State v. Graydon , 2023 UT App 4 ( 2023 )


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    2023 UT App 4
    THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
    STATE OF UTAH,
    Appellee,
    v.
    GARY JOSEPH GRAYDON,
    Appellant.
    Opinion
    No. 20190918-CA
    Filed January 20, 2023
    Third District Court, West Jordan Department
    The Honorable Chelsea Koch
    The Honorable Katie Bernards-Goodman
    No. 171404075
    Janet Lawrence and Steffen Soller,
    Attorneys for Appellant
    Sean D. Reyes and Jeffrey D. Mann,
    Attorneys for Appellee
    JUDGE RYAN D. TENNEY authored this Opinion, in which
    JUDGE MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN FORSTER and SENIOR JUDGE
    KATE APPLEBY concurred. 1
    TENNEY, Judge:
    ¶1      A jury convicted Gary Graydon of aggravated assault and
    reckless driving after he displayed a gun during a road rage
    incident. On appeal, Graydon argues that there was insufficient
    evidence to support his conviction for aggravated assault, that the
    district court should have declared a mistrial after a police officer
    testified that Graydon had been in “a similar situation” before,
    1. Senior Judge Kate Appleby sat by special assignment as
    authorized by law. See generally Utah R. Jud. Admin. 11-201(7).
    State v. Graydon
    and that the district court should have suppressed the victim’s
    identification of him. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.
    BACKGROUND 2
    Wife’s 911 Call
    ¶2     Around 8:30 p.m. on August 5, 2017, Graydon’s wife (Wife)
    called 911 and told the dispatcher that Graydon was suicidal and
    had just left their home in Riverton, Utah, with a handgun. Wife
    also reported that Graydon was driving a “goldish/brown” 2000
    Lexus RX 350. An officer with the Unified Police Department
    (Officer 1) responded to the call and interviewed Wife.
    The Incident
    ¶3      Sometime within the next twenty minutes or so, the victim
    (Victim) was driving north on Highland Drive in Draper, Utah. A
    vehicle “pulled out in front of [him] and there wasn’t much room
    at all, so [he] hit [his] brakes and slowed down.” Victim later
    recalled that the vehicle was a “silverish-blue” Lexus and that it
    was a “small SUV” model, like “an RX350.” After pulling in front
    of Victim, the Lexus driver “slammed” on the brakes and “came
    to a complete stop.” When the Lexus didn’t move, Victim drove
    around it, and he could see the Lexus driver yelling and shaking
    his fist at Victim. Victim later identified the Lexus driver as
    Graydon.
    ¶4    “[A]bout five seconds later,” Graydon came “whizzing”
    past Victim, slammed on his brakes, and then started “swerving
    2. “On appeal, we review the record facts in a light most favorable
    to the jury’s verdict and recite the facts accordingly. We present
    conflicting evidence only as necessary to understand issues raised
    on appeal.” State v. Holgate, 
    2000 UT 74
    , ¶ 2, 
    10 P.3d 346
     (quotation
    simplified).
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    State v. Graydon
    back and forth.” Victim decided to pull over to the side of the road
    because he thought Graydon would just keep going. After Victim
    pulled over, other vehicles followed suit and parked behind him.
    ¶5     But Graydon did not keep going. Instead, he pulled to the
    side of the road about 30 feet in front of Victim, got out of his
    vehicle, and came running back towards Victim. Victim got out of
    his truck too. At trial, when asked why he exited his vehicle,
    Victim explained that his truck was new and he was worried that
    Graydon would damage it. Graydon met Victim at Victim’s
    driver-side door, said, “Let’s go,” and kicked Victim in the side at
    about rib height. Victim was able to mostly block the kick with his
    elbow. Graydon then swung at Victim with his fist, but he missed.
    Victim swung back at Graydon, hitting him and knocking him to
    the ground. Victim hit Graydon “probably” “two, three more
    times” because he was afraid that if he “let [Graydon] up for a
    second,” Graydon would “swing” or “kick” at Victim again.
    When Graydon said, “I’ve had enough,” Victim stopped
    swinging.
    ¶6     The two men returned to their respective vehicles, and
    because the fight had happened near Victim’s truck, Victim
    arrived at his first. When Victim got to his door, he “stood there
    for just a second” and watched Graydon to make sure that
    Graydon didn’t “run back” at him. Victim then got into his truck
    when Graydon reached his Lexus. But Graydon didn’t get into his
    vehicle— instead, he leaned in and pulled out “a silver pistol.”
    Graydon then stood by his door and tried to “rack a round” by
    pulling the slide “at least six or seven times,” but it “looked like it
    was jammed.” As Graydon did this, he didn’t “draw a bead on”
    Victim, but the gun “was pointing towards [Victim at] about a
    45-degree angle in [his] general direction.”
    ¶7     Victim was frightened and wanted to drive away, but he
    could back up only a few feet because a vehicle was parked
    behind him. He was also afraid that Graydon would shoot him if
    he pulled forward. So Victim “froze like a deer in the headlights
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    State v. Graydon
    for a second.” After the unsuccessful attempts to chamber a
    round, Graydon threw the gun into his Lexus and “sped off.”
    ¶8    Victim pulled out and drove behind Graydon, “hoping to
    follow him long enough that the cops could catch him.” But
    Graydon was driving “erratically,” so after “about a half a mile,”
    Victim pulled over and called 911.
    The Investigation and Preliminary Hearing
    ¶9     At 8:44 p.m., an officer from the Draper City Police
    Department (Officer 2) responded to Victim’s 911 call. Victim and
    Officer 2 met just off Highland Drive, and Officer 2 observed that
    Victim “was in somewhat of a panic or looked stressed.” Victim
    described what had happened, and Officer 2’s body camera
    captured at least some of Victim’s description. 3
    ¶10 After talking with Victim, the police identified Graydon as
    a suspect in the case because Victim’s description of the driver and
    vehicle from his confrontation mostly matched the description of
    Graydon and his vehicle that Wife had given to officers earlier.
    Sometime within an hour of the incident, an officer presented
    Victim with a photograph lineup that included a headshot of
    Graydon. Victim was unable to identify Graydon from the lineup,
    however, because in his opinion, “the pictures were not good to
    go off of.”
    ¶11 The State later charged Graydon with aggravated assault
    and reckless driving. About four to six weeks after the incident,
    3. The record contains four accounts from Victim about the
    incident: a transcript of the portion of the bodycam footage
    described above that was later played at trial; Victim’s
    preliminary hearing testimony; Victim’s testimony at the hearing
    on the motion to suppress; and Victim’s testimony at trial. As
    explained below, the accounts have some inconsistencies, but we
    don’t consider those inconsistencies to be material.
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    State v. Graydon
    Victim received a notice about the upcoming preliminary hearing,
    saw Graydon listed as the defendant, and looked up his Facebook
    page. When looking at some of Graydon’s photos, Victim became
    “absolutely 100 percent” certain that Graydon was the driver
    from the confrontation. At the preliminary hearing (which
    occurred about seven months after the incident), Victim described
    what happened and identified Graydon as the driver. He also
    acknowledged that he had looked at Graydon’s Facebook page
    before the hearing.
    Graydon’s Motion to Suppress
    ¶12 After the preliminary hearing, Graydon filed a motion to
    suppress Victim’s eyewitness identification. Graydon contended
    that the identification was “unconstitutionally unreliable,” and he
    based his argument on the factors laid out in State v. Ramirez, 
    817 P.2d 774
     (Utah 1991). For example, he argued that although
    Victim had the “opportunity to observe the unknown individual
    during the event,” Victim was likely more focused on the fight
    than on identifying the other man and “that the stress from the
    fight caused him to be distracted and not focused.” Graydon also
    argued that Victim’s identification “was influenced by his own
    independent research” and that Victim “may have simply
    identified the man he searched for online after being given the
    name of the individual by the State.” Graydon accordingly argued
    that Victim’s identification was “unreliable and should be
    excluded at trial.”
    ¶13 The district court held a hearing on Graydon’s motion to
    suppress. Victim was the only witness, and he testified to the
    events described above. Relevant to Graydon’s motion, Victim
    testified that on the day of the incident, he had not consumed any
    drugs or alcohol, he was wearing his contacts and could see
    clearly, it was “[v]ery light” outside, and the other driver’s face
    was not covered. Victim described the other driver as being
    “about” his height with a muscular build, and he said that the
    driver was either barefoot or wearing flip-flops. He also said the
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    State v. Graydon
    Lexus was either an RX350 or an RX330, that it was “maybe 10
    years old,” and that it was “[s]ilver with maybe a little bit of blue
    to it.” He said that he saw the Lexus in the parking lot at the
    preliminary hearing. And although Victim admitted that he was
    unable to identify Graydon at the earlier photo lineup, he said that
    he was “absolutely 100 percent” certain that Graydon was the
    driver after looking at Graydon’s Facebook page.
    ¶14 After argument from both sides, the court denied
    Graydon’s motion to suppress. In doing so, the court found that
    Victim “had sufficient opportunity to observe the person
    assaulting him for 20–30 seconds at close range,” that “it was light
    outside,” that Victim’s “attention was completely on the person
    assaulting him,” that Victim “was wearing contacts[,] giving him
    clear vision,” and that Victim “was not on any substances that
    would impair his vision or mental acuity.” The court also
    concluded that “looking up photos on Facebook is no more
    suggestive than coming to a court hearing and seeing the
    Defendant sitting next to his attorney.” The court thus held that
    the “identification made by [Victim] by looking up photos of
    [Graydon] on Facebook [was] sufficiently reliable for admission
    and consideration by a jury.” But the court also ruled that
    Graydon could “discuss the suggestive event with the jury,”
    “have an expert,” and cross-examine Victim “to try and damage
    the weight of the identification.”
    The Trial
    ¶15 At trial, the State presented four witnesses: Victim, the 911
    dispatcher (Dispatcher) who answered Wife’s call, Officer 2, and
    Officer 1.
    ¶16 Victim testified to the events as described above. On
    cross-examination, trial counsel (Counsel) asked Victim about the
    photo lineup and the Facebook search. Victim confirmed that he
    was unable to pick Graydon out of the lineup and that he was only
    able to identify him after viewing his Facebook page. Counsel also
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    State v. Graydon
    questioned Victim about the inconsistencies among his four
    accounts of the incident.
    ¶17 Officer 2 testified next, and on cross-examination, Counsel
    played bodycam footage of the officer’s interview of Victim.
    Counsel also questioned Officer 2 about Victim’s inability to
    identify Graydon in the photo lineup.
    ¶18 Dispatcher and Officer 1 each testified about Wife’s 911
    call. Officer 1 explained that he had at some point become aware
    of a road rage incident involving a vehicle and driver that
    matched Wife’s description of Graydon. The prosecutor asked if
    he found “out any more information about” Graydon, and
    Officer 1 responded “[t]hat there was a similar situation several
    years earlier.” Counsel objected to this statement, but before the
    court could rule, the prosecutor reworded his question and asked
    whether the police ever located Graydon.
    ¶19 After Officer 1 finished testifying, and outside the jury’s
    presence, Counsel asked for a mistrial based on Officer 1’s
    statement “[t]hat there was a similar situation several years
    earlier.” The court accessed Graydon’s criminal history and saw
    that he had no prior assault convictions or road rage incidents.
    But the court declined to grant a mistrial and instead gave the jury
    the following curative instruction:
    You heard an officer—you heard an objection when
    an officer said something about a prior incident or a
    prior similar incident. So we just waited to the break
    to look into it. I want to instruct you that there is no
    prior similar incident. The defendant does not have
    a prior road rage. He does not have any prior
    aggravated assaults. So we don’t know what that
    was. The officer could have been looking up
    something and it could have been somebody else’s.
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    State v. Graydon
    So you need to decide this case on the evidence you
    hear today with this incident and not try to consider
    anything from the past.
    ¶20 After the State presented its case in chief, Counsel moved
    for a directed verdict based on several grounds. First, he argued
    that Victim’s identification of Graydon was tainted because of
    Victim’s “research through Facebook.” Second, he asked the court
    to “strike” and “disregard” Victim’s testimony because Victim
    made “himself out to be extremely innocent,” which was “not
    believable.” Third, Counsel argued that the case wasn’t “true to
    aggravated assault” because there were “indications” that Victim
    initiated the fight, that Victim “beat [Graydon] up,” and that
    Graydon was just “playing with his gun” and “was not pointing
    it at” Victim.
    ¶21 The district court denied the directed verdict motion. The
    court understood Counsel to be arguing, in part, that Victim’s
    various accounts of the incident were too inconsistent to support
    a conviction. And the court acknowledged that there were some
    inconsistencies among Victim’s four accounts of the incident.
    Among others, Victim was inconsistent about whether he honked
    at Graydon, how close the two vehicles were when Graydon
    pulled in front of Victim, and whether Victim had called Graydon
    a “paper dragon.” 4 But the court explained that despite these or
    any other inconsistencies, there were no inconsistencies in
    Victim’s account about “who started the fight first, and what
    happened during the fight, and whether or not there was a gun
    4. The term “paper dragon” can refer to something that
    deceptively “appears to be powerful and capable.” John Mac
    Ghlionn, China Is No Paper Dragon, National Review,
    https://www.nationalreview.com/2021/05/china-is-no-paper-dra
    gon/ [https://perma.cc/4NBR-WBPN]. As one essayist put it, “All
    bark, no bite. The dragon exists, but it breathes no fire.” 
    Id.
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    State v. Graydon
    present, and whether it was pointed in [Victim’s] direction.” The
    court thus denied the motion.
    ¶22 Graydon was the defense’s only witness. In his testimony,
    Graydon acknowledged that he had been in a physical altercation
    with Victim, and his account mostly tracked Victim’s, though
    with some key differences. Graydon testified that he was driving
    on Highland Drive because he was interested in moving to that
    area. He acknowledged that he pulled in front of Victim, but he
    claimed that it was not intentional and that he had simply
    misjudged Victim’s speed. Graydon said that he then “heard a
    sustained car horn,” which startled him, so he stopped in the road.
    Nothing seemed to be wrong, so he continued to drive, at which
    point he “started hearing horns again” and saw Victim tailgating
    him, “honking his horn repeatedly,” “gesturing with . . . sign
    language,” and “flashing his brights.” Graydon said that he
    “slowed down significantly,” after which Victim pulled up beside
    him and they “began exchanging sign language.” Graydon said
    that he then pulled over and saw Victim pull behind him and get
    out of his vehicle.
    ¶23 Graydon said that he got out of his vehicle too and “went
    back to” Victim because he “wanted to get in [Victim’s] face.”
    Graydon testified that as he approached Victim, Victim had taken
    a “fighting position,” which “put [Graydon] in a defensive
    posture.” Graydon acknowledged that he kicked Victim before
    Victim began punching him.
    ¶24 According to Graydon, he went back to his vehicle after
    Victim’s last punch and then turned to see Victim standing by his
    vehicle and giving him “a very menacing look.” Graydon testified
    that he wanted to leave at that point but that his eye was swollen
    shut, thus making it hard to find his keys. Graydon said that he
    was worried that Victim would come after him, so he picked up
    his handgun—which he claimed was in “disrepair”—and “threw
    the slide a few times.” He said that he did this to give Victim “the
    impression that [he] had a capable weapon,” but he insisted that
    20190918-CA                     9                 
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    State v. Graydon
    he never pointed the gun at Victim. Graydon said that he then
    found his keys, got in his vehicle, and left. Graydon testified that
    he later received surgery to try to repair his eye. All in all,
    Graydon chalked up the incident to “a couple of guys being
    idiot[s] with each other.”
    ¶25 After each side rested and presented closing arguments,
    the jury found Graydon guilty of aggravated assault and reckless
    driving. Graydon now appeals his aggravated assault conviction.
    ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    ¶26 Graydon first argues that the district court erred when it
    denied his motion for a directed verdict. “We review the district
    court’s denial of a motion for directed verdict for correctness.”
    State v. Barner, 
    2020 UT App 68
    , ¶ 9, 
    464 P.3d 190
     (quotation
    simplified). When a defendant “challenges the denial of a motion
    for a directed verdict based on the sufficiency of the evidence, the
    applicable standard of review is highly deferential,” and “we will
    uphold the district court’s denial if, when viewed in the light most
    favorable to the State, some evidence exists from which the
    elements of the crime could be proven beyond a reasonable
    doubt.” State v. Washington, 
    2021 UT App 114
    , ¶ 8, 
    501 P.3d 1160
    (quotation simplified).
    ¶27 Second, Graydon argues that the court erred when it
    denied his motion for a mistrial and instead gave a curative
    instruction. “A trial court’s denial of a mistrial motion is reviewed
    for [an] abuse of discretion.” State v. Dunne, 
    2020 UT App 56
    , ¶ 18,
    
    463 P.3d 100
    .
    ¶28 Finally, Graydon argues that the court erred by denying his
    motion to suppress Victim’s eyewitness identification. As
    explained below in Part III, we conclude that the admissibility of
    Victim’s identification is governed by rule 403 of the Utah Rules
    of Evidence. A district court’s “decision to admit evidence under
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    State v. Graydon
    rule 403 of the Utah Rules of Evidence is reviewed for an abuse of
    discretion.” State v. Wright, 
    2021 UT App 7
    , ¶ 25, 
    481 P.3d 479
    (quotation simplified); see also id. ¶ 41 (“Consequently, our review
    is limited to determining whether the district court abused its
    discretion under rule 403 in admitting Eyewitness’s testimony.”).
    ANALYSIS
    I. Motion for a Directed Verdict
    ¶29 Graydon argues that the district court erred in denying his
    motion for a directed verdict. In Graydon’s view, (A) there was
    insufficient evidence to show that he committed the actus reus for
    aggravated assault, (B) there was insufficient evidence to disprove
    his self-defense claim, and (C) Victim’s trial testimony was
    inherently improbable because of inconsistencies among his
    various accounts of the incident. In response, the State contends
    that each argument was unpreserved and, in any event, meritless.
    We address these arguments in turn.
    A.     Actus Reus of Aggravated Assault
    ¶30    The State charged Graydon with aggravated assault.
    Under the statute, aggravated assault can be committed a number
    of ways. See Utah Code § 76-5-103(2). As charged here, the State
    needed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Graydon made
    “a threat, accompanied by a show of immediate force or violence,
    to do bodily injury to another.” Id. § 76-5-103(2)(a)(ii). In closing,
    the prosecutor thus argued that Graydon made a threat when “he
    went back to his [vehicle and] pulled the gun out.” And he further
    argued that Graydon made a show of force when he pointed the
    gun in Victim’s “direction and began to rack it.”
    ¶31 On appeal, Graydon contends that the State “attempted to
    prove both threat and show of force by one act—Graydon’s
    exhibition of the gun.” He further contends that the State
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    State v. Graydon
    cannot rely on a single act to prove a threat and a show of
    force. Put differently, Graydon argues that the State “failed
    to prove the actus reus of aggravated assault” because it “did
    not prove Graydon made both a threat and a separate show
    of force as required by statute.” (Emphasis in original.) The
    State contends that this argument was not preserved and that
    Graydon has not shown plain error. We agree with the State on
    both fronts.
    1.     Preservation
    ¶32 “An issue is preserved for appeal when it has been
    presented to the district court in such a way that the court has
    an opportunity to rule on it.” State v. Johnson, 
    2017 UT 76
    , ¶ 15,
    
    416 P.3d 443
     (quotation simplified). “[W]here a motion for a
    directed verdict makes general assertions but fails to assert
    the specific argument raised on appeal, the directed verdict
    motion itself is insufficient to preserve the more specific
    argument for appeal.” State v. Bosquez, 
    2012 UT App 89
    , ¶ 8, 
    275 P.3d 1032
    . “Such specificity is necessary to allow the district court
    to assess allegations by isolating relevant facts and considering
    them in the context of the specific legal doctrine placed at issue.”
    State v. Rogers, 
    2020 UT App 78
    , ¶ 47, 
    467 P.3d 880
     (quotation
    simplified).
    ¶33 In his motion for a directed verdict, Graydon did not argue
    that the statute required “both a threat and a separate show of
    force.” (Emphasis in original.) His arguments were limited to
    asserting that his actions weren’t “true” aggravated assault
    because he was just “playing with his gun” and “not pointing it
    at” Victim. This was merely a “general assertion[]” about the
    sufficiency of the evidence, and it was not specific enough to alert
    the district court that it needed to consider whether the statute
    requires two separate acts. See Bosquez, 
    2012 UT App 89
    , ¶ 8; see
    also id. ¶ 10 (“Broadly challenging one of the elements of the
    charge is insufficient to preserve for appeal any and every
    argument that could possibly relate to that element.”).
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    State v. Graydon
    ¶34 Graydon, however, asserts that this argument was
    preserved because the “context” would have made his objection
    “clear.” To be sure, an issue is preserved when “the specific
    ground for an objection is clear from its context.” State v. Gonzalez,
    
    2015 UT 10
    , ¶ 26, 
    345 P.3d 1168
    . But even so, we still see no place
    in this record where Graydon argued that the statute requires
    separate acts to prove the threat and show of force elements.
    Because of this, we don’t see any context that would have made it
    clear to the district court that Graydon was making this very
    particular legal argument. We are accordingly unconvinced that
    this argument was presented to the district court in a manner
    sufficient to preserve it for appellate review.
    2.     Plain Error
    ¶35 Because this argument was unpreserved, Graydon must
    demonstrate that there was plain error to prevail on appeal. See id.
    ¶ 19. “To demonstrate plain error, a defendant must establish that
    (i) an error exists; (ii) the error should have been obvious to the
    trial court; and (iii) the error is harmful.” Id. ¶ 20 (quotation
    simplified). “An error is obvious if from a review of the record,
    the appellate court is led to the conclusion that given the
    circumstances, the trial court should have been aware that an
    error was being committed at the time.” State v. Marquina, 
    2020 UT 66
    , ¶ 30, 
    478 P.3d 37
     (quotation simplified). To succeed,
    Graydon must therefore show that it should have been obvious to
    the district court that the State was required to point to separate
    acts as proof of the threat and show of force elements. But we are
    unpersuaded that there was any error, let alone an obvious error,
    because in our view, a single act can satisfy both elements within
    a single charged offense. 5
    5. The State argues that even if separate acts were required, there
    was sufficient evidence for the jury to find that Graydon made a
    threat and displayed a show of force in this case through separate
    (continued…)
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    State v. Graydon
    ¶36 Though this issue appears to have been unaddressed in a
    Utah appellate opinion, other courts have held that a single act or
    a single series of acts may be used to prove more than one element
    of a crime. 6 See, e.g., State v. Jarvis, 
    649 N.W.2d 186
    , 193 (Minn. Ct.
    App. 2002) (“The same sequence of events can prove multiple
    elements of one crime.”); State v. Mason, 
    2018 WI App 57
    , ¶ 28 n.4,
    
    918 N.W.2d 78
     (“As with many crimes, the same act may satisfy
    two different elements.” (quotation simplified)). To illustrate, the
    Minnesota Court of Appeals provided this example:
    [A] defendant pulls a pistol out of his belt and says
    to a man next to him with whom he was arguing, I
    am going to kill you. The defendant pulls the pistol
    up to shoulder level, aims it at the man, cocks the
    trigger, pulls the trigger, and kills the man. That is
    one series of acts. That same (one) series produces
    evidence that permits the state to argue the
    defendant (1) premeditated; (2) had intent to kill;
    and (3) killed a human being.
    Jarvis, 
    649 N.W.2d at 193
    .
    ¶37 That same logic holds true in the assault context. As noted,
    aggravated assault requires the State to prove that there was “a
    threat, accompanied by a show of immediate force or violence, to
    acts. But we need not address this alternative argument because
    we conclude that, even if there was only a single act, that act was
    sufficient to establish both the threat and the show of force.
    6. Of course, criminal defendants may not be “twice punished for
    committing a single act that may violate more than one criminal
    statute.” State v. Bond, 
    2015 UT 88
    , ¶ 65, 
    361 P.3d 104
     (quotation
    simplified). But our holding today does not implicate the merger
    doctrine or the Double Jeopardy Clause because we are simply
    concluding that a single act may be used to prove multiple
    elements within a single charge of aggravated assault.
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    State v. Graydon
    do bodily injury to another.” Utah Code § 76-5-103(2)(a)(ii). “A
    threat is the expression of an intention to inflict injury on another
    through conduct or words.” Layton City v. Carr, 
    2014 UT App 227
    ,
    ¶ 8, 
    336 P.3d 587
     (quotation simplified). As for the “show of force”
    element, that phrase is not defined in the Utah Code, and so far as
    we can tell, no Utah case has defined it either. But the parties here
    have agreed that it refers to a “display of one’s power, influence
    or capability to cause harm, meant to act as a warning or deterrent
    to others.” Though we need not decide whether this is the
    definitive definition for this phrase, this seems to be a reasonable
    expression of what it means. Accepting this definition for
    purposes of this appeal, we see no error in the decision at issue.
    ¶38 It’s true that a single act might not always satisfy both the
    threat element and the show of force element. A person could
    conceivably threaten another without making a show of force
    (such as through a verbal threat, unaccompanied by anything
    else), and a person might also make a show of force without
    making any threat. But this doesn’t mean that, under some
    circumstances, a single act couldn’t satisfy both elements.
    Suppose that A and B have just been in a confrontation or have
    some history of hostility. Against such a backdrop, if A silently
    points a gun at B, this single act could serve as both an expression
    of A’s intention to inflict injury on B through conduct (i.e., the
    threat), as well as a display of A’s power, influence or capability
    to cause harm, meant to act as a warning or deterrent to B (i.e., the
    show of force).
    ¶39 The same is true here. Again, in this procedural posture,
    we must view the evidence “in the light most favorable to the
    State.” State v. Washington, 
    2021 UT App 114
    , ¶ 8, 
    501 P.3d 1160
    (quotation simplified). So viewed, the circumstances that led to
    the “single act” in question were these: after having a fairly
    aggressive on-the-road dispute about each other’s driving,
    Graydon and Victim pulled over to the side of the road, got out of
    their vehicles, and engaged in a physical altercation in which each
    landed blows and which culminated in Victim repeatedly
    20190918-CA                     15                 
    2023 UT App 4
    State v. Graydon
    punching Graydon in the face. After the two returned to their
    respective vehicles, Graydon then performed the “single act” in
    question—namely, he pointed a handgun in Victim’s general
    direction. Against the backdrop of the just-concluded
    confrontation, a jury could conclude that when Graydon
    pointed the gun in Victim’s direction, he both threatened Victim
    and made a show of force, thereby providing some evidence
    from which the jury could conclude that each element had been
    proven.
    ¶40 Graydon, however, points to the statutory phrase
    “accompanied by” and argues that this phrase would be
    meaningless if a single act could constitute both a threat and a
    show of force. But we read that language as requiring there to be
    both a threat and a show of force. As explained, however, this can
    be accomplished through a single act or through multiple acts. We
    disagree with Graydon’s suggestion that this phrase requires
    separate acts for each element.
    ¶41 Graydon also points to several Utah cases affirming assault
    convictions and contends that they support his conclusion that
    there must be a threat and a separate show of force. Although
    some of these cases involve separate acts, see, e.g., State v. Brown,
    
    853 P.2d 851
    , 860 (Utah 1992) (defendant “raised a crescent
    wrench in his hand, pulled it back,” and said, “Do you want some
    of it too?”), none of them state that separate acts are required. And
    having considered the issue here, we see no basis for imposing
    such a requirement in either the statutory text or the understood
    meanings of its terms.
    ¶42 Because of all this, we conclude that the court did not err,
    let alone obviously err, when it determined that the State
    presented sufficient evidence that Graydon made “a threat,
    accompanied by a show of immediate force or violence, to do
    bodily injury to another.” Utah Code § 76-5-103(2)(a)(ii). This is so
    because, even if the State did rely on a single act, that act could
    establish both elements.
    20190918-CA                     16                 
    2023 UT App 4
    State v. Graydon
    B.     Self-Defense
    ¶43 Graydon next argues that the district court should have
    granted his motion for a directed verdict because the State failed
    to disprove self-defense. Graydon makes three arguments in
    support of this claim, but we reject all three because there was
    sufficient evidence to disprove self-defense. 7
    ¶44 Graydon first argues that he was acting in self-defense
    because he was not the initial aggressor. See Utah Code
    § 76-2-402(3)(a)(iii) (establishing that an individual who “was the
    aggressor” “is not justified in using force”). In support, Graydon
    asserts that Victim “began the confrontation by coming
    dangerously close to Graydon’s rear bumper, honking his horn
    and jockeying for a place with Graydon, pulling over first, exiting
    his vehicle first, and initiating the fight.” (Quotation simplified.)
    But this argument presents the evidence in the light most
    favorable to Graydon, not the State.
    ¶45 Viewed in the light most favorable to the State, however,
    the evidence demonstrated that Graydon pulled in front of
    Victim, Victim then drove past Graydon because Graydon had
    stopped in the middle of the road, and Victim pulled over only
    because Graydon accelerated past him and was swerving all over
    the road. Moreover, Victim testified that Graydon ran toward
    him, said, “Let’s go,” kicked him in the side, and attempted to
    punch him. Indeed, in Graydon’s own testimony, he confirmed
    that he made the first physical contact when he kicked Victim.
    From all this, there was at least some evidence from which the
    7. The State asserts that Graydon’s self-defense arguments were
    not preserved. Where “the merits of a claim can easily be resolved
    in favor of the party asserting that the claim was not preserved,
    we readily may opt to do so without addressing preservation.”
    State v. Kitches, 
    2021 UT App 24
    , ¶ 28, 
    484 P.3d 415
     (quotation
    simplified). This is so here.
    20190918-CA                     17                 
    2023 UT App 4
    State v. Graydon
    jury could conclude that it was Graydon—not Victim—who was
    the initial aggressor. See Washington, 
    2021 UT App 114
    , ¶ 8.
    ¶46 Graydon next argues that, even if he was the aggressor in
    the initial stages of the confrontation, Victim’s “use of force”
    during their physical exchange was “disproportionate to
    Graydon’s use of force.” In Graydon’s view, this was so because,
    after Victim’s first punch knocked Graydon to the ground and
    damaged his eye, Victim “continued to punch Graydon in the
    head even though Graydon had been neutralized as a potential
    threat.” As a result, Graydon argues that Victim had become the
    aggressor by the time Graydon exhibited his gun, thereby
    allowing Graydon to then display the gun as an act of self-defense
    against that aggression.
    ¶47 It’s true, of course, that the “law on self-defense does not
    allow for disproportionate use of defensive force,” and it’s
    likewise true that “using force in excess of the amount necessary
    to subdue any threat posed by another person is unjustified and
    unreasonable.” State v. Wall, 
    2020 UT App 168
    , ¶ 19, 
    479 P.3d 355
    (quotation simplified). But the problem with Graydon’s argument
    is that he again doesn’t view the evidence in the light most
    favorable to the State. Victim testified that he hit Graydon “a
    couple more times” after Graydon was on the ground because he
    was afraid that Graydon would get up and try to punch or kick
    him again. He also testified that he stopped hitting Graydon once
    Graydon said, “I’ve had enough.” This was sufficient evidence
    from which the jury could conclude that Victim used only the
    amount of force “necessary to subdue any threat posed by”
    Graydon, see 
    id.
     (quotation simplified), thereby also allowing the
    jury to conclude that Graydon was not acting in self-defense when
    he returned to his vehicle and grabbed his gun.
    ¶48 Finally, Graydon argues that he was justified in displaying
    his gun because Victim “remained a threat by maintaining a
    menacing stance, not driving away from the scene, and
    prolonging the encounter by chasing Graydon when Graydon
    20190918-CA                   18                
    2023 UT App 4
    State v. Graydon
    drove away.” (Quotation simplified.) But the fight was over and
    the two men had already separated when Graydon grabbed his
    gun. Moreover, Victim testified that he didn’t leave because there
    was a car parked behind him and he was afraid to drive past
    Graydon. And even though Graydon testified that Victim had “a
    menacing look” and he was afraid Victim would “make some
    kind of move,” Graydon never testified that Victim attempted to
    make any such move. Furthermore, Victim’s actions after
    Graydon displayed the gun—such as driving after Graydon—
    cannot retroactively justify Graydon’s decision to display the gun
    earlier. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    State, we conclude that there was sufficient evidence to disprove
    Graydon’s claim that he was justified in displaying his gun.
    ¶49 In short, because the State presented sufficient evidence to
    disprove self-defense, the court did not err in rejecting Graydon’s
    motion for a directed verdict on this point.
    C.     Inherent Improbability
    ¶50 Graydon argues that there was insufficient evidence to
    convict him because Victim’s testimony was inherently
    improbable. We disagree. Although there were some
    inconsistencies in Victim’s account, we conclude that his overall
    accounts were at least materially consistent. As a result, the
    inconsistencies didn’t warrant a directed verdict. 8
    ¶51 “We are not normally in the business of reassessing or
    reweighing evidence, and we resolve conflicts in the evidence in
    favor of the jury verdict.” State v. Prater, 
    2017 UT 13
    , ¶ 32, 
    392 P.3d 398
     (quotation simplified). “In some unusual circumstances,”
    however, “we will conclude that the testimony presented to the
    jury was so unreliable that it cannot form the basis of a
    8. The State contends that this argument is unpreserved. But
    because we easily resolve this issue in the State’s favor, we do not
    address this argument. See Kitches, 
    2021 UT App 24
    , ¶ 28.
    20190918-CA                      19                 
    2023 UT App 4
    State v. Graydon
    conviction.” 
    Id.
     (quotation simplified). Such unusual
    circumstances exist when the testimony is “so inconclusive or
    inherently improbable that it could not support a finding of guilt
    beyond a reasonable doubt.” 
    Id.
     (quotation simplified).
    ¶52 Our supreme court has “identified three factors that merit
    consideration under an inherently improbable analysis: material
    inconsistencies, patent falsehoods, and lack of corroborating
    evidence.” State v. Jok, 
    2021 UT 35
    , ¶ 32, 
    493 P.3d 665
     (emphasis
    added). But the court has also cautioned that the “proper test is,
    and always has been, whether reasonable minds must have
    entertained a reasonable doubt that the defendant committed the
    crime.” 
    Id.
     (quotation simplified).
    ¶53 The thrust of Graydon’s argument is that Victim’s four
    accounts were so inconsistent with each other that Victim’s
    testimony became inherently improbable. In support of this
    argument, Graydon identifies eleven inconsistencies from
    Victim’s accounts. And indeed, there were some inconsistencies.
    For example, Victim’s accounts varied about how hard he braked
    when Graydon pulled in front of him, how close he got to
    Graydon when Graydon pulled in front of him, whether he
    honked at Graydon, and whether Graydon gestured for him to
    pull over. Furthermore, Graydon notes that when Victim spoke to
    Officer 2, he called Graydon a “paper dragon,” but that at trial,
    Victim said he didn’t even know what “paper dragon” meant.
    ¶54 In our view, however, neither these nor any other
    identified inconsistency rendered Victim’s testimony “so
    unreliable that it [could not] form the basis of a conviction.” Prater,
    
    2017 UT 13
    , ¶ 32. This is because Victim’s various accounts were
    still materially consistent. Cf. Jok, 
    2021 UT 35
    , ¶ 27 (holding that
    testimony was not inherently improbable where it was
    “overwhelmingly consistent and free from statements that would
    have cast substantial doubt on [the witness’s] testimony”). Even
    with the differences identified by Graydon, Victim consistently
    said the following: Graydon abruptly pulled in front of Victim
    20190918-CA                      20                 
    2023 UT App 4
    State v. Graydon
    and stopped; Victim drove around Graydon; Graydon sped past
    Victim and started swerving; Victim pulled over and got out of
    his truck; Graydon pulled over, got out of his vehicle, and
    approached Victim; Graydon kicked Victim and tried to hit him;
    Victim punched Graydon several times; after the fight, the two
    men went back to their vehicles; Graydon then pulled out a gun
    and racked it several times; Victim wanted to leave but couldn’t
    back up; and when Graydon left, Victim tried to follow him but
    gave up and called 911. 9
    ¶55 These details about the fight at the side of the road were
    central to the State’s proposed narrative of what happened that
    night. And more particularly, the details about Graydon’s use of
    the gun were the basis for the charged offense. As a result, these
    details were far more important to the case than the ones
    identified by Graydon and about which Victim was sometimes
    inconsistent. Given that Victim was consistent about these
    material details, we are unpersuaded that the inconsistencies
    identified by Graydon rendered Victim’s testimony so inherently
    improbable that it could not be relied on by the jury. As a result,
    the district court appropriately let the jury decide how much
    weight to place on the inconsistencies identified by Graydon. See
    State v. Workman, 
    852 P.2d 981
    , 984 (Utah 1993) (“When the
    evidence presented is conflicting or disputed, the jury serves as
    the exclusive judge of both the credibility of witnesses and the
    weight to be given particular evidence.”).
    ¶56 Graydon, however, contends that these inconsistencies are
    meaningful because “there was no physical or testimonial
    9. We also note that Victim provided more detail in some accounts
    than others. For example, Victim’s description of the incident at
    the motion to suppress hearing was short in comparison to the
    description he gave at trial. But that’s not surprising, because the
    purpose of the motion to suppress hearing was to assess the
    reliability of Victim’s eyewitness identification, not necessarily to
    detail everything that happened.
    20190918-CA                     21                 
    2023 UT App 4
    State v. Graydon
    evidence” corroborating Victim’s testimony. We disagree with
    this description of the evidence. Graydon testified at trial, and
    much of his own account matched the account given by Victim.
    Like Victim, Graydon testified that he made “a regular driving
    error” and pulled in front of Victim, that the two men pulled over,
    that a fight started when Graydon kicked Victim, and that he
    eventually went back to his vehicle, pulled out his gun, and
    “threw the slide a few times.” Although Graydon nevertheless
    described Victim as the aggressor, his sworn testimony still
    corroborated Victim’s core claims that Graydon kicked him first
    and later pulled out a gun and tried to rack it. As a result, we are
    not convinced that Victim’s testimony was wholly
    uncorroborated.
    ¶57 Finally, Graydon contends that Victim’s testimony was
    “incredibly dubious.” See State v. Robbins, 
    2009 UT 23
    , ¶ 18, 
    210 P.3d 288
     (holding “that the definition of inherently improbable
    must include circumstances where a witness’s testimony is
    incredibly dubious and, as such, apparently false”). This is so,
    according to Graydon, because Victim failed “to recognize his role
    in the incident” and because Victim “presented himself as an
    innocent, naive family man” despite also testifying that he hit
    Graydon several times and “wanted to bring him to justice.” But
    from our review, Victim’s testimony doesn’t “run so counter to
    human experience that it renders the testimony inappropriate for
    consideration in sustaining a finding of guilt.” Jok, 
    2021 UT 35
    ,
    ¶ 36 (quotation simplified). Victim testified that Graydon was the
    aggressor, that he hit Graydon in self-defense, and that he wanted
    Graydon to be held responsible for what he had done. We don’t
    view that as “incredibly dubious.” A jury could have decided that
    Victim was insincere, of course, but we are not persuaded that all
    reasonable jurors must have doubted Victim’s sincerity for the
    reasons given by Graydon.
    ¶58 In short, although there were some inconsistencies in
    Victim’s accounts regarding some of the details, we are not
    persuaded that these inconsistencies were so serious that
    20190918-CA                    22                 
    2023 UT App 4
    State v. Graydon
    “reasonable minds must have entertained a reasonable doubt that
    [Graydon] committed the crime.” Id. ¶ 32 (quotation simplified).
    The district court therefore did not err in submitting the case to
    the jury.
    II. Motion for a Mistrial
    ¶59 As noted, Officer 1 testified that there had been “a similar
    situation several years earlier” involving Graydon. Counsel
    moved for a mistrial as a result, but the district court denied the
    motion and gave a curative instruction instead. On appeal,
    Graydon argues that the court erred by not granting a mistrial.
    We disagree.
    ¶60 “A trial court should not grant a mistrial except where the
    circumstances are such as to reasonably indicate that a fair trial
    cannot be had and that a mistrial is necessary in order to avoid
    injustice.” State v. Dunne, 
    2020 UT App 56
    , ¶ 18, 
    463 P.3d 100
    (quotation simplified). “A district judge is in an advantaged
    position to determine the impact of courtroom events on the total
    proceedings.” 
    Id.
     (quotation simplified). Thus, “once a district
    court has exercised its discretion and denied a motion for a
    mistrial, an appellate court will not reverse the court’s decision
    unless it is plainly wrong in that the incident so likely influenced
    the jury that the defendant cannot be said to have had a fair trial.”
    
    Id.
     (quotation simplified).
    ¶61 Our supreme court has cautioned that “a mistrial is not
    required where an improper statement is not intentionally
    elicited, is made in passing, and is relatively innocuous in light of
    all the testimony presented.” State v. Allen, 
    2005 UT 11
    , ¶ 40, 
    108 P.3d 730
    . This was the case here. When Officer 1 stated that “there
    was a similar situation several years earlier,” this was not
    responsive to any question from the prosecutor that had asked for
    this kind of information. When Counsel objected, the prosecutor
    immediately rephrased his question to ask about Officer 1’s
    attempts to locate Graydon. Officer 1 did not then expound on the
    20190918-CA                     23                 
    2023 UT App 4
    State v. Graydon
    alleged prior incident any further. Given this, it seems apparent
    that the challenged statement was “not intentionally elicited,”
    was “made in passing,” and was “relatively innocuous.” 
    Id.
     We
    are thus not persuaded that a mistrial was essential to avoiding
    injustice. See Dunne, 
    2020 UT App 56
    , ¶ 18.
    ¶62 Our conclusion is further strengthened by the district
    court’s subsequent curative instruction, wherein it instructed the
    jury not to consider Officer 1’s reference to a “similar situation.”
    “Curative instructions are ordinarily presumed on appeal to be
    effective, absent a substantial and prejudicial underlying error or
    irregularity.” State v. Curtis, 
    2013 UT App 287
    , ¶ 25, 
    317 P.3d 968
    (quotation simplified); see also State v. Harmon, 
    956 P.2d 262
    , 271
    (Utah 1998) (describing curative instructions as “a settled and
    necessary feature of our judicial process and one of the most
    important tools by which a court may remedy errors at trial”);
    State v. Hodges, 
    517 P.2d 1322
    , 1324 (Utah 1974) (“In the absence of
    the appearance of something persuasive to the contrary, we
    assume that the jurors were conscientious in performing to their
    duty, and that they followed the instructions of the court.”).
    Graydon has not offered any persuasive reason why we should
    conclude that this presumption was overcome in this case, and we
    see none either.
    ¶63 Moreover, in past cases, Utah appellate courts have
    repeatedly held that a curative instruction was an appropriate
    alternative to a mistrial. See, e.g., State v. Vallejo, 
    2019 UT 38
    , ¶¶ 90–
    100, 
    449 P.3d 39
    ; State v. Neilson, 
    2017 UT App 7
    , ¶¶ 16–19, 
    391 P.3d 398
    ; State v. Allred, 
    2002 UT App 291
    , ¶¶ 19–20, 
    55 P.3d 1158
    .
    And there’s good reason to think that the curative instruction here
    effectively ameliorated any harm caused by Officer 1’s comment.
    In addition to instructing the jury to not “consider anything from
    the past,” the court went further and instructed the jury “that
    there is no prior similar incident.” The court specifically told the
    jury that Graydon did not “have a prior road rage” incident or
    “any prior aggravated assaults.” So in addition to instructing the
    jury to disregard the challenged statement—an instruction that
    20190918-CA                       24                  
    2023 UT App 4
    State v. Graydon
    likely would have been sufficient on its own—the court also told
    the jury that Officer 1’s comment about a prior “similar situation”
    was actually inaccurate. We don’t see any basis for concluding
    that the jury would have disregarded this direct instruction and
    relied on the comment anyway.
    ¶64 In sum, given the passing nature of Officer 1’s statement
    and the curative instruction, the district court did not abuse its
    discretion by denying Graydon’s motion for a mistrial. 10
    10. In further support of this argument, Graydon points to Officer
    1’s statements at trial that Graydon was a “danger to himself [and
    a] danger to other people and [the] officers involved” and that the
    officers “didn’t want to put anyone else in danger.” Graydon
    contends that these statements were “impermissible comments on
    Graydon’s character trait of being violent or peaceful.” See Utah
    R. Evid. 404(a)(1). But Counsel did not object to these statements,
    so Graydon must show plain error, and as part of this, he must
    show that the error should have been obvious to the court. See
    State v. Johnson, 
    2017 UT 76
    , ¶¶ 18–20, 
    416 P.3d 443
    . Graydon has
    not shown plain error because, from our review of the record, it
    does not seem obvious that Officer 1 was providing character
    evidence when he made these statements.
    “Character evidence is evidence of a person’s good or bad
    character—whether or not they are a generally good-hearted
    person with positive qualities.” State v. Richins, 
    2021 UT 50
    , ¶ 10
    n.2, 
    496 P.3d 158
     (quotation simplified). It also includes “evidence
    of specific traits or propensities a person might have, some of
    which might be negative even if the person could be considered
    generally a good person.” 
    Id.
     (quotation simplified). Officer 1’s
    testimony was not obviously evidence of whether Graydon was a
    “good-hearted person” or whether he had “specific traits or
    propensities.” See 
    id.
     (quotation simplified). Rather, Officer 1
    appears to have been explaining why he and other officers
    decided not to speak with Graydon. Because this testimony was
    (continued…)
    20190918-CA                    25                 
    2023 UT App 4
    State v. Graydon
    III. Eyewitness Identification
    ¶65 Graydon’s final argument is that the district court erred
    when it rejected his motion to exclude Victim’s eyewitness
    identification. We first identify the controlling law and then apply
    that law to the facts of this case. 11
    A.     Controlling Law
    ¶66 Graydon contends that we should review the district
    court’s decision under State v. Ramirez, 
    817 P.2d 774
     (Utah 1991),
    State v. Lujan, 
    2020 UT 5
    , 
    459 P.3d 992
    , and rules 403 and 617 of
    the Utah Rules of Evidence. The State, however, asserts that the
    admissibility of Victim’s identification should be assessed under
    rule 403 only. We agree with the State.
    ¶67 Utah        courts     previously     evaluated     eyewitness
    identifications under Ramirez, which “identified five factors for
    courts to consider in assessing the reliability (and hence
    admissibility) of eyewitness identification testimony under the
    due process clause of the Utah Constitution.” Lujan, 
    2020 UT 5
    ,
    ¶ 1. But in Lujan, “our supreme court clarified that the
    admissibility of eyewitness identification testimony is to be
    measured in the first instance by our rules of evidence rather than
    grounded in the events of that evening, it was not obviously an
    effort to show that Graydon “acted in conformity with” a
    “character or trait.” See Utah R. Evid. 404(a)(1). There was
    accordingly no plain error.
    11. The State contends that rule 403 of the Utah Rules of Evidence
    is the controlling law and that because Graydon’s argument
    below was not based on rule 403, his arguments on appeal are not
    preserved. Although we agree that rule 403 is the controlling law,
    we do not address the State’s preservation argument because we
    can easily resolve this issue in its favor. See Kitches, 
    2021 UT App 24
    , ¶ 28.
    20190918-CA                    26                 
    2023 UT App 4
    State v. Graydon
    by any due process standard.” State v. Wright, 
    2021 UT App 7
    ,
    ¶ 34, 
    481 P.3d 479
     (quotation simplified). In other words, concerns
    about the reliability of an eyewitness identification “are more
    appropriately addressed by our rules of evidence” than by the
    Ramirez standard. 
    Id.
     (quotation simplified). As a result, our
    inquiry is guided by the Utah Rules of Evidence and not the
    Ramirez factors. 12 See 
    id.
     ¶¶ 39–40 (reviewing the admissibility of
    eyewitness testimony under rule 403 and not Ramirez).
    12. “While the threshold standard of admissibility of eyewitness
    testimony is provided by the Utah Rules of Evidence, the
    governing case law preserves a role for due process.” State v.
    Lujan, 
    2020 UT 5
    , ¶ 46, 
    459 P.3d 992
    . “When eyewitness
    identification evidence is secured by unnecessarily suggestive
    police action, the federal Due Process Clause adds a constitutional
    backstop to our rules of evidence.” 
    Id.
     (quotation simplified). And
    Utah Supreme Court cases have “established a similar backstop
    under the due process clause of the Utah Constitution.” 
    Id.
    Accordingly, “the Ramirez factors are entitled to stare decisis
    respect, and will not be overridden, insofar as they provide
    ‘guidance’ of relevance to the purpose for which they have been
    applied in [Utah Supreme Court] case law—as possible
    considerations in assessing whether evidence produced as a result
    of suggestive police activity should be excluded on the ground
    that it leads to a substantial likelihood of misidentification.” Id.
    ¶ 49.
    Graydon’s argument is that Victim tainted his own
    memory by looking at Graydon’s Facebook profile. But because
    he doesn’t suggest that the police were involved in this alleged
    tainting, we don’t read his argument as implicating the federal
    Due Process Clause. See Perry v. New Hampshire, 
    565 U.S. 228
    , 233
    (2012) (“When no improper law enforcement activity is involved,
    we hold, it suffices to test reliability through the rights and
    opportunities generally designed for that purpose, notably, the
    (continued…)
    20190918-CA                    27                 
    2023 UT App 4
    State v. Graydon
    ¶68 Against that backdrop, Graydon identifies two potentially
    relevant rules of evidence. First, he points to rule 403, which
    allows a court to “exclude relevant evidence if its probative value
    is substantially outweighed by a danger of,” among other things,
    “unfair prejudice.” Utah R. Evid. 403. Second, he points to rule
    617, which “establishes factors and standards for a trial court to
    employ in judging the admissibility of eyewitness testimony.”
    Lujan, 
    2020 UT 5
    , ¶ 30; see also Utah R. Evid. 617.
    ¶69 The district court denied Graydon’s motion to suppress in
    December 2018. And when Graydon raised the issue again at trial
    in May 2019, the court again ruled that the testimony was
    admissible. Rule 617 was not adopted until November 2019,
    almost a year after the court denied the motion to suppress and
    months after the conclusion of Graydon’s trial. See Utah R. Evid.
    617.
    ¶70 As a result, rule 617 was not in effect when the court ruled
    on Graydon’s motion to exclude. We accordingly do not apply
    rule 617 and instead focus our analysis on rule 403, which was in
    effect when Graydon moved to suppress Victim’s identification.
    presence of counsel at postindictment lineups, vigorous
    cross-examination, protective rules of evidence, and jury
    instructions on both the fallibility of eyewitness identification and
    the requirement that guilt be proved beyond a reasonable
    doubt.”).
    It is an open question “whether the Utah due process
    clause establishes a freestanding guarantee of the reliability of
    eyewitness identification testimony that would attach in the
    absence of state action.” Lujan, 
    2020 UT 5
    , ¶ 25. But Graydon has
    not adequately briefed or argued the existence of such a
    “freestanding guarantee,” so we will not answer that question in
    this appeal. See generally Utah R. App. P. 24(a)(8) (“The argument
    must explain, with reasoned analysis supported by citations to
    legal authority and the record, why the party should prevail on
    appeal.”).
    20190918-CA                     28                 
    2023 UT App 4
    State v. Graydon
    See Lujan, 
    2020 UT 5
    , ¶ 31 (explaining that rule 617 “was not in
    place at the time of the trial in [the relevant] proceeding” and thus
    “could not have been applied” and that the rules in place at the
    time “could and should have been applied”); Wright, 
    2021 UT App 7
    , ¶ 37 n.3 (noting that Lujan “makes clear that the district
    court would have been required to apply rule 403 only, given that
    rule 617 was not in effect at the time of trial”); id. ¶ 25 (explaining
    that “our supreme court recently clarified that for cases to which
    the new rule 617 of the Utah Rules of Evidence does not apply, a
    district court’s analysis to determine the admissibility of
    eyewitness identification is rooted in rule 403 of the Utah Rules of
    Evidence”); see also State v. Clopten, 
    2009 UT 84
    , ¶ 37, 
    223 P.3d 1103
    (declining to apply the then-current version of rule 702 of the Utah
    Rules of Evidence because it was not the law that existed at the
    time of the trial).
    B.     Application of Rule 403
    ¶71 Because we assess the district court’s decision under rule
    403, we will not reverse unless it was an abuse of discretion for
    the court to admit Victim’s identification. See Wright, 
    2021 UT App 7
    , ¶ 25. A district court “abuses its discretion under rule 403 if its
    decision to admit or exclude evidence is beyond the limits of
    reasonability.” State v. Cuttler, 
    2015 UT 95
    , ¶ 12, 
    367 P.3d 981
    (quotation simplified). Here, Graydon argues that the “probative
    value” of Victim’s eyewitness identification was “substantially
    outweighed by a danger of . . . unfair prejudice.” Utah R. Evid.
    403. We disagree.
    ¶72 Our decision in Wright provides a useful comparison.
    There, an eyewitness to a shooting described the shooter’s
    appearance and noted that the shooter had worn a wig. 
    2021 UT App 7
    , ¶ 5. He also viewed a photographic lineup and identified
    the defendant with “eighty to ninety percent certainty.” Id. ¶ 17.
    After the defendant was arrested and charged, the eyewitness
    identified him again, “this time with one hundred percent
    certainty.” Id. Between the two identifications, the eyewitness had
    20190918-CA                      29                 
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    State v. Graydon
    downloaded the defendant’s photo and “digitally superimposed
    various wigs on the photo until he came up with an image that he
    believed matched the shooter.” 
    Id.
     The defendant attempted to
    suppress the identification, but the court denied the motion. Id.
    ¶ 18.
    ¶73 On appeal, we outlined the findings made by the district
    court, which included the following: (1) the eyewitness “had a
    sufficient opportunity to view the shooter,” and “it was light
    outside[] with no distracting noises, activity, or other
    circumstances affecting [the eyewitness’s] opportunity to observe
    the shooter,” id. ¶ 45 (quotation simplified); (2) the eyewitness’s
    “attention was sufficiently focused on the shooter to provide a
    reliable identification,” id. ¶ 46; (3) neither stress nor “witness
    characteristics . . . had any appreciable impact on [the
    eyewitness’s] capacity to observe the shooter,” id. ¶ 47 (quotation
    simplified); (4) the details that the eyewitness was able “to
    provide on the day of the shooting and consistently recall
    thereafter demonstrated that his eventual identification of [the
    defendant] in the photo-lineup was not tainted by memory
    decay,” id. ¶ 48; and (5) “because it was not ordinary for [the
    eyewitness] to observe an argument escalating to murder, the
    nature of the event made it highly likely that [the eyewitness]
    would correctly perceive, remember, and relate his observations,”
    id. ¶ 49. Given these findings, we saw “no abuse of discretion in
    the district court’s conclusion that [the eyewitness’s] testimony
    was admissible.” 13 Id. ¶ 51.
    13. The district court in State v. Wright, 
    2021 UT App 7
    , ¶ 41, 
    481 P.3d 479
    , evaluated the eyewitness identification using the
    Ramirez factors. On appeal, the defendant asked for a remand so
    that the district court could assess the identification under rule
    403 of the Utah Rules of Evidence. Id. ¶ 43. We acknowledged that
    a rule 403 analysis is not identical to a Ramirez analysis, but we
    also concluded that they are “quite similar.” Id. ¶ 42. And we
    (continued…)
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    State v. Graydon
    ¶74 Here, the district court made several similar findings that
    likewise indicated that Victim’s identification was reliable. Of
    note, the court found that (1) Victim “had sufficient opportunity
    to observe the person assaulting him for 20–30 seconds at close
    range”; (2) “it was light outside”; (3) Victim’s “attention was
    completely on the person assaulting him”; and (4) Victim “was
    wearing contacts giving him clear vision, and [he] was not on any
    substances that would impair his vision or mental acuity.” And
    although the court acknowledged that Victim’s independent
    research was problematic, it still concluded that the identification
    was sufficiently reliable to be admitted. In essence, the court
    decided that the probative value of Victim’s identification was not
    ultimately declined to remand the case, explaining “that the
    district court evaluated the relevant reliability factors and thus
    substantively made a rule 403 inquiry, even if it never explicitly
    invoked the rule.” Id. ¶ 43 (emphasis in original).
    The district court here also applied the Ramirez factors, as
    that was the governing law at the time. But Graydon has not
    requested that we remand this case for further consideration.
    And, as in Wright, we think the district court here “substantively
    made a rule 403 inquiry” because its oral and written rulings both
    indicate that it weighed the relevant variables before concluding
    that the identification was sufficiently reliable. See Lujan, 
    2020 UT 5
    , ¶¶ 36–38 (identifying variables that “may be considered in
    assessing both the probative value of a given piece of eyewitness
    identification testimony and the possibility of it producing unfair
    prejudice”). We are thus comfortable reviewing the court’s
    decision under rule 403, even though its analysis was not
    explicitly based on that rule. See Wright, 
    2021 UT App 7
    , ¶ 41
    (explaining that “appellate review of evidentiary decisions should
    only assess whether the district judge made an error in admitting
    or excluding the evidence in question and should thus affirm so
    long as the trial court made the right decision, even if it was for a
    mistaken reason” (quotation simplified)).
    20190918-CA                     31                 
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    State v. Graydon
    substantially “outweighed by a danger of . . . unfair prejudice.”
    Utah R. Evid. 403.
    ¶75 In our view, the court’s decision was not “beyond the limits
    of reasonability.” Cuttler, 
    2015 UT 95
    , ¶ 12 (quotation simplified).
    Although it is possible that Victim’s independent research tainted
    his memory, there was also good reason to think the identification
    was still reliable. As the district court found, Victim had a good
    opportunity to view Graydon and “was not on any substances
    that would impair his vision or mental acuity.” Moreover,
    Victim’s description of Graydon and his vehicle (both of which he
    provided well before he ever conducted the Facebook search) also
    matched information about Graydon that Wife independently
    gave to police. We thus don’t see an abuse of discretion in the
    court’s decision that Victim’s identification was sufficiently
    reliable to be admissible. 14
    14. While our conclusion above is both warranted under and
    properly grounded in Utah law, we also note that courts in other
    jurisdictions have reached similar conclusions in similar cases. See
    State v. Lively, 
    153 So. 3d 1061
    , 1070–71 (La. Ct. App. 2014)
    (holding that a court did not err in admitting eyewitness
    testimony even though the eyewitness saw the defendant’s photo
    on the news before selecting the same photo in a police lineup);
    Commonwealth v. Fielding, 
    119 N.E.3d 328
    , 332–33 (Mass. App. Ct.
    2019) (holding that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by
    admitting eyewitness testimony even though someone showed
    the eyewitness the defendant’s Facebook page before the
    eyewitness identified the defendant); State v. Butler, 
    642 S.W.3d 364
    , 371–72 (Mo. Ct. App. 2022) (holding that a court did not abuse
    its discretion in admitting eyewitness testimony even though the
    eyewitness first identified the defendant by looking at Facebook
    photos shown to her by a relative); State v. Webster, 
    104 A.3d 203
    ,
    205–09 (N.H. 2014) (holding that eyewitness testimony was
    admissible even though the eyewitnesses saw the defendant’s
    (continued…)
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    State v. Graydon
    ¶76 To be clear: this isn’t to say that Victim’s Facebook search
    was irrelevant, and our decision today should not be read as an
    endorsement of Victim’s independent research. We are simply
    holding that, to the extent that there were problems with Victim’s
    identification, those problems went to the weight of Victim’s
    testimony, not its admissibility. See State v. Guzman, 
    2004 UT App 211
    , ¶ 31, 
    95 P.3d 302
     (holding that an eyewitness’s testimony
    about how confident she was in her identification was “relevant
    once the eyewitness identification [was] deemed admissible,
    insofar as it assists the jury’s evaluation of the credibility of the
    identification testimony and the weight to be accorded it”); see also
    State v. Brown, 
    528 N.E.2d 523
    , 533 (Ohio 1988) (“The alleged
    suggestiveness of the identification, therefore, goes to weight and
    reliability of the testimony rather than admissibility.”). Graydon
    could (and in fact did) put this issue before the jury by
    cross-examining Victim about his identification, and he could
    have gone further by presenting relevant expert testimony about
    this. But under the circumstances of this case, we are unpersuaded
    booking photo online and in the newspaper before they identified
    the defendant); State v. Brown, 
    528 N.E.2d 523
    , 532–33 (Ohio 1988)
    (holding that it was not error to admit eyewitness identification
    when the eyewitness originally could not identify the defendant
    but later identified her when he saw her walking through
    the courthouse and “that any prejudicial effect of the testimony
    could have been cured by effective cross-examination”); State v.
    Reid, 
    91 S.W.3d 247
    , 271–73 (Tenn. 2002) (holding that it was not
    error to admit an eyewitness’s identification even though the
    eyewitness was unable to identify the defendant in a photo lineup
    and identified the defendant only after seeing his arrest on
    television).
    20190918-CA                     33                 
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    State v. Graydon
    that the court abused its discretion by allowing the State to present
    Victim’s identification in the first instance. 15
    CONCLUSION
    ¶77 The State presented sufficient evidence to support
    Graydon’s convictions, so the district court did not err in denying
    his motion for a directed verdict. And the court did not abuse its
    discretion when it denied Graydon’s motion for a mistrial and
    motion to suppress. For these reasons, we affirm Graydon’s
    conviction.
    15. Graydon argues that the cumulative effect of the claimed
    errors requires reversal. But because there are no errors to
    accumulate, the cumulative error doctrine is inapplicable. See
    State v. Martinez-Castellanos, 
    2018 UT 46
    , ¶ 42, 
    428 P.3d 1038
    .
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