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Yes. The interplay of phone activity.
I don't see how the Defense can overcome the corroboration.
JMO
Great! I will tune in for the recap. Thanks Meg.
Yes. The interplay of phone activity.
I don't see how the Defense can overcome the corroboration.
JMO
Ramos asks if other things can be done to try and locate whether the three gifs could be track. Ramos suggests you could contact the person on the other end of the message. Kotrodimos says he could have done that
3:55 p.m. Ramos asks if the three gifs are tied together. Kotrodimos does not know. Ramos asks Kotrodimos to explain epoch time when it comes to cell phones. Kotrodimos says he’s not familiar enough with it to testify on the stand. Ramos says epoch time is the number of seconds that has elapsed since Jan. 1, 1970. That’s how phones have registered the information. Kotrodimos says it’s a programming reason.
3:53 p.m. Ramos asks where the gifs were in the phone. They were in an SMS database. Ramos asks about cache. Kotrodimos says they are folders where the system stores data. Ramos asks if there are certain things in our phones that we can’t access. That’s true.
3:47 p.m. Back from break. Ramos says he’s going to begin by diving into the PNG files. Ramos asks about the time and date of one of the files. He pulls out his cell phone and says he’s going to text his son three gifs and another item. “If you were to get my phone and put it in your system, extract it and analyze it, would all of those be the same time date and time down to the second?” Kotrodimos says they could.
Nate Eaton, EastIdahoNews.com