OPINION
¶ 1 After a jury trial, Nathan Leyvas was convicted of five counts of sexual assault sentenced him to consecutive and concurrent, presumptive prison terms totaling forty years. On appeal, Leyvas contends the court erred by allowing a witness to identify him at trial without first having held a Dessureault 1 hearing and by denying his motion for judgment of acquittal on the two attempted armed robbery charges. We affirm.
Background
¶ 2 “We view the facts and all reasonable inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to upholding the verdicts.”
State v. Tamplin,
¶ 3 After the assaults, the man asked if either woman had any money. They said no, and he then allowed them to walk away. When they realized he was no longer behind them, they ran to a convenience store and called 911. Police took the victims for medical examinations, but no male DNA 2 evidence was ever found. Both victims described their assailant as a skinny Hispanic male in his early twenties who was wearing a gray sweatshirt and gray beaniе cap.
¶ 4 After Leyvas became a suspect, police searched his bedroom at his parent’s house and found an air pistol, gray beanie, gray sweatshirt, and a condom. Police also searched his girlfriend’s house and found the mountain bicycle that Leyvas had used on the night of the assaults.
¶ 5 Leyvas’s defense at trial was mistaken identity. Neither of the two victims was able to positively identify him as the assailant. 3 But a female jogger, M., who twice that night had passed by a man on a bicycle, identified Leyvas as the man she had seen at the park on the night of the crimes. A few weeks before trial, and about seven months aftеr the crimes, a detective showed M. a six-person photographic lineup that included Leyvas’s photograph. M. identified another man as the person she had seen at the park that night. In a subsequent pretrial inter *184 view, the prosecutor told M. she had “identified the wrong person.”
¶ 6 Before trial, citing only Dessureault, Leyvas moved to preclude M. from identifying him in court on the ground that any such identification would be tainted by the prosecutor’s comment. After a brief discussion, and when Leyvas was unable to produce any “analogous” case law, the trial court determined Dessureault did not apply “to this fact situation” and allowed M. to identify Leyvas at trial. That identifiсation occurred for the first time on redirect examination and then again in response to questions by the jury, when M. answered she was sure Leyvas was the man she had seen at the park. M. further testified she had “[n]ot [been] very confident at all” when she previously had identified a different man in the photographic lineup. She also identified the mountain bicycle found at Leyvas’s girlfriend’s house as the one she had seen the man riding at the park and testified that a recording of Ley-vas’s voice was consistent with the voice “tone range” of the man who had spoken to her while she jogged.
Discussion
I. In-court identification
¶ 7 Leyvas contends his due process rights wеre violated when the trial court allowed M. to identify him in court without first having-held a Dessureault hearing to determine whether the pretrial identification procedure was unduly suggestive and, if so, whether that would taint any proposed in-court identification by M. He acknowledges that the pretrial photographic lineup, in which M. “identified a picture of another man,” was not suggestive. Nonetheless, Leyvas argues, the prosecutor’s later telling M. “she had chosen the wrong man’s photo” “was sufficient to trigger the Dessureault paradigm,” “requiring] the trial court to make an initial determination whether the pretrial identification circumstances were unduly suggestive.”
¶ 8 The state argues, as it did below, that
Dessureault
does not apply because M. had failed to identify Leyvas in the pretrial photographic lineup. Similarly, in denying Ley-vas’s motion to preclude M. from identifying him at trial, the trial court accepted the state’s argument that an allegedly “suggestive nonidentification” does not “fall[ ] under
Dess[u]reault.”
We do not find
Dessureault
necessarily limited to situations in which an allegedly suggestive pretrial identification of the defendant has occurred.
See State v. Myers,
¶ 9 We review the trial court’s denial of Leyvas’s motion to preclude M.’s in-court identification for an abuse of discretion.
See State v. Prion,
*185
¶ 10 “The criminal defendant’s due process rights include the right to a fair identification procedure.”
State v. Nieto,
¶ 11 In
Dessureault,
about nine hours after an armed robbery, the victim/witness identified the defendant in a live lineup that included him and three others.
¶ 12 Referring to situations in which “pretrial identifications” of defendants have been made,
id.
at 383,
First, if at the trial the proposed in-court identification is challenged, the trial judge must immediately hold a hearing in the absence of the jury to determine from clear and convincing evidence whether it contained unduly suggestive circumstances. In this the burden is on the prosecution to establish from all the circumstances surrounding the pretrial identification that it was not such as to be unduly suggestive.
Second, if the trial judge concludes that the circumstances of the pretrial identification were unduly suggestive or that the prosecution has failed to establish by clear and convincing evidence that they were not, then it is the prosecution’s burden to satisfy the trial judge from clear and convincing evidence that the proposed in-court identification is not tainted by the prior identification.
Third, if requested, the court must instruct the jury that before returning a verdict of guilty it must be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the in-court identification was independent of the previous pretrial identification or if not derived from an independent source, it must find from other evidence in the case that the defendant is the guilty person beyond a reasonable doubt.
Id.
at 384,
¶ 13 “The requirements of
Dessureault
are sequential,” triggered only if and when a determination is made that a pretrial identification procedure was unduly suggestive.
State v. Harris,
[I]f the trial court finds that the pretrial identification was not unduly suggestive, it *186 need not do any of the following: (a) [determine whether an in-court identification was tainted; (b) instruct that the jury must be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the in-court identification was independent; and (e) instruct that the jury must be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the pretrial identification was fair.
Id.
at 360,
¶ 14 For the reasons set forth below, we agree with the trial court that Dessureault does not apply to the particular situation presented here. Accordingly, we conclude the court did not, err in failing to conduct a pretrial Dessureault hearing or to follow the other procedural steps outlined in that case. 4
¶ 15 First, as noted above, the court in
Dessureault
stated that, “if at the trial the proposed in-court identification is challenged, the trial judge must immediately hold a hearing in the absence of the jury to determine from clear and convincing evidence whether it contained unduly suggestive circumstances.”
coulcl do so during trial, it is not аt all clear what purpose would have been served by conducting a Dessureault hearing. And, from a practical standpoint, such a hearing, conducted in a vacuum, would not readily facilitate the trial court’s gauging whether any proposed in-court identification of Ley-vas by M. would somehow be tainted by the prosecutor’s pretrial comment to her.
¶ 16 Second, the primary concerns addressed in
Dessureault
and its progeny, and the mischief those cases seek to avoid, are not present here. Generally,
“Dessureault
deals with fairness concerns that arise when a witness (often the victim) of a crime is confronted with a live or photographic lineup and asked whether the рerpetrator is among them.”
Apelt,
¶ 17 Third, whether a witness may reliably make an “in-court identification of the defendant, untainted by prior identification procedures, is preliminarily a question for the trial court which will not be disturbed on appeal unless there is clear and manifest error.”
Taylor,
¶ 18 He argues, however, “the trial court failed to consider the key additional circumstances on which [his]
Dessureault
motion was based” — the prosecutor’s having informed M. “she had picked the wrong man from the [photographic] lineup.” But the court was well aware of that fact when it denied Leyvas’s motion. And even though the trial court did not expressly determine whether the prosecutor’s comment to M. renderеd the pretrial identification procedure unduly suggestive or otherwise unconstitutional, we conclude it did not, based on the same, undisputed facts before that court.
See State v. Money,
¶ 19 As noted earlier, during a pretrial interview the prosecutor told M. she had “identified the wrong person” in the photographic lineup shown to her about seven months after the crime. But the record does not reflect that the prosecutor ever steered M. to the “right person.”
Cf. Alexander,
¶ 20 Leyvas maintains, however, that the prosecutor’s having told M. before trial she had selected “the wrong person” in the photographic lineup, after she had “affirmatively identified someone other than [him],” “tainted as a matter of law” M.’s subsequent in-court identification and “deprived him of due process” because M. “was then permitted to make an identification at trial of the only person in the courtroom whose picture had been in that photo lineup: [Leyvas].” Citing
Simmons
and
Foster v. California,
¶ 21 In
Foster,
the witness finally identified the defendant in a second live lineup after failing to identify him in a previous lineup and one-to-one confrontation.
Foster,
¶ 22 Here, in contrast, M. did not identify Leyvas in the pretrial procedure and was not asked to identify him again before trial. Therefore, the main concern addressed in
Foster
and
Simmons
— that law enforcement officers will unduly influence a witness in making a mistaken identification and then repeating that misidentification at trial — is not present here.
See Smith,
¶ 23 In addition, although we do not condone, and indeed strongly discourage, the practice of telling a witness before trial she chose thе “wrong” person in a lineup, that is less suggestive or problematic than informing her she made the “right” choice.
See United States v. Moskowitz,
¶ 24 Similarly, our supreme court has expressed concern that informing a witness he or she chose correctly from a lineup could “lessen or eliminate any doubt” the witness might have had before the identification procedure.
State v. Richie,
¶ 25 We also find significant that M. only identified Leyvas on redirect examination,
after
he had introduced the photographic lineup in evidence and questioned M. about her prior inability to identify him in that lineup.
5
Thus, her in-court identification
*189
essentially was prompted by Leyvas’s own trial strategy and cross-examination. “The invited error doctrine applies to situations where evidence adduced or comments made by one party make otherwise irrelevant evidence relevant or require some response or rebuttal.”
State v. Wilson,
¶ 26 Here, M. did not identify Leyvas on direct examination and was not asked to do so. Therefore, nothing in the state’s direct examination of M. prompted the defense inquiry into identification-related issues on cross-examination. By voluntarily and strategically probing those issues, Leyvas opened the door to the state’s redirect examination, which was “specifically responsive to the invitation.” Id. Accordingly, even if M.’s in-court identification of Leyvas were otherwise objectionable, Leyvas invited any error in that regard.
¶ 27 Because we find
Dessureault
inapplicable to the situation presented here, M.’s inability to identify Leyvas before trial went to her credibility and the weight to be given her testimony, not to the admissibility of her in-court identification.
See Prion,
¶ 28 We further note that identifications made for the first time in court generally are not deemed unduly suggestive or impermissible.
See Cartwright,
¶29 Here, Leyvas thoroughly questioned M. about her mistaken identification in the photographic linеup and how the prosecutor had later informed her that she had chosen “the wrong person.” M. was examined and cross-examined about her level of awareness on the night in question, how often and for how long she had observed the man on the bicycle, and the discrepancies between her testimony and her earlier statement to the police. She acknowledged that she had described the bicycle as a BMX type, not a mountain bicycle, and that she had thought the man had been wearing a hooded sweatshirt, not a beanie cap. M. also noted at trial that nine months had passed since the сrime and that her memory at trial was not as clear as it had been shortly after the incident. Any conflicts or other weaknesses in her testimony were matters for the jury to consider.
See State v. Nordstrom,
¶ 30 Leyvas also argues that, because the trial court erred in not “find[ing] the Dessureault paradigm triggered on these facts, it did not proceed to the second Dessureault step: requiring the State to prove by clear and convincing evidence that the suggestive pretrial identification procedure did not taint the proposed in-court identification.”
See
¶ 12,
supra.
As Leyvas coi’rectly notes,
Des
sureav.lt’s “second step is accomplished using the factors set forth in
Neil v. Biggers,
¶ 31 Several other points on the subject of reliability deserve mention. First, Leyvas never requested a hearing outside the presence of the jury to permit the trial court to evaluate and determine the reliability of any in-court identification M. might make. Second, after M. identified Leyvas on redirect examination as the man she had seen at the park on the night in quеstion, he did not object to that testimony or move to strike it on the ground of unreliability that he now urges. Third, we find purely speculative Leyvas’s argument that “the State would not have been able to prove by clear and convincing evidence ... [M.’s] subsequent in-court identification of [him] was not tainted by the suggestive procedure,” had it been required to do so. Accordingly, we reject Leyvas’s contention that his convictions must be reversed because M.’s in-court identification of him was tainted and unreliable as a matter of law. 7
¶ 32 In sum, the “effective procedures at the trial court level,” as outlined in
Dessu-
*191
reault,
II. Rule 20 motion on attempted armed robbery charges
¶ 33 Leyvas contends the trial court erroneously denied his motion, made pursuant to Rule 20, Ariz. R.Crim. P., because the state presented insufficient evidence “of all the elements of attempted armed robbery.” On appeal, we review the court’s denial of a Rule 20 motion for an abuse of discretion.
See State v. Paris-Sheldon,
¶ 34 Section 13-1902(A), A.R.S., provides:
A person commits robbery if in the course of taking any property of another from his person or immediate presence and against his will, such person threatens or uses force against any person with intent either to coerce surrender of property or to prevent resistance to such person tаking or retaining property.
See also State v. Benenati,
¶ 35 Leyvas argues there “was no substantial evidence that the assailant intended to force the women to give him their property and no substantial evidence that he took any actions planned to culminate in taking the victims’ property” because he “innocuously]” asked them if they had any money. But Leyvas was holding a gun or “simulated deadly weapon” throughout his encounter with the victims. And one victim testified he was holding it when he asked them whether they had any money. Thus, the evidence of Leyvas’s actions and statements permitted an inference that he had intended to take property from the women by force.
See State v. Vann,
Disposition
¶ 36 Leyvas’s convictions and sentences are affirmed.
Notes
.
State v. Dessureault,
. Deoxyribonucleic acid.
. One victim, who before trial had not been asked to identify the assailant from a photographic or live lineup, testified that Leyvas “matchfed] the description of the person” she had described to police. When the other victim was asked if she saw "anybody in the courtroom that [she] recognize[d] as being from that evening,” she said she did not know but did not "think so."
. Though not dispositive, we note Leyvas never asked the trial court to hold a pretrial hearing to probe any of the issues he now raises. His ciyplic motion to preclude had only one aim — to prevent M. from identifying him at trial because of the taint allegedly caused by the prosecutor's earlier comment to her. When, as here, a factual scenario does not fall squarely within
Dessu-reault,
a defendant should specifically request a hearing, explaining why it is needed and what relevant topics will be explored.
See State v. Reid,
. Leyvas failed lo object to M.'s in-court identification at trial. But "where a motion in limine is made and ruled upon, the objection raised in that motion is preserved for appeal, despite the absence of a specific objection at trial."
State v. Burton,
. Leyvas maintains an appellate court should not evaluate in the first instance the factors listed in
Biggers
when, as here, the trial court did not hold a
Dessureault
hearing and, therefore, never required the state to prove by clear and convincing evidence that the in-сourt identification was untainted.
See Dessureault,
. Leyvas correctly points out that, because the trial court found
Dessureault
inapplicable, he was not entitled to and did not request "the defense-favorable jury instruction mandated by the [Dessureault] paradigm's third step.”
See
¶ 12,
supra. Cf. State
v.
Stow,
