AMENDED OPINION 1
T1 Defendant Henry Louis Jackson was convicted of several offenses, including attempted murder. On appeal, he raises many issues, including whether the trial court improperly admitted hearsay and photographs; whether the trial court erred in not dismissing the case after the State "destroyed" evidence in a vehicle used in the attempted murder; whether the State was racially motivated in striking a potential juror; and whether the trial court erred in reopening the case and in sentencing Defendant. We affirm.
BACKGROUND 2
12 On November 9, 2006, a mother and her eighteen-year-old son returned home after picking up some lunch. As the mother began walking toward her apartment, she saw Defendant, her estranged boyfriend, parked nearby. She sat down on a curb and told her son, who was still by their car retrieving his pit bull, that Defendant was back. Defendant then drove toward the mother, hit her with his car, rolled back over her lower leg, and maneuvered the car so it appeared Defendant was going to hit her again. After giving his mother the pit bull, the son tried to stop Defendant by opening the front passenger door of Defendant's car and trying to hit him. According to the son, he did not make contact with Defendant.
T3 Defendant had a large knife and cut the son's hand when the son tried to grab the knife. Defendant then stabbed the son's arm, whereupon the son retreated from the car and started running away. 3 Defendant chased the son and stabbed him again, inflicting additional wounds to his back and chest. After seeing Defendant stab her son in the back, the mother released the pit bull, and the dog chased Defendant. - Defendant stopped pursuing the son and stabbed the pit bull in the throat. Defendant then approached the mother, "picked [her] up by [her] shirt," and started dragging her toward his car. 4 The mother testified that "he was hitting me in the head with the back of the *907 knife telling me now talk to me bitch." 5 After letting the mother go, Defendant left the scene and was later arrested.
T4 Three eyewitnesses testified at trial, two of whom were standing in a nearby doorway and yelling for the son to come toward them to safety and one who observed the events through her sliding-glass door. Collectively, the eyewitness testimony established that (1) there was a loud bang that sounded like a car crash; (2) the mother was on the ground, appeared injured, and was saying Defendant had hit her with the car; (3) Defendant, armed with a knife, left his car and chased the son while threatening to kill him; (4) Defendant stabbed the son in the back with the knife; (5) the pit bull approached - Defendant, and - Defendant stabbed the pit bull; and (6) Defendant then went back to the mother, who could barely stand, held the knife to her neck, and threatened to kill her. 6
T5 The State charged Defendant with two counts of attempted aggravated murder, first degree felonies, see Utah Code Ann. § 76-5-202(0O(iii) (Supp.2009) (aggravated murder), id. §§ 76-4-101, -102(1)(a) (2008) (defining attempt and classifying attempt offenses); one count of eruelty to animals, a class B misdemeanor, see id. § 76-9-301(2)(c), (8)(a) (2008); and one count of assault, a class B misdemeanor, see id. § 76-5-102(1)-(2). 7 Prior to trial, Defendant moved to dismiss the case, claiming that the State had destroyed evidence by releasing his car to its lienholder, which promptly cleaned the car and offered it for sale before Defendant was able to examine it. Defendant also claimed that the evidence in the car was crucial to his self-defense theory. He hoped to have obtained blood samples from the car that, upon testing, would have revealed canine blood in the car, which Defendant claims would have corroborated his claim that the pit bull attacked him, making self-defense necessary. At the hearing on the issue, it was clear that the State had taken blood samples from the car and, although the State had not submitted the samples for testing, the State indicated that it would "address the issue" if Defendant wanted to. The trial court denied Defendant's motion to dismiss, and the case proceeded to trial.
T6 During jury voir dire, the State exercised one of its peremptory challenges on a prospective juror who had a high school education, worked as a mechanic, subscribed to "Car and Driver" magazine, and was deaf in one ear. Defense counsel objected to the strike pursuant to Batson v. Kentucky,
T7 The trial, held in December of 2007, was bifurcated so that only evidence on the underlying charges was presented to the jury, which found Defendant guilty on all counts. After the jury was released, the State presented the trial court with its evidence on the aggravating cireumstance, Le., Defendant's prior murder conviction. Defendant argued that the prior crime was not murder, but manslaughter. Defendant also *908 requested additional time for briefing his position on the aggravating cireumstance. When Defendant filed his brief, he challenged whether the State had sufficiently established his identity with regard to the previous conviction. At a hearing in January of 2008, the trial court allowed the State additional time to prove Defendant's identity based on the court's determinations that Defendant, having apparently conceded the identity issue during trial by making reference to Defendant's prior conviction, raised the identity issue for the first time after trial and that the witness who could authenticate the prior conviction was on military leave. The court also noted, in response to Defendant's objection, that it did not think the proceedings had been officially closed because it had allowed Defendant additional time for argument and submission of evidence.
8 At the next hearing, in April 2008, the trial court determined that the State had established Defendant's identity as it related to the previous murder conviction and, thus, had proven the aggravating circumstance. The court thereafter sentenced Defendant to two consecutive sentences of five years to life for the attempted aggravated murder convie-tions and 180 days of jail time for the two class B misdemeanors, with credit for time served.
ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW
19 Defendant first argues that the trial court erred in admitting hearsay from two police officers, claiming that the testimony did not fall within the excited utterance or prior consistent statement exceptions. See Utah R. Evid. 803(2), 801(d)(1)(B). When reviewing rulings on hearsay, we review "legal questions regarding admissibility ... for correctness, ... questions of fact ... for clear error," and the final "ruling on admissibility for abuse of discretion." State v. Rhinehart,
{10 Defendant additionally claims that the trial court erred in denying his motion to dismiss based on the State's destruction of evidence. "Whether the State's destruction of potentially exculpatory evidence violates due process is a question of law that we review for correctness. 'Howeyer, because this question requires application of facts in the record to the due process standard, we incorporate a clearly erroncous standard for the necessary subsidiary factual determinations." State v. Tiedemann,
111 Next, Defendant challenges the trial court's decision to reopen the case to allow the State to present additional evidence on the aggravating cireumstance. "A motion to reopen to take additional testimony when a case has been submitted to the court, but prior to the entry of judgment, is addressed to the sound discretion of the [trial] court." Lewis v. Porter,
{12 Defendant also asserts that the trial court improperly entered consecutive sentences without considering all the relevant factors. "We review sentences for abuse of discretion. 'An abuse of discretion may be manifest if the actions of the judge in sentencing were inherently unfair or if the judge imposed a clearly excessive sentence." State v. Valdez,
113 Finally, Defendant seeks reversal of the trial court's ruling on his Batson
*909
challenge, i.e., the court's determination that the State was not racially motivated in striking the prospective juror. The issue presented only involves analysis of the trial court's decisions at the second and third steps of its Batson review. The second step, a determination of whether the State presented a facially neutral reason for the strike, is reviewed for an abuse of discretion. See State v. Valdez,
ANALYSIS
I. Evidentiary Claims Failing Due to No Prejudice
114 Defendant has failed to demonstrate prejudice with regard to his arguments that the trial court improperly admitted hearsay under the criteria governing excited utterances, see Utah R. Evid. 803(2), and prior consistent statements, see id. R. 801(d)(1)(B), and that it improperly admitted photographs under rule 408, see id. R. 408. See generally State v. Calliham,
15 Defendant's theory, however, fails to take into account the eyewitnesses who heard what sounded like a car crash and who then observed the injured mother on the ground saying the Defendant had just hit her with his car. The eyewitnesses also saw Defendant get out of his car, chase the mother's son with a butcher knife while threatening to kill him, stab the son in the back, stab the pit bull in the throat, and then put the knife to the mother's throat while cursing and threatening her.
116 Even if Defendant was the first aggressor, when faced with such evidence reasonable minds clearly would conclude, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the risk of death or serious injury after the son retreated from Defendant's car was not imminent and that Defendant used unreasonable and unnecessary force to protect himself.
9
This defeats his self-defense theory. See Utah Code Ann. § 76-2-402(1) (2008) ("A person is justified in threatening or using force against another when and to the extent that he or she reasonably believes that force is necessary to defend himself or a third person against such other's imminent use of unlawful force. However, that person is justified in using force intended or likely to cause death or serious bodily injury only if he or she reasonably believes that force is necessary to prevent death or serious bodily injury to himself or a third person as a result of the other's imminent use of unlawful foree{[.]"); id. § 76-2-402(5) ("In determining immi-nencee or reasonableness under Subsection (1), the trier of fact may consider, but is not limited to, any of the following factors: (a) the nature of the danger; (b) the immediacy
*910
of the danger; (c) the probability that the unlawful force would result in death or serious bodily injury; (d) the other's prior violent acts or violent propensities; and (e) any patterns of abuse or violence in the parties' relationship."); State v. Duran,
117 In any event, the alleged hearsay evidence was cumulative because it reiterated the essence of testimony presented by the victims or other eyewitnesses, even if the exact wording was different. Contrary to Defendant's assertion, the alleged additional evidence provided by one of the police officers, insofar as it went beyond the victims' own account of events-namely, that the mother said Defendant threatened to kill her after stabbing the son-was also provided in an eyewitness's testimony. See State v. Thomas,
118 The same is true of the photographic evidence. Irrespective of whether the photographs were properly admitted under rule 403 of the Utah Rules of Evidence, see Utah R. Evid. 403 ("Although relevant, evidence may be excluded if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice[.]"), Defendant has not demonstrated that the photographic depiction of the severe injuries he admittedly inflicted prejudiced the trial's outcome, especially in light of the highly descriptive eyewitness testimony negating his self-defense theory. See generally State v. Dunn,
II. Destruction of Evidence
T19 Defendant's argument that the trial court erred in denying his motion to dismiss based on the State's destruction of evidence is also unavailing. He claims that the State violated his Due Process rights when it released his car to the lienholder, which cleaned the car's interior, potentially destroying evidence, before Defendant had an opportunity to inspect it.
20 When evaluating a motion to dismiss based on destruction of evidence, courts should consider the "nonexclusive factors" outlined in rule 16 of the Utah Rules of Criminal Procedure:
(1) the extent to which the prosecution's representation [of the existing evidence] is actually inaccurate, (2) the tendency of the omission or misstatement to lead defense counsel into tactics or strategy that could prejudice the outcome, (3) the culpability of the prosecutor in omitting pertinent information or misstating the facts, and (4) the extent to which appropriate defense investigation would have discovered the omitted or misstated evidence.
State v. Triedemann,
(1) the reason for the destruction or loss of the evidence, including the degree of negli-genee or culpability on the part of the State; and (2) the degree of prejudice to the defendant in light of the materiality and importance of the missing evidence in *911 the context of the case as a whole, including the strength of the remaining evidence.
Id. I 44.
{21 Here, the relevant factors favor the State and, thus, countenance against dismissal. Defendant claims that the car may have contained some of the pit bull's blood, which blood allegedly would have supported his self-defense theory by potentially establishing that the son and pit bull attacked first. Although Defendant may have been able to demonstrate that pit bull blood would have been found inside the car had the car not been returned to the lienholder and cleaned, any such blood within the car could have been attributed to having come from Defendant's person after he stabbed the pit bull in the throat. 10 Additionally, even if pit bull blood was in the car, the jury still could have concluded beyond a reasonable doubt that Defendant was guilty because the presence of pit bull blood in the car would not have significantly negated the other strong evi-denee supporting that Defendant became the aggressor when he left the car, that any danger was not immediate after the son retreated, and that Defendant's use of force was objectively unreasonable. Thus, Defendant has failed to establish that he was prejudiced by any destruction of evidence.
{22 Additionally, the facts here simply do not speak of bad faith on the part of the State. After the State photographed and took blood samples from the car, it was taken by the lienholder and cleaned. This procedure suggests normal, routine cataloguing and disposition of evidence, not bad faith destruction.
11
Moreover, although the State chose not to test the retained blood samples, Defendant could have had those samples tested to see if any included canine blood, which Defendant apparently opted not to do. When considering that the presence of canine blood likely would not have changed the outcome of the trial and that the loss of the evidence does not suggest bad faith on the State's part, we affirm the trial court's denial of Defendant's motion to dismiss. See generally Tiedemann,
III. Reopening the Case
123 Defendant has not succeeded in showing that the trial court abused its discretion in reopening the case to allow the State to present evidence of his identity with regard to his prior conviction. See Lewis v. Porter,
IV. Consecutive Sentences
$24 Defendant's argument that the trial court abused its discretion in sentencing him to "two terms of five years to life consecutively," without "adequately consider[ing]" his rehabilitative needs and that his convictions came from "one criminal episode," also fails. 13 "In determining whether state offenses are to run concurrently or consecutively, the court shall consider the gravity and circumstances of the offenses, the number of victims, and the history, character, and rehabilitative needs of the defendant." Utah Code Ann. § 76-3-401(2) (2008) (emphasis added). The statute specifically authorizes the court to "impose consecutive sentences for offenses arising out of a single criminal episode." Id. § 76-3-401(5).
125 In this case, the court clearly heard information regarding the likelihood of Defendant's rehabilitation, le., the State's evidence that Defendant's assault on the mother was preceded by Defendant serving time for killing his wife and for a parole violation related to another domestic violence incident. And at the sentencing hearing, Defendant's counsel pointed out that the convictions resulted from a single criminal episode. Defendant has not provided any detailed argument that the trial court's consideration of these facts was inadequate. Cf. State v. Galli,
€26 Defendant's argument that the court "failed to consider that [the mother]'s injuries were relatively minor" is also without merit. The same judge presided over all relevant proceedings, i.e., the underlying jury trial, the proceedings regarding the aggravating cireumstances, and the sentencing hearing. Therefore, the court was fully cognizant of the details of the crime and the extent of the injuries inflicted. Cf. State v. Helms,
V. Batson Challenge
127 Finally, irrespective of whether Defendant waived his Batson challenge,
14
see Batson v. Kentucky,
128 Courts employ a three-step analytical process to evaluate the merits of a Batson challenge. See id. 1117-20; Cannon,
$29 Finally, under the third step, if the State has succeeded in providing a facially neutral explanation, the trial court then must evaluate all the evidence before it and determine whether the State's explanation for its peremptory challenge, although facially neutral, was actually just "a pretext to disguise a racial motive." Cannon,
[T}he presence of one or more of [the following] factors will tend to show that the state's reasons are not actually supported by the record or are an impermissible pretext: (1) alleged group bias not shown to be shared by the juror in question, (2) failure to examine the juror or perfunctory examination, assuming neither the trial court nor opposing counsel had questioned the juror, (8) singling the juror out for special questioning designed to evoke a certain response, (4) the prosecutor's reason is unrelated to the facts of the case, and (5) a challenge based on reasons equally applicable to juror{s] who were not challenged.[ 15 ]
*915
State v. Cantu,
In this case, the trial court determined that Defendant bad made a prima facie case of racial motivation. The State then explained that it used a peremptory challenge on the prospective juror due to his young age and deafness in his right ear. 16 In denying Defendant's Batson motion, the trial court apparently accepted these reasons as facially neutral and not given as a pretext.
T31 Our analysis of this case's specific facts, then, begins with Batson's see-ond step because, as the parties agree, once the State has "offered [an] explanation for the peremptory challenge[] and the trial court has ruled on the ultimate question of intentional discrimination, the preliminary issue of whether the defendant has made a prima facie showing [as required under Bat-son's first step] becomes moot." State v. Chatwin,
1382 Under Batson's third step, Defendant initially claims that the State's reasoning that the stricken juror was "to[ol young" was just a pretext and points to several potential jurors that the State did not strike who were about the same age. See Cantu,
133 Second, Defendant suggests that the State's stated reason for striking the prospective juror, namely that he is deaf in one ear, was also pretextual because the State "could have questioned him further" after he responded affirmatively when the court asked if he was able to hear the judge. Although "failure to examine the juror or perfunctory examination" by the State is one factor the court considers when determining if the strike was a pretext for racial discrimination, "the prosecutor's failure to voir dire [the prospective juror] does not make his facially valid explanation for dismissing [him] pretextual as a matter of law." State v. Bowman,
134 Given all the evidence and circumstances before the trial court, and with due deference to the trial court's ability to judge the credibility of the attorneys and to personally observe the prospective juror peremptorily stricken by the State, see Cosey,
CONCLUSION
185 Even if the trial court erred in admitting hearsay and photographs, Defendant has not demonstrated any prejudice caused by such evidence. Defendant has also failed to establish that, in light of balancing the relevant factors, fundamental fairness required dismissal of his case after evidence in the vehicle was destroyed. The trial court did not err in reopening the case to give the State an opportunity to conclusively prove Defendant's identity with regard to the aggravating cireumstance. Defendant requested additional briefing on the aggravating circumstance and gave no indication that identity was an issue until the additional briefing. Defendant's counsel also made statements at trial fostering the court's and the State's misconception that identity was not at issue. The decision imposing consecutive sentences is sustainable because the record shows that the trial court had evidence on all the relevant sentencing factors before it and adequately considered those factors. Finally, the trial court's determination that Defendant's Batson challenge failed because the State was not racially motivated in peremptorily striking a prospective juror is supported by the evidence.
11 36 Affirmed.
Notes
.This amended opinion replaces our opinion in this case issued on May 27, 2010. Having granted the State's petition for rehearing, we have revised footnote 16. The opinion is otherwise unchanged. pea
. Our recitation of the facts is drawn from the testimony of the victims and eyewitnesses, presented in the light most consistent with the jury verdict, See generally State v. Hales,
. In raising his self-defense theory, Defendant pointed to the son's size. The son weighed approximately 320 pounds and stood over six feet tall.
. In support of his theory that the son and pit bull actually started the altercation when the son approached the car, and that Defendant was only defending himself, Defendant challenged the credibility of the victims' version of events as thus far outlined. In argument at trial, Defendant's counsel pointed to Defendant's history with the victims, including that he and the mother had been "on again, off again lover{s]," that he and the son had recently had a confrontation, and that the mother susiained relatively minor injuries for having been hit by a car. Defense counsel also suggested that it was unlikely the son would have given the mother the pit bull before approaching Defendant's car. Defense counsel posited that the victims concocted their version of events to avoid criminal liability for the son's having first attacked Defendant. As indicated in our discussion of the evidentiary issues, however, the evidence presented by the State sufficiently negated Defendant's self-defense theory beyond a reasonable doubt.
. - Defendant apparently had been helping the victims move and, according to the mother, was angry because she originally had refused to tell him where she was moving.
. To avoid unnecessary repetition in detailing what each eyewitness observed or heard, we describe the eyewitnesses' testimony as a whole, while acknowledging that not every eyewitness saw or heard the entire incident as we have summarized it.
. We cite to the current versions of the statutes as recent amendments have no bearing on our analysis. See Utah Code Ann. § 76-5-202 amendment noles (2008 & Supp.2009) id. §§ 76-4-101 amendment notes, -102 amendment notes (2008); id. § 76-9-301 amendment notes (2008); id. § 76-5-102 history (2008).
. In State v. Valdez,
. Under Utah's self-defense jurisprudence, it is true that "a person does not have a duty to retreat" when the incident occurs "in a place where" he has a lawful right to remain. Utah Code Ann. § 76-2-402(3) (2008). However, the fact that Defendant was in his car and could have simply driven away to safety after the son retreated from Defendant's car does bear on the issue of whether the perceived danger was imminent and whether Defendant reasonably feared death or serious injury so as to justify the force he used. See id. § 76-2-402(1); State v. Duran,
. Witness testimony reflected that the pit bull "was bleeding profusely" and "continually," and that "the blood was just squirting out of his neck."
. At oral argument, the State indicated for the first time that the blood evidence in the vehicle had been "destroyed" earlier than it had previously thought. Counsel for Defendant made a motion in open court for further briefing on the issue of bad faith in light of this new information. We deny counsel's motion because, as indicated, the facts here simply do not suggest bad faith when the evidence was only destroyed after numerous photographs and blood samples were obtained, especially when it appears that such photographs and samples could have been made available to Defendant upon request. Nor was the evidence destroyed for its own sake but, rather, as a result of delivering the car to the lienholder entitled to its possession.
. Defendant also has not persuaded us that the trial court abused its discretion in allowing the State time to gather evidence in light of the reason for reopening the case and the fact that the witness who could authenticate photographs from the 1982 case was on military leave. Contrary to what Defendant suggests through limited argument on the issue, we do not see that the Double Jeopardy Clause was implicated here, see generally U.S. Const. amend. V; Utah Const. art. I, § 12; Tibbs v. Florida,
. In a single sentence, without legal argument beyond mere citation to authority, Defendant also claims that the trial court "improperly limited the [Parole] Board's discretion 'to release' [Defendant] when he is rehabilitated." We decline to address the issue further, especially given Defendant's failure to demonstrate preservation of this issue. See Utah R.App. P. 24(a)(9) (requiring briefs to contain legally supported arguments and record citations).
. The State has raised the issue of whether Defendant's Batson challenge was timely or, more accurately, whether Defendant waived the Batson challenge in not pressing the trial court to rule on the issue prior to swearing in the jury and dismissing the venire. In light of our decision to address the merits of the challenge, we do not reach the interesting issue of whether prior case law clearly required defense counsel to insist upon a ruling prior to dismissal of the venire. See State v. Valdez,
. We recognize that Utah case law is not entirely clear on whether a trial court is supposed to consider these additional factors under step two of the analysis (as bearing on whether the proffered reason for the strike is facially neutral), or under step three (as bearing on whether the purportedly facially neutral reason is actually a pretext for discrimination). Compare State v. Cantu, T78 P.2d 517, 518-19 (Utah 1989) (listing and considering these factors as part of its analysis under step two and not identifying step three), and State v. Pharris,
In Purkett, the United States Supreme Court determined that the federal court of appeals had "erred by combining Batson's second and third steps into one" and emphasized that the persuasiveness of the reason is only relevant at step three. Id. at 768,
We also clarify, however, to the extent the later cases indicate otherwise, see Cannon,
. As discussed in paragraphs 31-33, infra, case law supports that these reasons were racially neutral and that the trial court properly determined the reasons were not a pretext under step three.
. Whether a juror can hear the proceedings is a relevant concern because a lack of hearing always could affect the outcome of the case if such a juror caught only a portion of the evidence and arguments. - See State v. Colwell,
. This court, however, ultimately remanded in Cannon based on the trial court's failure to adequately explain its ruling regarding the prosecution's explanation and credibility. See State v. Cannon,
. Although the trial court's ruling could have been more detailed, see State v. Cannon,
