I'm not familiar with the case. Do you remember a name?
Kelly Morris
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I'm not familiar with the case. Do you remember a name?
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-Brad's expertise was networks. At the time he took computer science, internet browsers were brand new and the internet itself just starting to be known. In fact, when he started college the public at large did not have access to the internet. Browsers were not taught at the UofC then. Nor were forensic classes in computer science. In fact, the U of C didn't have access for students to the internet as of 1994--- students could use a U of C bulletin board, and access the university network, but that was about it. I am positive no such types of classes you potentially refer to were available by the time he graduated (2 yrs Medicine Hat College, 2 yrs U of C).
I was a student there from 1990 to 1994.
You were a computer science student? I cannot imagine that a computer science student would not have internet accounts in 1990, let alone 1994. It was a necessary part of any curriculum.
Edited to add: Ok, I looked it up, and it looks like the ucalgary.edu domain wasn't registered until 1997. Very surprising, as it was pretty far behind (a decade even) other schools like mine. And we were not known for our computer science program. I wonder if there was another domain that they used.
I feel like we've time warped back to 2011.
On evidence:
The old adage is "There is no such thing as a perfect crime", meaning a criminal always leave a clue or two behind. Whoever killed Nancy left very few clues.
The Pro-Brad Crowd: Brad's too smart to leave clues, they must have been planted.
The Not-Pro-Brad Crowd: he's a smart guy and managed to cover 98% of his tracks, but was thwarted by a couple details.
On motive:
The Not-Pro-Brad Crowd: Brad is the only one with motive.
The Pro-Brad Crowd: Brad had no motive.
The draft separation agreement shows Brad's motive. Their credits cards were maxed out, 401k loaned out, a hefty mortgage, and two leases on their BMWs. Nancy wanted the house, a car, the kids, and the option to move. Brad got the debt and alimony, child support, and private school tuition payments. He did not have access to enough money to hire an attorney. Alice Stubbs backed Brad into a corner.
While I have always thought the google search doesn't make sense, if it is actually an issue with the early version of private browsing, then BC wouldn't have known the files were still on the PC. That is supposed to be the point of private browsing.
-Brad was not one to carry equipment or gear in his cars. I'm specifically referring to a Jeep YJ he used to have, and which he would drive into Banff National Park in Canada. I can't speak for the BMW 325i (or 323?) he bought shortly after that and took with him to NC. He was not good keeping his vehicles maintained, mechanically or even from a cleanliness standard. His Jeep always had an alternator issue, and as a result the battery would go dead or his lights wouldn't work, so no night driving.
-I'm not sure what you mean by prominent. Each family was white collar middle class and respectable, but not stand out in any way. Neither had any type of even pseudo-celebrity status. Even in small Medicine Hat (pop. 50,000 or so, now 60Kish) his father wasn't known unless you attended the college. In Edmonton--- greater area population near 1,000,000 --- Nancy's family did not stand out in any way.
-the philanthropist you cite wasn't a boyfriend. They had a coffee date the morning after Brad and Nancy's first get-together. They knew each other through work channels. The philanthropist made it well known he wasn't looking for a girlfriend at the time.
-Brad's expertise was networks. At the time he took computer science, internet browsers were brand new and the internet itself just starting to be known. In fact, when he started college the public at large did not have access to the internet. Browsers were not taught at the UofC then. Nor were forensic classes in computer science. In fact, the U of C didn't have access for students to the internet as of 1994--- students could use a U of C bulletin board, and access the university network, but that was about it. I am positive no such types of classes you potentially refer to were available by the time he graduated (2 yrs Medicine Hat College, 2 yrs U of C).
I feel like we've time warped back to 2011.
On evidence:
The old adage is "There is no such thing as a perfect crime", meaning a criminal always leave a clue or two behind. Whoever killed Nancy left very few clues.
The Pro-Brad Crowd: Brad's too smart to leave clues, they must have been planted.
The Not-Pro-Brad Crowd: he's a smart guy and managed to cover 98% of his tracks, but was thwarted by a couple details.
On motive:
The Not-Pro-Brad Crowd: Brad is the only one with motive.
The Pro-Brad Crowd: Brad had no motive.
The draft separation agreement shows Brad's motive. Their credits cards were maxed out, 401k loaned out, a hefty mortgage, and two leases on their BMWs. Nancy wanted the house, a car, the kids, and the option to move. Brad got the debt and alimony, child support, and private school tuition payments. He did not have access to enough money to hire an attorney. Alice Stubbs backed Brad into a corner.
My larger point is that you don't need to be trained on "browser technology" to understand the foundational aspects of html, cookies, temporary internet files, etc. These all come with the territory of being in technology. And the foundational computer science skills that you built in university are designed to let you learn as technology evolves.
Any person involved in technology professional should know how browsers work, how html works, and how a browser uses caches to temporarily maintain local copies of internet files. What they probably won't know is the details around how timestamps work, how to read an MFT file, etc.
The problem is that it is difficult to believe someone with those skills would leave an obvious digital trail.
One question which I didn't catch from the trial: were the temporary internet files recovered from the google search out in the open, or were they deleted and then recovered from the hard drive manually?
NB It is amazing how quickly technology evolved in the last 20 years. I remember using Gopher and being amazed at the possibilities.