The link appears to be copied and incomplete ... so it doesn't work.
Here is the correct link:
http://www.wral.com/specialreports/nancycooper/video/9524242/
The link appears to be copied and incomplete ... so it doesn't work.
Too bad it was discovered at the 11th hour by Cisco and not presented to the jury.With system logs, Mr Frye will prove the missing $11,000, 3825 router was in fact used by Brad when he said he was sound asleep.
Wonder how the defense will attempt to counter this smoking gun? Maybe they will say Cisco conspired with CPD to frame Brad.:lol:
Hypothetically, what if a defense witness claims that the log could have been planted?
Hypothetically, what if the defense argued in closing arguments, that yes he was configuring the router at 10:21pm, but he was configuring VoIP for work, not to create an alibi?
......and then decided to dispose of it the day Nancy died?
I think there are two ways that this could go. 1) that the system logs are accurate, and they do demonstrate beyond doubt that Brad was configuring a locally connected router on Friday night; or 2) the system logs are being misinterpreted, and that they do not actually say what they claim to say.
(Note: it is safe to assume that Brad was not asleep, that he was mistaken about that at his deposition, and that he was actually doing some work on the computer Friday night.)
If the first case is true, then those like me will likely believe that the state has proven their case beyond a reasonable doubt, and we will be convinced of his guilt. If the second case is true, then we are back where we were before the logs were introduced.
In regards to the 3825 router, which is the one that counts, the router itself was discarded before it could be seized by LE. There most definitely was a router and to say there wasn't is insanity.
Brad said in a chat log at work he had taken home a 3825 router mid-January. That router was never seen again. But Cisco eventually found a "calling card" of sorts that the 3825 router left behind on his work laptop--a Windows system event log error notation with a code that pointed directly to that very 3825 router being configured and having an IP address conflict on 7/11/08 @ 10:21pm. That evidence was found by Cisco too late to come into the first trial, but there's no reason it shouldn't be able to come in if there's a 2nd trial. The defense will have it in discovery and can find their own expert to opine about that log entry.
Regarding the router, I can't see how it could be admissable evidence. There is a huge problem with the chain of custody. The prosecution imagined that a router was in the house on the night of the murder because it heled explain the theory of the crime. There was no router. Instead of rethinking the theory of the crime, a dust spot explains the missing evidence. In the nick of time, evidence of the router is discovered after the publicized trial makes it clear that the discovery of the router would be very helpful. Now we have a router, but it was not collected by police at the crime scene. A router with just the evidence police need is discovered and analyzed by an unknown party.
Frye's proffer on the Win Sys Event log from 7/11/08 pointing to the 3825 router with MAC ID matching the one 3825 that was missing at Cisco was real. His proffer and the hearing are part of the trial transcript. The jury didn't have that log file as part of their considered evidence and they were able to convict without it. We know about that system event log file because of the video stream where the newly found evidence is being discussed in a motion and the details of what Frye found are elicited before the cameras were turned off.
Understood, however that proffer was never subject to a critical cross examination, and the evidence was not thoroughly evaluated by a defense expert prior to it being submitted as part of the proffer. Frye may have misinterpreted the data, he may have overlooked data that contradicts what he testified to, etc. Thus, we really don't know much about the Win Sys Event log apart from what the prosecution, via Frye, has told us.
Feel free to post the Frye proffer transcript if you have it.
I'm quite sure the defense can hire a 'hack' that can at least try to muddy the water on a windows system even log that clearly points to guilt. We'll see how smart these jurors are. Hopefully they will have at least some common sense and justice will prevail for the Nancy.
The exact same thing can be said for defense witness Massuci's proffer, yet that hasn't stopped Brad's supporters from claiming Masucci's assertions from his hearing as proof of tampering/spoilation. Kurtz even used Masucci's graphs in his closing arguments, even though Masucci did not testify in front of the jury. Massuci didn't get any further than Frye did, nor were his allegations and findings subject to a thorough evaluation by any prosecution expert prior to it being submitted as part of the proffer. The only difference is Massuci's hearing was live-streamed and Frye's was not. Massuci even said during his proffer he hadn't completed his report yet.Oenoephile opined: Understood, however that proffer was never subject to a critical cross examination, and the evidence was not thoroughly evaluated by a defense expert prior to it being submitted as part of the proffer.
The exact same thing can be said for defense witness Massuci's proffer, yet that hasn't stopped Brad's supporters from claiming Masucci's assertions from his hearing as proof of tampering/spoilation. Kurtz even used Masucci's graphs in his closing arguments, even though Masucci did not testify in front of the jury. Massuci didn't get any further than Frye did, nor were his allegations and findings subject to a thorough evaluation by any prosecution expert prior to it being submitted as part of the proffer. The only difference is Massuci's hearing was live-streamed and Frye's was not. Massuci even said during his proffer he hadn't completed his report yet.