[mod.legal] Macintosh Testimony in court

CMP.WERNER@R20.UTEXAS.EDU.UUCP (07/10/86)

A Macintosh computer was recently a star witness in the first-degree-murder
trial of Sagon Penn, who was charged with the shooting deaths of two San Diego
policemen.  The defense contended that shots had been fired in self-defense as
Penn attempted to escape a brutal beating by the police.  The defense's case
centered on a 2.3-second tape sequence recorded by the police dispatcher that
contained the voices of citizens complaining of police brutality;  the voice of
the dispatcher; and, faintly in the background, six sounds that both the
defense and prosecution agreed could be gunshots.  Determining the exact
timing of these shots was critical to Penn's claiming of self-defense.  Defense
attorneys hired speech expert Tito Poza to assist in analysis of the brief tape
sequence.  Poza used a Macintosh with the Mac-ADIOS audio digitizer and
MacSpeech Lab signal-processing program (both produced by GW Instruments of
Cambridge, Massachussetts) to locate and time the gunshots and represent the
data graphically on the Macintosh screen.

According to Poza, "I knew the only way I could get my specialized findings
across to the jury was to play the critical section of the tape to them over
and over, with millisecond timing .... [With the Mac] there were none of the
false starts you get with an ordinary tape recorder."  Although a verdict in
the case had not been reached at press time, Poza said that the attorneys, the
judge, and the jury were impressed with the Macintosh technology and its
contribution to the analysis of important evidence.

[above, without permission, from A+ Magazine, August '86, page 16, column News
and Views, by Frederic E. Davis]
-------