Yes, I agree
@jepop . Both sides know now.
They didn't fully know at the time the PCA was written, since they didn't have all the data. BK's physical phone was analyzed after his arrest, along with the various warrants for apps and digital accounts which were issued later. Then, full CAST was only known to both parties after the full report was finished on March 31st. But at this point now, yes, they know. IMO that's why both parties are suddenly so adamant that there was no stalking: because now, they know a lot more than at the time the PCA was written up.
Of the two options you listed, I would tend to believe option 2 is pretty close to what the Defense seems to be going with. I don't know for a fact of course, but if the data can back it up, they will say the phone was never switched off, but BK merely entered an area with no coverage, and drove around there for two hours. They will question the location accuracy of the pings.
Like I said in my previous posts, if the phone truly was on, but just out of range, the D will be able to show this rather easily. It would be very stupid of them to lie on something so easy to know definitively, and, whether you like them or not, those lawyers are definitely not dumb.
It cuts both ways: if BK switched the phone off, there's no way the D can reasonably deny it: it's not something anyone would consider controversial. The same goes if the phone was set to airplane mode.
I'll add that if the phone ran out of battery and was charging for two hours before being turned back on, that low batt will also show unquestionably.
There won't be a battle of experts on that topic, but more likely IMO there
will be one about the accuracy of the ping locations in general, not just for those two hours but also for the 12 previous times he supposedly visited the house and for the morning after. Massoth kind of hinted at that at the last hearing.