OPINION
CHAPEL, Vice Presiding Judge.
John Kennedy White was tried by jury in the District Court of Atoka County, Case No. CRF-92-126. He was convicted of Trafficking in Illegal Drugs in violation of 63 O.S. 1991, § 2-415, and Unlawful Possession of a Controlled Dangerous Substance without a Tax Stamp in violation of 68 O.S.1991, § 450.4, both after former conviction of a felony. In accordance with the jury’s recommendation, the Honorable Doug Gabbard, II, sentenced Mr. White to Life without Parole on the trafficking count and twenty years imprisonment on the possession charge. White has perfected his appeal of these convictions. We affirm.
On November 14, 1992, Officer Layton, a Stringtown police officer, stopped a vehicle for traveling 73 mph in a 55 mph zone. White was the passenger in the vehicle. During the stop, Layton instructed White to open the glove compartment to retrieve the insurance verification; Layton saw a plastic bag that looked like it contained “cake soap.” When Layton returned to his unit to issue the driver a traffic citation, he noticed that the driver’s signature on the ticket did not match the signature on the license. When Layton questioned the driver about the license data (age, height, etc.) the driver answered incorrectly, prompting Layton to call for backup.
Officer Payton arrived and the two officers obtained a search waiver from the driver. Layton maintained he searched the car only because the driver lied to him, even though this happened after he saw the plastic bag. Another officer, Hurd, arrived as well to help with the search. Layton searched the driver’s side and told Hurd, who was searching the passenger side, to look for the plastic bag he had seen earlier in the glove box. Layton discovered the plastic bag in the console behind the ashtray.1 The parties stipulated at trial that the bag contained approximately 43 grams of cocaine. When White and Omar Hawkins, the driver, were arrested, both men gave the officers false names.
Hawkins was the sole witness for the defense.2 Hawkins testified that before he was pulled over, the glove box had not ever been opened in White’s presence. Hawkins testified that the drugs found in the car were his, not White’s, and that White had neither the right nor the power to dispose of the drugs in any way; however, he conceded he never told anyone this until his case was resolved.
In his first proposition of error, White argues there was insufficient evidence of trafficking to support his conviction. He claims Layton’s testimony was insufficient [986]*986because it was not corroborated, and in the alternative, that even with Layton’s testimony, there was insufficient evidence of dominion and control over the drugs to sustain his conviction. White’s first argument that officer testimony in narcotics cases should require corroboration, much like rape cases and cases in which accomplice testimony is used, is groundless.3 White cites no caselaw requiring such corroboration, and we are aware of none. This Court declines to extend the rules regarding corroboration of testimony to officer testimony in narcotics cases. The truth or falsity of Layton’s testimony was a credibility question for the jury, and the jury believed him. This Court will not reexamine the credibility of witness testimony, as it is within the jury’s exclusive province.4
White next argues that there was insufficient evidence of dominion and control over the drugs to sustain his conviction for trafficking. This argument is also without merit. The elements of trafficking are knowing and intentional possession of 28 grams or more of a mixture or substance containing a detectable amount of the controlled dangerous substance cocaine or coca leaves.5 The elements of possession are (1) knowing and intentional; (2) possession; and (3) a controlled dangerous substance.6 Because both Hawkins and White occupied the car in which the drugs were found, possession cannot be presumed by White’s presence in the location where the drugs were found. However, joint possession can be proven by circumstantial evidence of dominion and control over the thing possessed.7 Moreover, possession may be either actual or constructive, and need not be exclusive “as long as there is proof that the defendant knowingly and willfully shared the right to control the dangerous substance.” 8
White argues there was insufficient evidence of dominion and control because the evidence, when taken in the light most favorable to the state, showed circumstantially that he merely relocated Hawkins’ drugs from the glove compartment to underneath the car’s ash tray. He argues an attempt to relocate drugs is not sufficient proof of dominion and control because it is circumstantial evidence which does not exclude every reasonable hypothesis other than guilt.9 We disagree.
[987]*987This Court recently found that a passenger in a car which was under surveillance for drug activity was in possession of the drugs in question where the juvenile driver tossed a small plastic pill bottle into the car and the passenger picked it up and tried to hide it in the glove box.10 We find Carolina to be dispositive of this case.11 White’s action in moving the drugs from the glove box to behind the ash tray demonstrated his knowledge that contents of the bag were contraband, as he would not have attempted to hide them otherwise; it also established that he exercised dominion and control over the drugs. Accordingly, the state presented sufficient evidence of dominion and control to sustain White’s conviction for trafficking. This proposition must fail.
In his second proposition of error, White argues the Oklahoma Drug Tax Stamp Act, which requires a tax stamp to be immediately affixed to illegal drugs, is unconstitutional because (1) it compels defendants to incriminate themselves in order to defend against its charge, (2) it is impossible to comply with, and (3) it infringes on the state and federal protections against self-incrimination.12 White’s challenge of the Oklahoma Drug Tax Stamp Act presents a question of first impression in our State.13 In analyzing this issue, we are mindful of the principle that statutes are presumptively constitutional, and the burden of proving unconstitutionality rests with the party challenging the statute.14 It should also be noted that “the unlawfulness of an activity does not prevent its taxation.”15
White’s first claim that the statute is unconstitutional because defendants must incriminate themselves in order to defend against it is baseless. He claims an accused cannot deny being in possession of drugs and at the same time, in order to defend against a tax stamp violation charge, admit that he affixed a tax stamp to them. White concludes that this creates a “Catch-22” situation wherein any defense to this charge would cause a defendant to at least admit knowledge of the drugs’ presence. He asserts that this would constitute a Fifth Amendment violation, as the privilege against self-incrimination does not distinguish between degrees of incrimination and thus to compel a defendant to admit knowledge of narcotics is unconstitutional, even if knowledge alone would not support a conviction.16
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OPINION
CHAPEL, Vice Presiding Judge.
John Kennedy White was tried by jury in the District Court of Atoka County, Case No. CRF-92-126. He was convicted of Trafficking in Illegal Drugs in violation of 63 O.S. 1991, § 2-415, and Unlawful Possession of a Controlled Dangerous Substance without a Tax Stamp in violation of 68 O.S.1991, § 450.4, both after former conviction of a felony. In accordance with the jury’s recommendation, the Honorable Doug Gabbard, II, sentenced Mr. White to Life without Parole on the trafficking count and twenty years imprisonment on the possession charge. White has perfected his appeal of these convictions. We affirm.
On November 14, 1992, Officer Layton, a Stringtown police officer, stopped a vehicle for traveling 73 mph in a 55 mph zone. White was the passenger in the vehicle. During the stop, Layton instructed White to open the glove compartment to retrieve the insurance verification; Layton saw a plastic bag that looked like it contained “cake soap.” When Layton returned to his unit to issue the driver a traffic citation, he noticed that the driver’s signature on the ticket did not match the signature on the license. When Layton questioned the driver about the license data (age, height, etc.) the driver answered incorrectly, prompting Layton to call for backup.
Officer Payton arrived and the two officers obtained a search waiver from the driver. Layton maintained he searched the car only because the driver lied to him, even though this happened after he saw the plastic bag. Another officer, Hurd, arrived as well to help with the search. Layton searched the driver’s side and told Hurd, who was searching the passenger side, to look for the plastic bag he had seen earlier in the glove box. Layton discovered the plastic bag in the console behind the ashtray.1 The parties stipulated at trial that the bag contained approximately 43 grams of cocaine. When White and Omar Hawkins, the driver, were arrested, both men gave the officers false names.
Hawkins was the sole witness for the defense.2 Hawkins testified that before he was pulled over, the glove box had not ever been opened in White’s presence. Hawkins testified that the drugs found in the car were his, not White’s, and that White had neither the right nor the power to dispose of the drugs in any way; however, he conceded he never told anyone this until his case was resolved.
In his first proposition of error, White argues there was insufficient evidence of trafficking to support his conviction. He claims Layton’s testimony was insufficient [986]*986because it was not corroborated, and in the alternative, that even with Layton’s testimony, there was insufficient evidence of dominion and control over the drugs to sustain his conviction. White’s first argument that officer testimony in narcotics cases should require corroboration, much like rape cases and cases in which accomplice testimony is used, is groundless.3 White cites no caselaw requiring such corroboration, and we are aware of none. This Court declines to extend the rules regarding corroboration of testimony to officer testimony in narcotics cases. The truth or falsity of Layton’s testimony was a credibility question for the jury, and the jury believed him. This Court will not reexamine the credibility of witness testimony, as it is within the jury’s exclusive province.4
White next argues that there was insufficient evidence of dominion and control over the drugs to sustain his conviction for trafficking. This argument is also without merit. The elements of trafficking are knowing and intentional possession of 28 grams or more of a mixture or substance containing a detectable amount of the controlled dangerous substance cocaine or coca leaves.5 The elements of possession are (1) knowing and intentional; (2) possession; and (3) a controlled dangerous substance.6 Because both Hawkins and White occupied the car in which the drugs were found, possession cannot be presumed by White’s presence in the location where the drugs were found. However, joint possession can be proven by circumstantial evidence of dominion and control over the thing possessed.7 Moreover, possession may be either actual or constructive, and need not be exclusive “as long as there is proof that the defendant knowingly and willfully shared the right to control the dangerous substance.” 8
White argues there was insufficient evidence of dominion and control because the evidence, when taken in the light most favorable to the state, showed circumstantially that he merely relocated Hawkins’ drugs from the glove compartment to underneath the car’s ash tray. He argues an attempt to relocate drugs is not sufficient proof of dominion and control because it is circumstantial evidence which does not exclude every reasonable hypothesis other than guilt.9 We disagree.
[987]*987This Court recently found that a passenger in a car which was under surveillance for drug activity was in possession of the drugs in question where the juvenile driver tossed a small plastic pill bottle into the car and the passenger picked it up and tried to hide it in the glove box.10 We find Carolina to be dispositive of this case.11 White’s action in moving the drugs from the glove box to behind the ash tray demonstrated his knowledge that contents of the bag were contraband, as he would not have attempted to hide them otherwise; it also established that he exercised dominion and control over the drugs. Accordingly, the state presented sufficient evidence of dominion and control to sustain White’s conviction for trafficking. This proposition must fail.
In his second proposition of error, White argues the Oklahoma Drug Tax Stamp Act, which requires a tax stamp to be immediately affixed to illegal drugs, is unconstitutional because (1) it compels defendants to incriminate themselves in order to defend against its charge, (2) it is impossible to comply with, and (3) it infringes on the state and federal protections against self-incrimination.12 White’s challenge of the Oklahoma Drug Tax Stamp Act presents a question of first impression in our State.13 In analyzing this issue, we are mindful of the principle that statutes are presumptively constitutional, and the burden of proving unconstitutionality rests with the party challenging the statute.14 It should also be noted that “the unlawfulness of an activity does not prevent its taxation.”15
White’s first claim that the statute is unconstitutional because defendants must incriminate themselves in order to defend against it is baseless. He claims an accused cannot deny being in possession of drugs and at the same time, in order to defend against a tax stamp violation charge, admit that he affixed a tax stamp to them. White concludes that this creates a “Catch-22” situation wherein any defense to this charge would cause a defendant to at least admit knowledge of the drugs’ presence. He asserts that this would constitute a Fifth Amendment violation, as the privilege against self-incrimination does not distinguish between degrees of incrimination and thus to compel a defendant to admit knowledge of narcotics is unconstitutional, even if knowledge alone would not support a conviction.16
[988]*988White’s theory that defending against a tax stamp charge requires admission of at least knowledge of the drug’s presence is faulty. The error in his reasoning lies in his belief that the only way to defend against this charge is to admit he affixed the stamp. The statute does not require the dealer to purchase the tax stamp. Anyone may purchase the stamp. Therefore, if a stamp is on the drugs, that does not mean the defendant purchased it. One may deny knowledge and ownership of the drugs, claiming they belong to someone else, and consistently deny knowledge of the tax stamp that “someone else” affixed to them. Because one may prove a stamp was present on the drugs without incriminating one’s self, this argument is meritless.17
Additionally, White challenges the Drug Tax Stamp Act by contending compliance with its mandates is impossible. He claims that dealers will never be able to immediately affix the stamp upon acquisition as the statute requires because (a) the drugs will never be purchased at the Oklahoma Tax Commission and (b) the OTC is the only place where the tax stamp can be purchased. An Alabama appellant raised a similar argument in Hyatt v. State Dept. of Revenue,18 Hyatt claimed it was impossible for him to affix the stamps as required by the Act because he received the drugs at 7:00 p.m. on a Friday evening and was arrested shortly thereafter.19 The Hyatt Court found nothing in the record to support his contention and accordingly “found the argument to be unsupported by the evidence and unpersuasive. We consider it also spurious.”20 Similarly, White presented no evidence at trial that it would have been impossible to affix a tax stamp to the drugs located in Hawkins’ car. Accordingly, this claim presents nothing but unsupported speculation and lacks merit.
White’s final challenge to § 450.4 is that its immunity provisions do not adequately protect defendants against self-incrimination.21 The Fifth Amendment provides in pertinent part, “nor shall any person .... be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself.”22 The United States Supreme Court established a three-part analysis which must be conducted when determining the validity of a tax on illegal behavior: (1) the regulated activity must be in an area permeated with criminal statutes and the regulation or tax directed toward a select group inherently suspect of criminal activity; (2) the obligation to register or pay tax must create a real and appreciable, rather than a mere imaginary and unsubstantial hazard of self-incrimination; and (3) compliance with the regulation must prove a signifi[989]*989cant link in the chain of evidence tending to establish guilt.23 The Court emphasized that the “central standard for the privilege’s application has been whether the claimant is confronted by substantial and ‘real,’ and not merely trifling or imaginary, hazards of incrimination.” 24 If all three prongs are met, the tax will be held to have violated an accused’s rights against self-incrimination.
In Marchetti, the statutory system for taxing wagers was held to have violated Mar-chetti’s rights against self-incrimination because all three prongs were met: wagering was an area “permeated with criminal statutes” and those who engaged in it were a group “inherently suspect of criminal activities”; Marchetti’s risk of self-incrimination if he complied with the statute was substantial and not merely “trifling” because information obtained according to these laws was readily available to law enforcement and commonly used as evidence in criminal prosecutions; and because Marchetti was confronted with a “comprehensive system of federal and state prohibitions against wagering activities, he was required, on pain of criminal prosecution, to provide information which he might reasonably suppose would be available to prosecuting authorities, and which would surely prove a significant ‘link in a chain’ of evidence tending to establish his guilt.”25
The issue then is whether Oklahoma’s Drug Tax Stamp Act withstands scrutiny under the Marchetti analysis. Other states with virtually identical drug tax statutes have analyzed them under Marchetti and have concluded the statutes do not offend the Fifth Amendment. These courts found sufficient distinction between the tax stamp statutes and the fatal wagering statutes at issue in Marchetti where the tax stamp statutes provided for immunity from unrelated prosecutions. Even if the immunity provided in the statutes was not broad enough to grant protection co-extensive with the Fifth Amendment,26 the other courts held that the legislature, by granting some immunity, evidenced no intent to enact the statute for the purpose of aiding prosecutions. Thus the statutes were given saving constructions wherein they were read to grant as much protection as the Fifth Amendment.27
[990]*990On the other hand, only taxing statutes which provided no immunity and/or evidenced a legislative intent that information obtained by a taxpayer’s compliance with them to be used in unrelated criminal proceedings or investigations have been held to violate the Fifth Amendment.28
Oklahoma’s tax stamp statute, unlike those which have failed under the Fifth Amendment, contains immunity provisions and meets all three prongs of the Marchetti analysis: (1) illegal drags are within “an area permeated with criminal statutes,” and the statute thus targets a group “inherently suspect of criminal activities”;29 (2) through its confidentiality and anonymity provisions,30 the statute does not require taxpayers to provide information which they might reasonably suppose would be made available to prosecuting authorities;31 and (3) given the narrowing construction we assign to the statute below, there is no possibility information gathered by compliance with the statute will [991]*991“prove a significant ‘link in a chain’ of evidence tending to establish guilt.”32
The immunity/anonymity language in 68 O.S.1991, §§ 450.1 et seq. resembles the language found in other states tax stamp statutes which have been upheld after the states’ highest courts construed them to grant absolute immunity from unrelated prosecutions.33 Similarly, the Oklahoma Drug Tax Stamp Act’s immunity/anonymity provisions will be construed to extend both use and derivative-use immunity in order to comply with both the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination and Oklahoma’s corollary provision.34 Our legislature, by prohibiting the use of information received by compliance with statute “in any criminal proceeding,” evidenced an intent to grant this broad immunity which the constitution demands.35 Accordingly, the statute as construed grants immunity “so broad as to have the same extent in scope and effect” as the Fifth Amendment privilege itself and is therefore constitutionally sound.36 We conclude that the Oklahoma Drug Tax Stamp Act, as construed, violates neither state nor federal protections against self-incrimination.
In his third proposition of error, White argues there was insufficient evidence to prove he violated Oklahoma’s Drug Tax Stamp Act. Officer Layton testified that he knows what an Oklahoma Tax Commission Controlled Dangerous Substance Tax Stamp is, knows what one looks like, and did not see one on the plastic bag found under the car’s ashtray.37 White now claims Layton’s testimony is insufficient because the State presented no evidence that he “bothered to specifically look for a tax stamp.” There are five elements which the state must prove to support a charge for Possession of CDS without a Tax Stamp Affixed; when the jury found White guilty of Trafficking, they necessarily found the existence of the first four elements: (1) knowing and intentional; (2) possession; (3) of 7 grams or more; (4) of cocaine.38 The only element left for the jury’s determination was the fifth element: “upon which there has been no Tax Commission tax stamp obtained, affixed and dis[992]*992played.”39 This element does not require the state to establish that a witness specifically looked first for the stamp before testifying that he or she did not see it. Because Layton testified he saw no tax stamp on the bag, and White presented no evidence to the contrary, it cannot be said that when the evidence is viewed in the light most favorable to the state, a rational trier of fact could not have found the essential elements of this crime beyond a reasonable doubt.40 The jury believed Layton’s testimony, and this Court will not disturb its findings on appeal, as the jury is the exclusive judge of the weight of the evidence and the credibility of witness testimony.41 This proposition is wholly without merit.
In his fourth proposition of error, White contends the trial court erred in denying his motion for a mistrial after Officer Patton injected an evidentiary harpoon into the proceedings. The prosecutor asked Patton what happened after he arrived at the scene, and Patton answered that he had White step out of the vehicle, he Mirandized him, and White said he didn’t want to talk. At this point, the defense objected and moved for a mistrial on the grounds that this was an evidentiary harpoon commenting on the defendant’s exercise of his right to remain silent. The trial court sustained the objection and admonished the jury as follows:
- a moment ago Officer Patton responded to a question by responding further than what he was actually asked. He did not respond to the question. And you are going to be admonished to totally disregard his answer, totally disregard his answer for all purposes.42
The trial court then denied White’s motion for a mistrial, but did state that the defense could reurge the motion for a mistrial if they could provide caselaw supporting it. The motion was not reurged.
Any comment on a defendant’s exercise of his right to remain silent is error.43 However, error may be harmless where there is overwhelming evidence of guilt and the defendant is not prejudiced by the error.44 Error may also be “cured” where the trial court sustains the defendant’s objection and admonishes the jury.45 In this case, any error caused by the officer’s improper comment was cured when White objected and the jury was admonished to disregard the comment. This proposition must fail.
In his fifth proposition of error, White claims that prosecutorial misconduct denied him a fair trial. White complains of two questions asked of Hawkins during cross-examination and references to that line of questioning during closing argument. The two questions, both met with objections which were sustained by the trial court, implied to the jury that Hawkins was lying on behalf of White because of “prison politics” wherein people who “squeal” meet an impliedly ominous fate. Where an objection is sustained, no error will be found unless the verdict was affected.46 In addition, the part of the prosecutor’s closing argument which requested the jury use their common sense “as to what happens in prison to people who snitch on other people” was not met with an [993]*993objection, and thus all but plain error has been waived.47
These sparse references to “prison politics” cannot be found to have determined the jury’s verdict or to have denied White any constitutional or statutory right. Although the questions were improper and references to matters outside the record are not condoned by this Court, no prejudice resulted in this case. Hawkins testified that he was not afraid of White, nullifying the prosecutor’s innuendos. Furthermore, evidence was presented that when Hawkins was arrested, he lied to the police about his identity, he was on probation, and he was also driving while his license was suspended. Additionally, evidence showed Hawkins lied under oath at his arraignment that his name was Lamont Lewis rather than Omar Hawkins. Hawkins’ credibility was certainly damaged by the above evidence. The jury weighed Hawkins’ testimony against the testimony of Officers Layton and Patton. It is highly unlikely that the jury would have believed Hawkins over the two officers had it not been subjected to the prosecutor’s speculation about “prison politics.” Therefore, this Court finds beyond a reasonable doubt that White was not prejudiced by the improper comments.48 This proposition is without merit.
In his final proposition of error, "White claims his sentence was improperly enhanced. The record indicates that "White stipulated during second stage that he in fact had the two convictions alleged on the second page of the information, that he was represented by counsel, and that they were final convictions.49 White now challenges the validity of his two prior convictions on the grounds that they were entered pursuant to guilty pleas, but there is nothing in the record to show the pleas were entered knowingly and voluntarily.
White relies on Staten v. State,50 wherein this Court held “when prior felony convictions on pleas of guilty are used to enhance punishment, an affirmative showing that the defendant was represented by counsel and advised of his rights, before he entered his guilty pleas, is essential.51 Staten is clearly distinguishable from the instant ease, as it did not involve a defendant who stipulated to the prior convictions.52 Not only did "White stipulate that he had two prior convictions and the representation of counsel when he received them, but he also stipulated the prior convictions were final. The stipulation to the finality of the convictions necessarily encompassed their validity (that they were entered knowingly and voluntarily). This is because such a stipulation is a concession that any claim to the contrary was either raised unsuccessfully on direct appeal, and thus barred by res judicata, or not challenged at all, and thus waived. White’s final assignment of error lacks merit.
DECISION
The Judgment and Sentence of the trial court is AFFIRMED.
JOHNSON, P.J., and LANE and STRUBHAR, JJ., concur.
LUMPKIN, J., specially concurs.