OPINION
¶ 1 Following a bench trial, the court convicted appellant David Henry of one count of failing to obtain an identification card or driver’s license as a person previously convicted of a sex offense. The court then sentenced Henry to an enhanced term of 3.75 years’ imprisonment and ordered him to register as a sex offender. On appeal, Henry argues the court’s refusal to dismiss the indictment against him violated principles of double jeopardy and resulted in an ex post facto application of the law. He also contends the court denied him his right to a speedy trial. 1 We affirm his conviction and sentence for the reasons set forth below.
Factual and Procedural Background
¶ 2 In 1974, Henry was convicted of several felony offenses, one of which was first-degree armed rape committed on May 25, 1974, in violation of former A.R.S. §§ 13-611 and 13-614(C). See 1967 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 62, § 9 (former § 13-614(C)); 1962 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 52, § 1 (former § 13-611(A)). On September 8, 2007, a Tucson police officer requested identification from Henry in the course of a traffic stop. Henry could not produce any identification at the time, and certified documents from the Motor Vehicle Division of the Arizona Department of Transportation revealed his last identification card had been issued on October 5,2001. 2
¶ 3 Henry subsequently was arrested and charged with three offenses relating to his status as a sex offender: failure to give notice of a change of address or name on September 8, 2007 (count one); failure to obtain a “nonoperating identification license or a driver license” on September 8, 2007, in violation of A.R.S. §§ 13-3821 and 13-3824 (count two); 3 and failure to give notice of a *166 change of address or name between February 14 and February 26, 2008 (count three). 4 In response, Henry filed a motion to dismiss the indictment on grounds that the charges constituted double jeopardy and that, as applied to him, Arizona’s sex offender registration and notification statutes, AR.S. § § 13-3821 and 13-3825, were ex post facto laws violating the United States and Arizona Constitutions. The trial court denied the motion. Henry then waived his right to a jury trial and represented himself with the assistance of advisory counsel.
¶ 4 The trial court dismissed count one of the indictment on the state’s motion before trial. It entered a judgment of acquittal on count three and found Henry guilty of count two. 5 After determining Henry had been previously convicted of two felonies, the court sentenced him to a term of 3.75 years in prison and, over his objection, ordered him to register as a sex offender.
Ex Post Facto
¶ 5 As he did below, Henry argues his 1974 rape conviction neither subjected him to the laws he was charged with violating, AR.S. §§ 13-3821 and 13-3824, nor exposed him to the community notification requirements of A.R.S. § 13-3825. Consequently, he contends his present conviction and required registration as a sex offender violated his rights, guaranteed by both the federal and state constitutions, to be free from ex post facto laws.
6
We review these legal issues de novo.
See State v. Kuntz,
¶ 6 Ex post facto laws are prohibited by both article I, § 10, cl. 1 of the United States Constitution
7
and article II, § 25 of
*167
the Arizona Constitution.
8
Because the language of these provisions is materially the same, we generally interpret them as having the same scope, and we typically follow federal precedent in the area.
See State v. Noble,
¶ 7 An ex post facto law is defined exclusively as a law falling into one of the four categories delineated in
Calder v. Bull,
1st. Every law that makes an action, done before the passing of the law, and which was innocent when done, criminal; and punishes such action. 2nd. Every law that aggravates a crime, or makes it greater than it was, when committed. 3rd. Every law that changes the punishment, and inflicts a greater punishment, than the law annexed to the crime, when committed. 4th. Every law that alters the legal rules of evidence, and receives less, or different, testimony, than the law required at the time of the commission of the offence, in order to convict the offender.
¶ 8 To determine whether the application of sex offender registration and notification laws inflicts a greater punishment than was provided by law at the time of an offense, the ultimate question to be decided is whether the subsequent laws are punitive or regulatory in nature.
See Noble,
¶ 9 When evaluating the punitive or regulatory character of a law, a court first looks to the legislative intent behind it.
See Smith v. Doe,
Statutes
¶ 10 Arizona’s first sex offender registration statute was enacted in 1951. See 1951 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 105, § 1;
Fushek v. State,
¶ 11 When the Arizona Code was revised in 1956, former § 43-6117 was separated into four sections. See 1956 Ariz. Sess. Laws, 3d Spec. Sess., ch. 3, § 1. Sex offender registration in general was required by A.R.S. § 13-1271; the requirement that sex offenders inform the sheriff of an address change was codified in A.R.S. § 13-1272; public access to a sex offender’s information was prohibited by A.R.S. § 13-1273; and any violation of the registration statutes was punishable as a misdemeanor pursuant to A.R.S. § 13-1274. 9
¶ 12 In 1977, the legislature again renumbered the pi’ineipal sex offender registration statute, former § 13-1271, as A.R.S. § 13-3821, making minor changes to it in the process. See 1977 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 142, § 115. The legislature also specified that a violation of registration requirements was punishable as a class two misdemeanor.
See
1977 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 142, § 116 (amending former § 13-1274 and renumbering it as AR.S. § 13-3824). Lawmakers then repealed § 13-3821 in 1978, with the result that our state was without a registration statute for overlive years.
10
See 1978 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 201, § 242;
State v. Lammie,
¶ 13 For instance, in 1985 the legislature began to loosen restrictions on who could access a sex offender’s information, permitting disclosure to others than law enforcement officers for the first time. See 1985 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 54, § 2 (granting access to potential employers and child welfare agencies). As our supreme court recently summarized in Fushek:
Access to registration information is today considerably broader. In 1998, the legislature provided for a sex offender website, making the information of some offenders available to the public at large. 1998 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 291, § 5 (codified as amended at A.R.S. § 13-3827). In addition, the current statute requires that individuals and groups in the communities where offenders live and work be notified of the offenders’ presence. A.R.S. §§ 13-3825(C), (G), 13-3826(E)(l)(a).
218,Ariz. 285, n. 6,
¶ 14 Section 13-3821 was amended in 2001 to apply expressly to people such as Henry who had been convicted of certain sexual offenses under Arizona laws in effect before 1978. 2001 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 109, § 2. The legislature provided for retroactive application of community notification requirements in § 13-3825(1), and we assume it similarly intended that additional statutes relating to sex offender registration and monitoring apply retroactively.
12
See Fushek,
¶ 15 As the duties placed on sex offenders and the access to their information have steadily increased over the years, so, too, have the penalties for failing to comply with registration requirements. In 1985, the penalty for failing to register was increased from a class two misdemeanor to a class six felony. 1985 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 364, § 33. In 1998, failure to comply with any registration requirement was deemed a class four felony. See 1998 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 291, § 3 (former § 13-3824). The legislature made a brief exception to this rule in 2004 when it designated the failure to update and carry an identification card a class one misdemeanor subject to a mandatory $250 assessment upon conviction. 2004 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 142, § 3. However, in 2006 it reclassified the offense a class six felony, leaving the financial assessment in place. 2006 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 160, § 3. Today, failure to update or carry photographic identification remains a class six felony, as is the failure to annually confirm one’s online identifiers. §§ 13-3824(B), 13-3821(J). All other registration violations are punished as class four felonies. § 13-3824(A).
Intent
¶ 16 In conducting our ex post facto analysis of §§ 13-3821, 13-3825, and the other related statutes, we first inquire “ ‘whether the legislative aim was to punish [an] individual for past activity, or whether the restriction of the individual comes about as a relevant incident to a regulation of a present situation.’ ”
Noble,
¶ 17 Upon reexamining the sex offender registration scheme in
Falcone,
Division One of this court found express evidence of non-punitive purposes behind the community notification statute in effect in 1997,
Effects
¶ 18 Because the legislature has indicated nonpunitive purposes for sex offender registration and notification laws, we next consider whether the laws’ punitive effects
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outweigh their regulatory purposes.
See Noble,
[wjhether the sanction involves an affirmative disability or restraint, whether it has historically been regarded as a punishment, whether it comes into play only on a finding of scienter, whether its operation will promote the traditional aims of punishment — retribution and deterrence, whether the behavior to which it applies is already a crime, whether an alternative purpose to which it may rationally be connected is assignable for it, and whether it appears excessive in relation to the alternative purpose assigned----
¶ 19 In
Smith,
the United States Supreme Court held that Alaska’s Sex Offender Registration Act, which established a registration and public notification scheme similar to Arizona’s, was regulatory in character rather than punitive and therefore did not violate the Ex Post Facto Clause when retroactively applied to offenders convicted before the Act’s passage.
¶ 20 First, although the Arizona Supreme Court expressly found sex offender registration to be a traditional form of punishment,
Noble,
¶ 21 Second, in upholding Alaska’s Sex Offender Registration Act, the United States Supreme Court acknowledged that the registration system’s similarities to probation or supervised release presented a forceful argument that the Act was punitive.
Smith,
¶ 22 Yet, Arizona’s supreme court previously has upheld our sex offender registration system as regulatory despite its codification in title 13, A.R.S., our criminal code; its enforcement solely through criminal prosecution; and its designation of registration violations as felony offenses.
See Noble,
¶ 23 Moreover, although the registration and notification laws certainly have some punitive effects, our legislature has taken steps to tailor the statutes to serve more precisely their nonpunitive ends. For example, mandatory community and website notification is required only for offenders deemed to pose a heightened risk to the community, see §§ 13-3825(C), 13-3826(E), 13-3827(A), and other provisions limit public disclosure of an offender’s online identifiers. § 13-3827(D), (E). In addition, A.R.S. § 13-923, the statute under which a trial court reviews the probation of sex offenders younger than age twenty-two, also allows a court to terminate both registration and community notification requirements pursuant to §§ 13-3821(H) and 13-3825(L).
¶ 24 Although neither
Noble
nor
Falcone
analyzed the exact registration scheme we address here, many of the salient components of the current statutes already existed in some form and were addressed in those cases. Indeed, in
Noble
our supreme court considered Arizona’s first registration scheme authorizing potential felony imprisonment sanctions and found it applicable to defendants who had faced no registration requirements at all when they committed their predicate offenses.
See Noble,
¶ 25 Although we follow
Smith
today, we might well have reached a different result under controlling state precedent predating
Smith. See Noble,
¶ 26 Noting these very developments, our supreme court recently has held that sex offender registration is a sufficiently severe potential consequence for a sexually motivated misdemeanor that a person so charged has a right to a trial by jury under article II, § 24 of the Arizona Constitution.
Fushek,
Double Jeopardy
¶27 Apart from citing the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution and article II, § 10 of the Arizona Constitution, Henry has failed to develop an argument in his opening brief that his conviction and sentence violate the prohibition against double jeopardy. We therefore need not address the issue.
See
Ariz. R.Crim. P. 31.13.(c)(1)(vi) (opening brief must contain citations to record and argument for each issue raised);
State v. Cons,
Speedy Trial
¶ 28 Henry last contends “the trial court erred in denying [his] motion to dismiss the charges for [a] violation of his right to a speedy trial.” A transcript attached as an exhibit to Henry’s motion below shows that certain charges against him in a different cause, number CR-20073489, were dismissed without prejudice at the state’s request due to the inability of a state’s witness to testify at Henry’s trial. The indictment in that ease is not included in the record on appeal, and there is otherwise scant evidence of the procedural history of the ease. The record does not clearly show, as Henry asserts, that the previously dismissed charges were refiled as counts one and two of the present indictment. The relevance of the earlier cause number, therefore, has not been established, and we find the record insufficient to allow appellate review of the issue.
See State v. Rivera,
¶ 29 Even if the appellate record were more extensively developed, we would still reject Henry’s argument. Without providing any standard of review for the issue he raises, and with minimal support from legal authorities, see Ariz. R.Crim. P. 31.13(e)(1)(vi), Henry contends “[t]he prosecutor’s argument that she was dismissing [the earlier charges] because she didn’t have a witness, rather than to avoid Rule 8 [, Ariz. R.Crim. P.,] is frivolous,” given that her own actions in “waiting] until the last minute to attempt to subpoena [the witness] ... put her in a position to have to move to dismiss to avoid the time requirements.”
¶ 30 Rule 8.2(a) requires that defendants be tried within a certain number of days from arraignment, and Rule 16.6(a), Ariz. R.Crim. P., permits a court to dismiss charges on the state’s motion only “upon finding that the purpose of the dismissal is not to avoid the provisions of Rule 8.” Hence, the trial court already had determined the prosecutor did not seek a dismissal to avoid the requirements of Rule 8. And, as the state points out, the record shows there were difficulties in locating and securing the presence of the witness at the previously scheduled trial. In any event, “the proper method to raise the issue was through a motion for reconsideration or petition for special action filed in [CR-20073489], not by a motion to dismiss” in the present ease.
State v. Paris-Sheldon,
Disposition
¶ 31 For the foregoing reasons, Henry’s conviction and sentence are affirmed.
Notes
. In his reply brief, Hemy withdrew the argument that his conviction violated the separation of powers doctrine in the Arizona Constitution.
. The state, apparently misreading these documents, represented to the court that Henry's last identification card had been issued on April 18, 1997. Although Henry did not challenge the error, the disparity between the two dates is irrelevant to this appeal.
. The versions of §§ 13-3821 and 13-3824 in effect when Hemy committed the offense are the same in relevant part as the current versions. See 2006 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 184, § 1; 2006 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 160, § 3.
. Although count two of the indictment cited § 13-3821(E), this subsection specifies the registration requirements for nonresident sex offenders and was not applicable to this case. The trial court later implicitly amended the indictment to reflect that Henry was charged with violating the former § 13-3821(1), which required him to obtain and carry identification, a class six felony.
See
2006 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 184, § 1; 2006 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 160, § 3. This subsection was renumbered as § 13 — 3821 (J) by 2007 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 176, § 4, where it remains codified today. However, because this amendment did not take effect until September 19, 2007— eleven days after Henry committed the offense charged in count two — the state was technically incorrect in its repeated assertion at oral argument that Henry was convicted of violating § 13-3821 (J), not former § 13-3821(1).
See
Ariz. Const. art. IV, pt. 1, § 1(3) (laws generally do not take effect until ninety days after close of legislative session);
Baker v. Superior Court,
. Henry did not raise the issue of whether the state had shown "actual knowledge of the need to [Register as a sex offender or proof of the probability that he had knowledge of the requirement and thereafter failed to [comply with it],” an element of the offense under § 13-3821 imposed by the
Due
Process Clause and
Lambert v. California,
. Because Henry has challenged the general applicability to him of the present-day sex offender registration and monitoring statutes, irrespective of his most recent conviction, we do not limit our ex post facto analysis to the specific provision under which he was convicted, as the state invites us to do.
. The federal provision- reads, in part: "No State shall ... pass any Bill of Attainder, ex post facto Law, or Law impairing the Obligation of Con-tracts____”
. The Arizona provision reads: "No bill of attainder, ex-post-facto law, or law impairing the obligation of a contract, shall ever be enacted.”
. Henry mistakenly asserts in his opening brief that, "[a]l the time of [his] conviction there was no such thing as sex offender registration.”
. Former §§ 13-1272 and 13-1273, which were renumbered as A.R.S. §§ 13-3822 and 13-3823, respectively, see 1977 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 142, § 114, remained in place, as did § 13-3824.
. The subsections Fushek cited have not materially changed. See 2008 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 9, § 1.
. Authorities are divided whether the terms “retroactive” and "retrospective” have the same or different meanings.
Compare
16B Am.Jur.2d
Constitutional Law
§ 735 (2009) ("The terms ‘retrospective’ and ‘retroactive’ are frequently used interchangeably, even though, in fact, they have different meanings____”),
with Black's Law Dictionary
1318, 1319 (7th ed. 1999) (defining "retroactive law” and "retrospective law” as interchangeable). Our supreme court appears to use the terms interchangeably,
compare Fushek,
. § 13-3821 (D),(F)-(H),(M).
. See §§ 13-3821(1); 13-3822(A)-(B).
. § 13-3821(N).
. See §§ 13-3821(I)-(J), (P), (R); 13-3822(C).
. See § 13-3821(I), (J).
. At oral argument, counsel for Henry erroneously sought to distinguish
Smith
on the ground that Alaska's registration scheme imposed only misdemeanor sanctions for violations.
See Smith,
