Watson does not use or sell cocaine;
• she is 18 years old, and Watson is 31;
• the two of them have been friends for two or three years;
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DREW, J.
| T LaBarrie D. Watson appeals his two convictions: attempted manufacturing of cocaine and possession with intent to distribute cocaine.
I. ERRORS ASSIGNED IN THIS APPEAL
He urges that these errors were made at the trial level:
• there was insufficient evidence to support his convictions;
• his pro se motion to suppress should have been granted;
• the court improperly admitted copies of photographs of buy funds;
• his motion for new trial was improperly denied;
• his motion for reconsideration of sentence was improperly denied;
• he should have been granted a Franks1 hearing; and
• ineffective assistance of counsel.
We affirm both convictions. Each sentence is illegally lenient. We vacate these sentences and remand for resentencing. We direct the trial court to apportion part of each sentence be served without benefits.
II. FACTS
A. FACTUAL LAW ENFORCEMENT TESTIMONY
Six law officers2 testified about the facts of the investigation and the execution of [697]*697the search warrants. Their testimony was consistent.
12This case began in May 2011, after receipt of information about the distribution of crack cocaine at two premises in the 2500 and 2600 blocks of Darien Street. On several occasions, the officers had observed the defendant traveling between 2512 Darien Street, 2602 Darien Street, and 1441 Claiborne Avenue. He had been tied to the 2512 Darien Street address through past investigations. The 2602 Darien Street house was an empty trap house3 without water hookup. Confidential informants made multiple drug buys with prerecorded buy money at the two Darien Street houses.
Based on the foregoing, search warrants were secured for each house.
When the law officers arrived at 1441 Claiborne Avenue, they observed several security cameras; a pickup, known to be connected to the defendant; a parked carpet cleaning van; a partially open front door; and cleaning hoses running from the van through the front door. When the officers knocked, there was no response. They entered the 1,500-square foot residence and told the uniformed carpet cleaning employees to leave.
Watson peered out into the hallway from the rear bedroom, made eye contact, slunk back into the room and shut the door. He did not come out of the room until the officers identified themselves again. He was then handcuffed, searched and advised of his rights as per Miranda.4
Between $150 and $200 was seized from the truck, $85 of whidl was traceable to the controlled drug buys at the Darien gtreet locations
the main bedroom, three firearms were discovered:
|a> a .857 revolver between the box spring and the mattress:
• an AK-47 pistol under the left side of the bed; and
• a .22 caliber revolver in a drawer in the room.
The state submitted photographs of the currency and firearms.
Also seized from the master bedroom were:
• several television monitors of a surveillance system;
• $1,581 in a dresser drawer;5
• male clothing;
• photos of Watson and Keriea Hymes together;
• a prescription bottle6 in the defendant’s name;
• defendant’s driver’s license and I.D. card;7
• various receipts and pieces of mail addressed to the defendant.8
From the kitchen, the agents seized:
[698]*698• a flat dish containing a white rock-like substance in the pantry;
• a digital scale and a measuring cup, each with white powdery residue;
• packaging materials and small Apple Baggies;
• ammunition; and
14* slightly over 10 grams of cocaine.9
B. EXPERT LAW ENFORCEMENT TESTIMONY
Lt. Carl Townley of the Caddo Shreveport Narcotics Task Force testified as an expert regarding possession with intent to distribute drugs, as well as the packaging, sale and distribution of narcotics.10 Town-ley testified that based on his review of the evidence at 1441 Claiborne Avenue and accompanying reports, he believed that Watson had been cooking dope and possessing it with intent to distribute. He relied on these facts:
• a large amount of drugs was already cooked;
• a Pyrex container containing residue was in the sink;
• there was already a large quantity of crack cocaine;
• seven grams of cocaine (1/4 ounce) were found in a large Baggie;
• this amount of cocaine would make 70 individual dosage units;
• the product had not been cut up, yet there were probably 100 Baggies;
• this amount was inconsistent with personal use;
• there was no crack pipe;
• a lethal dose of cocaine is 8.1 grams within a 24-hour period;
• mid-level dealers supply street-level dealers, who stand on street corners selling little $10 bags (commonly called dime bags) of crack;
• mid-level dealers sell large amounts11 and use electronic scales;
|5» mid-level dealers do not peddle dime
bags on the street;
• mid-level dealers get trap houses and small-timers to sell their drugs;
• the officers followed Watson, placing him at each location;
• serial numbers on currency are similar to fingerprints;
• buy money is essential in controlled drug buys;
• drug dealers do not keep property in their own name; and
• family and girlfriends often keep the property in their names.
C. DEFENSE TESTIMONY
Kerica Hymes testified that:
• the day before the searches, she gave birth to Watson’s child;
• she lived alone at 1441 Claiborne Avenue in Shreveport;
• Watson did not and has never lived with her;
• Watson was a friend of the family;
• she was in the hospital for several days before giving birth;
• she wanted the carpets cleaned before she and the baby came home;
[699]*699• Watson was at her home only to open the door for the carpet cleaners;
• he was going to bring back her key, and he seldom spent the night;
• she told Watson’s lawyer that the money and drugs belonged to her;
• Watson did not know that she had drugs and money in the house;
• she had given Watson $500 for the carpet cleaner and baby supplies;
• she had never seen Watson make crack cocaine in her house;
• Watson does not use or sell cocaine;
• she is 18 years old, and Watson is 31;
• the two of them have been friends for two or three years;
|fi* she has two children, including one child fathered by Watson;
• she has never been arrested;
• she dropped out of high school after the birth of her first child;
• she has received her GED;
• she works for a temporary service and is a hairdresser;
• she makes about $2,300 a month;
• she lives at 1441 Claiborne Avenue and pays rent of $600 a month;
• the cocaine belonged to friends who visited;
• she had bought a pistol for her own protection;
• she knew of no other guns in her house;
• when asked about the AK-47 which was bought by Arnetta Carter, she denied knowing of any romantic relationship between Watson and Carter, but did admit that Carter had been to her house;
• she and Watson do not have sex, but they do share a child;
• the money found at her house was baby shower money;
• she and Watson went out a couple of times per week;
• the drugs were hers, but she did not know who brought the drugs; and
• before trial she had never told the state that the drugs were hers.
D. REBUTTAL BY THE STATE
Agent Brown was called back to the stand and testified that:
• Arnetta Carter was a previous acquaintance of Watson;
• Carter purchased the AK pistol 200 days prior to its seizure;
• Carter and Watson had a domestic relationship;
• in June, a controlled crack buy was made at 2602 Darien Street; and
17» buy funds from that operation were found at 1441 Claiborne Avenue.
A 12-member jury unanimously found Watson guilty as charged. The state mul-ti-billed Watson as a third-felony offender. He initially entered a plea of not guilty, but later pled guilty, after which a presen-tence investigation (“PSI”) was ordered.
III. ANALYSIS
A. SUFFICIENCY
Watson asserts that: (1) the law officers did not recover a large amount of cocaine packaged for sale; (2) the cocaine could have been for Watson’s personal use; (3) the drugs were found in a bedroom and not the kitchen, showing that he exercised no dominion or control over the cocaine; (4) neither his fingerprints nor his DNA was found on the seized evidence; and (5) the lease was in Kerica Hymes’s name, demonstrating that she was actually in possession of the cocaine.
The state responds by highlighting the following evidence presented at trial: (1) the testimony from multiple police officers and surveillance investigators who had watched Watson; (2) the presence of Wat[700]*700son’s driver’s license, I.D. card, and prescription bottle in the master bedroom; (3) Watson’s relationship with Hymes based on their child; (4) Watson’s sole presence at the home at the time of the search; (5) the prerecorded money from the controlled drug buys at the Darien Street addresses located in Watson’s truck and the master bedroom; (6) the large amount of crack cocaine (over seven grams) in the kitchen and the expert’s testimony that this amount is a lethal dose for personal use; (7) the set of digital scales with |8cocaine residue, the razor blade, the baking soda, and the small Baggies for packaging; (8) the Pyrex dish with cocaine flakes sitting in the sink; and (9) the lack of paraphernalia with which to smoke the crack cocaine.
The state accordingly submits that Watson lived at 1441 Claiborne Avenue, was in constructive possession of the cocaine, and was manufacturing crack cocaine.12
Our law on the appellate review of insufficiency claims is clear.13
The crimes of conviction are straightforward.14
Our jurisprudence is helpful in reviewing drug possession cases.15
[701]*701| a(i) Attempted Manufacture of Cocaine
The record supports a finding that Watson had the specific intent to manufacture crack cocaine. He lived at 1441 Claiborne Avenue with Kerica Hymes. He was seen traveling to and from the Darien Street addresses. The items seized proved he resided at the Claiborne Avenue property. Lt. Townley testified that drug dealers avoid purchasing property in their name for fear of seizure.
The evidence supports a finding that Watson was cooking cocaine in the kitchen. Further, upon his arrest, he admitted to owning the drugs.
Despite Ms. Hymes’s favorable testimony for the defendant, it is hard to believe that she would cook crack cocaine and leave the drugs and packaging materials in plain view, pack her bags, and check in the hospital on May 29, 2011, in anticipation of the birth of her second child. The jury clearly disbelieved her testimony that Watson did not live with her, they never had a relationship, and he borrowed her key only for the purpose of the carpet cleaning.
|inBased on the evidence, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime of attempted manufacture of controlled dangerous substances (cocaine), Schedule II, were proven beyond a reasonable doubt. There was no manifest error in the jury’s conclusion that Watson was guilty.
(ii) Possession of Cocaine with Intent to Distribute
Watson clearly exercised dominion and control over the cocaine, and possessed it with intent to distribute. The items seized are his undoing:
• over 10 grams of cocaine in three areas of the house;
• small “Apple” Baggies containing cocaine;
• dozens of other small Baggies;
• electronic scales and a razor blade with drug residue; and
• his driver’s license and other paperwork tying him to the scene.16
Currency from Darien Street drug buys were found at 1441 Claiborne Avenue and in Watson’s truck. It is not unreasonable for the jury to disbelieve Hymes’s theories as to the origin of the money. This record, viewed in the light most favorable for the prosecution, proves that Watson was manufacturing crack cocaine at the Claiborne house and sending it to Darien Street for distribution.
Based on the evidence, a rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime of possession with intent to distribute controlled dangerous substances, Schedule II (cocaine), were proven | nbeyond a reasonable doubt. There was no manifest error in the jury’s conclusion that Watson was guilty.
[702]*702B. MOTION FOR NEW TRIAL
Watson asserts that the trial court should have granted him a new trial. The state asserts that the defendant has articulated no legal error.
La. C. Cr. P. art. 851 is instructive on this issue.17
In reviewing the record, we conclude that Watson has suffered no injustice, nor has he met his burden of proving the existence of such harm. His mere denial that the drugs were not his does not allow him a new trial.
|1PC. DENIAL OF MOTION TO RECONSIDER OR MODIFY SENTENCE
The court sentenced the defendant to 30 and 45 years at hard labor, to be served concurrently, with no prison time to be served without benefits.
Defendant urges that his sentences were grossly out of proportion to the severity of the crime, particularly since there were no aggravating circumstances.
Immediately before sentencing, the trial court explained that:
• the PSI reflected that defendant’s litany of crimes began in 1997;
• defendant was involved in the sale and manufacture of cocaine; and
• three guns were seized at the scene.
The state asserts that the sentences are not excessive because of the defendant’s criminal history, the firearms recovered, and the trial court’s ample consideration of the sentencing guidelines.18
The sentencing provisions for these crimes in 2011 were clear.19
[703]*703113Our law on reviewing allegedly excessive sentences is well settled.20
Watson pled guilty as a third-felony offender and was sentenced pursuant to a PSI. We see no error in this sentence, other than it is actually illegally lenient.
D. DENIAL OF BOTH THE MOTION TO SUPPRESS AND A FRANKS HEARING
Defendant attacks the affidavit in support of the search warrant, challenging the truthfulness of the confidential informant. Our law reflects a policy against revealing the identity of a confidential informant.21
[704]*704| 14 Agents Whitehorn and Alkire testified that the reliable Cl used in the “buy-back” twice purchased drugs at the Darien Street residence. Other drug buys were made at the 2602 and 2512 locations. Watson is not charged with those distributions. We cannot see that the Cl’s identity will provide Watson with information relevant to his defense. The threshold for a Franks hearing has not been approached. The defendant’s naked conclusion of false statements affords him no relief.
[ir,E. USE OF PHOTOS OF CURRENCY, DRUGS AND WEAPONS
The defendant’s claims in this regard are frivolous, and, at the very most, would be a factor of weight for a jury to consider. F. INEFFECTIVENESS OF COUNSEL
The defendant claims that trial counsel filed no pretrial motions, admitted his guilt during closing,22 and apologized for his poor defense on three occasions.
Our law on appellate review of ineffectiveness claims is well settled.23
[705]*705This record does not reflect that counsel’s performance fell below an objective standard of reasonableness. The defendant has failed to present evidence that the outcome of the trial would have differed had pretrial motions been filed.
G. ILLEGALLY LENIENT SENTENCES
The concurrent sentences lack the required prohibition of benefits.
| ^DECREE
We affirm both convictions but vacate the sentences and remand, directing the trial court to affix a portion of each sentence to be served without benefits.
CONVICTIONS AFFIRMED; REMANDED FOR RESENTENCING.
APPLICATION FOR REHEARING
Before WILLIAMS, CARAWAY, DREW, MOORE and LOLLEY, JJ.
Rehearing denied.