BDS
Squad Member
Posts: 201
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Post by BDS on Oct 12, 2008 17:45:10 GMT
Did anyone know that it is possible today to date the date of production of a document with reasonable certainty by subjecting it to simple forensic tests?
Such evidence is, of course, unobtainable in the event of the documents being affected by intense heat as in, say, a major fire or, of course, in the event of their unavailability.
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Post by The All Seeing I on Oct 12, 2008 17:56:48 GMT
I fail to see what you're insinuating there bds.
Feel free to PM me to explain it to my feeble Leinster brain
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Post by creaner on Oct 12, 2008 19:34:03 GMT
Coming soon to Sky One: CSI: Ronkswood.
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BDS
Squad Member
Posts: 201
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Post by BDS on Oct 13, 2008 20:52:31 GMT
Coming soon to Sky One: CSI: Ronkswood. ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D
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BDS
Squad Member
Posts: 201
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Post by BDS on Oct 13, 2008 20:57:22 GMT
I fail to see what you're insinuating there bds. Feel free to PM me to explain it to my feeble Leinster brain Nothing at all. It is a simple statement. I was hoping someone with computer wizard status might be able to corroborate it. I understand it is a useful tool for investigators as it proves conclusively that documents have been prepared at a later date to present a false picture of events.
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Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
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Post by Deleted on Oct 21, 2008 8:31:19 GMT
Its very easy to prove when any document created on a pc has been created, amended etc. And its very easy to find deleted documents on a hard drive, even after the hard drive has been formatted. I had a hard drive problem, formatted and lost loads of important stuff, I bought a piece of software for about £20 which found stuff on my hard drive that I didn't even know I'd ever deleted!! its kind of scary! And thats a piece of £20 software - the experts can prove far more than just the existence of a document!!
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Post by The All Seeing I on Oct 22, 2008 12:31:32 GMT
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