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there would be no proof that the owner left the location.. only that the phone proximity was not triggered and the device was stagnant....That can and would be detected.
there would be no proof that the owner left the location.. only that the phone proximity was not triggered and the device was stagnant....That can and would be detected.
there would be no proof that the owner left the location.. only that the phone proximity was not triggered and the device was stagnant....
They would be at the rock for some period, leave, then return. What forensics.Again, someone leaving the device on a rock and going elsewhere, while presumably claiming they were at the rock, would be detected by pretty basic forensics.
They would be at the rock for some period, leave, then return. What forensics.
In this case I’m thinking there might not be dependable cell service anyway. Did we ever learn for sure if there was service around the Kelbaker location? If someone had been there before and knew there was no service, that would simplify everything for that person.I'm not entirely comfortable saying how it would work here, except a cell phone at rest is not going to behave the same as a cell phone in motion.
Try thinking about how your fitness app works.
In this case I’m thinking there might not be dependable cell service anyway. Did we ever learn for sure if there was service around the Kelbaker location? If someone had been there before and knew there was no service, that would simplify everything for that person.
Gotcha. This brings me back to the idea that there was another stop before Kelbaker.Collecting that information doesn't depend on cell service.
Most cell phone users are aware the phone display changes orientation when the phone is rotated around the screen's axis. I expect many people do not know how that works (accelerometer; I'm an old electronics guy) but, you're missing the point.I'm not entirely comfortable saying how it would work here, except a cell phone at rest is not going to behave the same as a cell phone in motion.
Try thinking about how your fitness app works.
Most cell phone users are aware the phone display changes orientation when the phone is rotated around the screen's axis. I expect many people do not know how that works (accelerometer; I'm an old electronics guy) but, you're missing the point.
I might insert my phone in to my hip pocket and sit or lay down upon a rock for forty-five minutes, perhaps sleeping. Or, maybe I placed my phone upon a rock because I just do not like sitting with my phone in my back pocket. You could not prove I was not sitting, standing, jogging in place or simply standing there and staring at a rock formation for thirty minutes while my phone was on the rock.
True......there would be “tracks” indicating such.
how did they get to the [new] location? how far away was it? walking or driving distance?
That can and would be detected.
Again, someone leaving the device on a rock and going elsewhere, while presumably claiming they were at the rock, would be detected by pretty basic forensics.
Can you say how?
Let's say that I arrived at a turn out in the desert (in a car, for simplicity). And I put my cell phone under a bush nearby (mine has a nice dust and waterproof case). I then drive a mile or two away, do something, then drive back. My vehicle doesn't have GPS.
I tell anyone who asks that I was at the parking lot the whole time. How would anyone know? Truly curious.
Oddly, in all my years of working alongside police (in a fairly large California county), I've never heard of anything more than analysis of pings and google data. In the case that was reported in detail in To Live and Die in LA, no attempt was made to tell where the victim's phone was aside from where it last pinged (whether it was in a car, or at hip height, or whatever).
I'm wondering if all police departments do this kind of forensic work. It would surprise me very much if San Bernardino (less resource rich than where I work) had done this.
Further, if a person put the phone at a height consistent with being inside a truck, how then would anyone know? The person could say they forgot their phone, returned later quickly to get it. Not that I think anyone asked anything so specific on a lie detector test...but if they did, it might cause an irregular result. OTOH, things slip the minds of honest people all the time.
There is no cell service there. One explanation for photos of Barb there then her not being there is an accomplice took her.