Tuesday, February 3, 2026

February 3: From our "Is this really real' department: As deepfakes blur the line between truth and fiction, how will we be able to determine what's real, what's fake and what can be proved in court: Deni Ellis Bechard tackles this thorny question in Scientific American, in an article headed, "headed,"How digital forensics could prove what’s real in the age of deepfakes."...Imagine this scenario. The year is 2030; deepfakes and artificial-intelligence-generated content are everywhere, and you are a member of a new profession—a reality notary. From your office, clients ask you to verify the authenticity of photos, videos, e-mails, contracts, screenshots, audio recordings, text message threads, social media posts and biometric records. People arrive desperate to protect their money, reputation and sanity—and also their freedom."

PASSAGE OF THE DAY: "All four are at stake on a rainy Monday when an elderly woman tells you her son has been accused of murder. She carries the evidence against him: a USB flash drive containing surveillance footage of the shooting. It is sealed in a plastic bag stapled to an affidavit, which explains that the drive contains evidence the prosecution intends to use. At the bottom is a string of numbers and letters: a cryptographic hash."

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STORY: "How digital forensics could prove what's real in the age of deepfakes," by Deni Ellis Bechard,  published by Scientific American, on January 24, 2026. (Deni Ellis Béchard is Scientific American’s senior writer for technologyHe is author of 10 books and has received a Commonwealth Writers’ Prize, a Midwest Book Award and a Nautilus Book Award for investigative journalism. He holds two master’s degrees in literature, as well as a master’s degree in biology from Harvard University. His most recent novel, We Are Dreams in the Eternal Machine, explores the ways that artificial intelligence could transform humanity.)

SUB-HEADING:  "The new forensic science of proving what’s real."


GIST: As deepfakes blur the line between truth and fiction, we’ll need a new class of forensic experts to determine what’s real, what’s fake and what can be proved in court


Imagine this scenario. The year is 2030; deepfakes and artificial-intelligence-generated content are everywhere, and you are a member of a new profession—a reality notary. From your office, clients ask you to verify the authenticity of photos, videos, e-mails, contracts, screenshots, audio recordings, text message threads, social media posts and biometric records. People arrive desperate to protect their money, reputation and sanity—and also their freedom.

All four are at stake on a rainy Monday when an elderly woman tells you her son has been accused of murder. She carries the evidence against him: a USB flash drive containing surveillance footage of the shooting. It is sealed in a plastic bag stapled to an affidavit, which explains that the drive contains evidence the prosecution intends to use. At the bottom is a string of numbers and letters: a cryptographic hash.

THE STERILE LAB

Your first step isn’t to look at the video—that would be like traipsing through a crime scene. Instead you connect the drive to an offline computer with a write blocker, a hardware device that prevents any data from being written back to the drive. This is like bringing evidence into a sterile lab. The computer is where you hash the file. Cryptographic hashing, an integrity check in digital forensics, has an “avalanche effect” so that any tiny change—a deleted pixel or audio adjustment—results in an entirely different code. If you open the drive without protecting it, your computer could quietly modify metadata—information about the file—and you won’t know whether the file you received was the same one that the prosecution intends to present. When you hash the video, you get the same string of numbers and letters printed on the affidavit.


Next you create a copy and hash it, checking that the codes match. Then you lock the original in a secure archive. You move the copy to a forensic workstation, where you watch the video—what appears to be security camera footage showing the woman’s adult son approaching a man in an alley, lifting a pistol and firing a shot. The video is convincing because it’s boring—no cinematic angles, no dramatic lighting. You’ve actually seen it before—it recently began circulating online, weeks after the murder. The affidavit notes the exact time the police downloaded it from a social platform.

Watching the grainy footage, you remember why you do this. You were still at university in the mid-2020s when deepfakes went from novelty to big business. Verification firms reported a 10-fold jump in deepfakes between 2022 and 2023, and face-swap attacks surged by more than 700 percent in just six months. By 2024 a deepfake fraud attempt occurred every five minutes. You had friends whose bank accounts were emptied, and your grandparents wired thousands to a virtual-kidnapping scammer after receiving altered photos of your cousin while she traveled through Europe. You entered this profession because you saw how a single fabrication could ruin a life.

DIGITAL FINGERPRINTS

The next step in analyzing the video is to run a provenance check. In 2021 the Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity (C2PA) was founded to develop a standard for tracking a file’s history. C2PA Content Credentials work like a passport, collecting stamps as the file moves through the world. If the video has any, you could track its creation and modifications. But most have been slow to adopt, and Content Credentials are often stripped as files circulate online. In a 2025 Washington Post test, journalists attached Content Credentials to an AI-generated video, but every major platform where they uploaded it stripped the data.

Next you open the file’s metadata, though it rarely survives online transfers. The time stamps don’t match the time of the murder. They were reset at some point—all are now listed as midnight—and the device field is blank. The software tag tells you the file was last saved by the kind of common video encoder used by social platforms. Nothing indicates the clip came directly from a surveillance system.

When you look up the public court filings in the homicide case, you learn that the owner of the property with the security camera was slow to respond to the police request. The surveillance system was set to overwrite data every 72 hours, and by the time the police accessed it, the footage was gone. This is what made the video’s anonymous online appearance—with the murder shown from the exact angle of that security camera—a sensation.

THE PHYSICS OF DECEPTION

You begin the Internet sleuthing that investigators call open-source intelligence, or OSINT. You instruct an AI agent to search for an earlier copy of the video. After eight minutes, it delivers the results. A video posted two hours before the police download shows a partial record that says the recording was made with a phone.

The reason you are finding the C2PA data is that companies such as Truepic and Qualcomm developed ways for phones and cameras to cryptographically sign content at the point of capture. What’s clear now is that the video didn’t come from a security camera.

You watch it again for physics that don’t make sense. The slowed frames pass like a flip-book. You stare at shadows, at the lines of an alley door. Then, at the edge of a wall, light that shouldn’t be there pulses. It’s not a light bulb’s flicker but a rhythmic shimmer. Someone filmed a screen.

The flicker is the sign of two clocks out of sync. A phone camera scans the world line by line, top to bottom, many times each second, whereas a screen refreshes in cycles—60, 90 or 120 times per second. When a phone records a screen, it can capture the shimmer of the screen updating. But this still doesn’t tell you if the recorded screen showed the truth. Someone might have simply recorded the original surveillance monitor to save the footage before it was overwritten. To prove a deepfake, you have to look deeper.

ARTIFACTS OF THE FAKE

You check for watermarks now—invisible statistical patterns inside the image. For instance, SynthID is Google DeepMind’s watermark for Google-made AI content. Your software finds hints of what might be a watermark but nothing certain. Cropping, compression or filming a screen can damage watermarks, leaving only traces, like those of erased words on paper. This doesn’t mean that AI generated the whole scene; it suggests an AI system may have altered the footage before the screen was recorded.

Next you run it through a deepfake detector like Reality Defender. The analysis flags anomalies around the shooter’s face. You break the video apart into stills. You use the InVID-WeVerify plug-in to pull clear frames and do reverse-image searches on the accused son’s face to see if it appeared in another context. Nothing comes up.

On the drive is other evidence, including more recent footage from the same camera. The brickwork lines up with the video. This isn’t a fabricated scene.

You return to the shooter’s face. The alley’s lighting is harsh, casting a distinct grain. His jacket and hands and the wall behind him have its coarse digital noise, but his face doesn’t. It’s slightly smoother, from a cleaner source.

Security cameras give moving objects a distinct blur, and their footage is compressed. The shooter has that blur and blocky quality except for his face. You watch the video again, zoomed in on only the face. The outline of the jaw jitters faintly—two layers are ever so slightly misaligned.

THE FINAL CALCULATION

You move back to when the shooter appears. He raises the weapon in his left hand. You call the woman. She tells you her son is right-handed and sends you videos of him playing sports as a teenager.

Lastly you go to the alley. The building’s maintenance records list the camera at 12 feet high. You measure its height and downward angle, using basic trigonometry to calculate the shooter’s height—three inches taller than the woman’s son.

The video makes sense now—it was made by cloning the son’s face, using an AI generator to superimpose it on the shooter and recording the screen with a phone to remove the generator’s watermark. Cleverly, whoever did this chose a phone that would generate Content Credentials, so viewers would see a cryptographically signed claim that the clip was recorded on that phone and that no edits were declared after capture. By doing this, the video’s maker essentially forged a certificate of authenticity for a lie.

The notarized document you will send to the public defender won’t read like a thriller but like a lab report. In 2030 a “reality notary” is no longer science fiction; it is the person whose services we use to ensure that people and institutions are what they appear to be."

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Join the discussion: Should we verify EVERYTHING or trust until something is proven false?

In this new world of deepfakes, what should be the default: skepticism unless something is cryptographically verified, or trust unless something is proven fake? And who should bear the burden and cost of verification—platforms, device makers, government, journalists, or everyday individuals?

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The entire story can be read at: 

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-digital-forensics-could-prove-whats-real-in-the-age-of-deepfakes/


PUBLISHER'S NOTE:  I am monitoring this case/issue/resource. Keep your eye on the Charles Smith Blog for reports on developments. The Toronto Star, my previous employer for more than twenty incredible years, has put considerable effort into exposing the harm caused by Dr. Charles Smith and his protectors - and into pushing for reform of Ontario's forensic pediatric pathology system. The Star has a "topic"  section which focuses on recent stories related to Dr. Charles Smith. It can be found at: http://www.thestar.com/topic/charlessmith. Information on "The Charles Smith Blog Award"- and its nomination process - can be found at: http://smithforensic.blogspot.com/2011/05/charles-smith-blog-award-nominations.html Please send any comments or information on other cases and issues of interest to the readers of this blog to: hlevy15@gmail.com.  Harold Levy: Publisher: The Charles Smith Blog.

SEE BREAKDOWN OF  SOME OF THE ON-GOING INTERNATIONAL CASES (OUTSIDE OF THE CONTINENTAL USA) THAT I AM FOLLOWING ON THIS BLOG,  AT THE LINK BELOW:  HL:

https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/120008354894645705/4704913685758792985


FINAL WORD:  (Applicable to all of our wrongful conviction cases):  "Whenever there is a wrongful conviction, it exposes errors in our criminal legal system, and we hope that this case — and lessons from it — can prevent future injustices."

Lawyer Radha Natarajan:

Executive Director: New England Innocence Project;

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FINAL, FINAL WORD: "Since its inception, the Innocence Project has pushed the criminal legal system to confront and correct the laws and policies that cause and contribute to wrongful convictions.   They never shied away from the hard cases — the ones involving eyewitness identifications, confessions, and bite marks. Instead, in the course of presenting scientific evidence of innocence, they've exposed the unreliability of evidence that was, for centuries, deemed untouchable." So true!


Christina Swarns: Executive Director: The Innocence Project;

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February 3: Neonatal Nurse: Lucy Letby: Part Three: ITN Productions pledges 'unprecedented access' for its documentary 'The Investigation of Lucy Letby' to be launched 'globally' on Netflix tomorrow (February 4), noting that, "The feature-length film about Lucy Letby, the British neonatal nurse who was found guilty of murdering seven babies and attempting to murder seven others under her care, hears for the first time from the British police who investigated the case and features never-before-seen footage of Letby during her arrests and police questioning. The documentary includes interviews with experts and lawyers on both sides. It also includes an anonymised interview with a mother of one of the victims who speaks for the first time about her experience and involvement in Letby’s trial."

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NOTA BENE: LBC NEWS: Analysis: "What all of the Lucy Letby documentaries reveal: The cases made on TV for and against the imprisoned neonatal nurse, who was convicted of killing seven babies."

https://www.lbc.co.uk/article/lucy-letby-documentary-evidence-

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x93eZD1F4vs

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RELEASE: "Unprecedented access secured for Lucy Letby Netflix doc," released by ITN Productions, on February 2, on February 2;

 

GIST: "ITN Productions’ new documentary, The Investigation of Lucy Letby, will launch globally on Netflix on Wednesday February 4th, 2026. 

The feature-length film about Lucy Letby, the British neonatal nurse who was found guilty of murdering seven babies and attempting to murder seven others under her care, hears for the first time from the British police who investigated the case and features never-before-seen footage of Letby during her arrests and police questioning. 

The documentary includes interviews with experts and lawyers on both sides. 

It also includes an anonymised interview with a mother of one of the victims who speaks for the first time about her experience and involvement in Letby’s trial.  

This group of contributors from both sides make The Investigation of Lucy Letby the most comprehensive look at one of Britain's most notorious crimes.

Produced as a result of years of research and relationship-building, the film traces developments from Letby’s arrests to trial chronologically only using testimonies from contributors from both sides who have been directly involved in or affected by the case.

Ian Rumsey, Managing Director of Content, ITN, said: “This was an incredibly challenging story to tell. We've presented perspectives from all sides in order to let viewers draw their own conclusions. I'm enormously proud of the entire team, who've attempted to make the definitive documentary about this tragic case. It is ITN Productions at its best."

Caroline Short, Head of Global TV, ITN Productions, said: “The access to all our contributors came with a huge responsibility to present everyone's perspectives with care and understanding. We are grateful to all those people who trusted us to tell their story.”

Dominic Sivyer, director of The Investigation of Lucy Letby, said: “This was an exceptional and demanding project, marked by significant creative and ethical responsibility. Our aim was to craft a powerful, emotionally resonant depiction of the events surrounding the case.”

The Investigation of Lucy Letby was executive produced by Caroline Short and Ian Rumsey. It was directed by Dominic Sivyer, produced by Carla Wright and edited by Simon Mason. Post production was completed in HDR in-house at ITN Post, led by Director of Post Production, Edurne Bengoa.

Programme Synopsis:

The Investigation of Lucy Letby, examines the case of Letby the neonatal nurse convicted of unimaginable crimes - the murder of 7 babies and attempted murder of 7 more. Her trial gripped Britain, and her conviction has divided opinion. The film includes never-before-seen footage and unparalleled and exclusive access to those central to the story: the detectives who built the case, a family seeking answers, the hospital consultants who initially raised the alarm, and lawyers and medical experts who question the evidence, providing a comprehensive look at one of Britain's most notorious crimes."

The entire release can be read at: 

https://www.itn.co.uk/media-centre/itn-productions-secures-unprecedented-access-lucy-letby-netflix-doc

PUBLISHER'S NOTE:  I am monitoring this case/issue/resource. Keep your eye on the Charles Smith Blog for reports on developments. The Toronto Star, my previous employer for more than twenty incredible years, has put considerable effort into exposing the harm caused by Dr. Charles Smith and his protectors - and into pushing for reform of Ontario's forensic pediatric pathology system. The Star has a "topic"  section which focuses on recent stories related to Dr. Charles Smith. It can be found at: http://www.thestar.com/topic/charlessmith. Information on "The Charles Smith Blog Award"- and its nomination process - can be found at: http://smithforensic.blogspot.com/2011/05/charles-smith-blog-award-nominations.html Please send any comments or information on other cases and issues of interest to the readers of this blog to: hlevy15@gmail.com.  Harold Levy: Publisher: The Charles Smith Blog.

SEE BREAKDOWN OF  SOME OF THE ON-GOING INTERNATIONAL CASES (OUTSIDE OF THE CONTINENTAL USA) THAT I AM FOLLOWING ON THIS BLOG,  AT THE LINK BELOW:  HL:

https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/120008354894645705/4704913685758792985

FINAL WORD:  (Applicable to all of our wrongful conviction cases):  "Whenever there is a wrongful conviction, it exposes errors in our criminal legal system, and we hope that this case — and lessons from it — can prevent future injustices."

Lawyer Radha Natarajan:

Executive Director: New England Innocence Project;

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FINAL, FINAL WORD: "Since its inception, the Innocence Project has pushed the criminal legal system to confront and correct the laws and policies that cause and contribute to wrongful convictions.   They never shied away from the hard cases — the ones involving eyewitness identifications, confessions, and bite marks. Instead, in the course of presenting scientific evidence of innocence, they've exposed the unreliability of evidence that was, for centuries, deemed untouchable." So true!


Christina Swarns: Executive Director: The Innocence Project;

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Monday, February 2, 2026

February 2: Paul Hildwin: Florida: Denial of DNA Testing: His message to the readers of the Concord Monitor: "Innocent people are on death row. I know because I was one of them"...Paul Hildwin spent 29 years on Florida’s death row for first-degree murder and was exonerated in 2014 after DNA evidence proved his innocence."

WORDS TO HEED: FROM OUR POST ON KEVIN COOPER'S  APPLICATION FOR POST-CONVICTION DNA TESTING; CALIFORNIA: (Applicable wherever a state resists DNA testing): "Blogger/extraordinaire Jeff Gamso's blunt, unequivocal, unforgettable message to the powers that be in California: "JUST TEST THE FUCKING DNA." (Oh yes, Gamso raises, as he does in many of his posts, an important philosophical question: This post is headed: "What is truth, said jesting Pilate."...Says Gamso: "So what's the harm? What, exactly, are they scared of? Don't we want the truth?" 

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PASSAGE OF THE DAY: "My case is not an outlier. The Innocence Project has represented many people who were wrongly convicted of murder and sentenced to death, including clients who came within days of execution. These cases share common failures: police and prosecutorial misconduct, ineffective legal representation, eyewitness misidentification, unreliable forensic evidence, coerced false confessions and racial bias. Together, they reveal a capital punishment system that is deeply flawed and that poses an unconscionable risk to innocent people."

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PASSAGE TWO OF THE DAY: "My case is not an outlier. The Innocence Project has represented many people who were wrongly convicted of murder and sentenced to death, including clients who came within days of execution. These cases share common failures: police and prosecutorial misconduct, ineffective legal representation, eyewitness misidentification, unreliable forensic evidence, coerced false confessions and racial bias. Together, they reveal a capital punishment system that is deeply flawed and that poses an unconscionable risk to innocent people."

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COMMENTARY: "Opinion: Innocent people are on death row. I know because I was one of them. - Concord Monitor," by Paul Hidden, published by the Concord Monitor, on January 27, 2026. (Paul Hildwin spent 29 years on Florida’s death row for first-degree murder and was exonerated in 2014 after DNA evidence proved his innocence.)


For 29 years, I went to sleep every night knowing the government had scheduled my death for a crime I did not commit. I entered prison at 24, young and healthy, and left at 60, seriously ill with cancer. In between, I lost my freedom, my family and nearly my life to a wrongful conviction.


In 1985, I was wrongfully convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to death. My conviction was the result of flaws in our system: inadequate legal representation, a prosecutor who withheld evidence pointing to my innocence and an FBI analyst who gave false testimony at trial.

In 1999, the Innocence Project agreed to take my case. Four years later, DNA testing excluded me as the source of the biological evidence recovered from the crime scene. Yet the state of Florida continued to fight those results. For seven more years, my attorneys battled to have the DNA profile entered into the national DNA database. When the Florida Supreme Court finally ordered the testing in 2010, the results were unmistakable: the DNA matched the victim’s boyfriend. In 2014, the Florida Supreme Court overturned my conviction.

The death penalty is often described as justice. I am living proof that it is not. Now, New Hampshire legislators are trying to bring back executions.

My case is not an outlier. The Innocence Project has represented many people who were wrongly convicted of murder and sentenced to death, including clients who came within days of execution. These cases share common failures: police and prosecutorial misconduct, ineffective legal representation, eyewitness misidentification, unreliable forensic evidence, coerced false confessions and racial bias. Together, they reveal a capital punishment system that is deeply flawed and that poses an unconscionable risk to innocent people.

Since 1973, at least 200 people in the United States have been exonerated from death row, according to the Death Penalty Information Center. A 2014 study conservatively estimated that at least four percent of those sentenced to death are innocent. And even those numbers fail to capture the full damage. The threat of execution pressures innocent people to plead guilty and incentivizes false testimony from witnesses, distorting the truth in ways that cannot be undone. Instead of focusing on the death penalty, New Hampshire should do more to prevent and correct wrongful convictions and protect the innocent. 

When my conviction was overturned, I walked out of prison a free man. But I never got back the years I spent on death row for a crime I didn’t commit and I never stopped thinking about the men who wouldn’t be as lucky.

Just last week, I traveled from my home state of Florida to New Hampshire to testify before the House Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee against several bills that would reinstate the death penalty in the Granite State.

 Supporters of these proposals (House Bills 1749141317371730) argue that our justice system is strong and that the risk of condemning an innocent person is exceedingly rare. I am living proof that this confidence is misplaced. 

One supporter even suggested limiting the amount of time a person can spend on death row to speed up the process. Had that policy existed in my case, I would never have lived long enough to prove my innocence.

New Hampshire executed 26 peo­ple in its his­to­ry before lawmakers vot­ed successfully to abol­ish the death penal­ty in 2019. 

Seven years later, these bills represent a step backward for New Hampshire’s criminal legal system and risk repeating the very failures that lead to wrongful convictions.

 I urge legislators to not reinstate the death penalty because the fact of the matter is, innocent people are arrested. Innocent people are wrongfully convicted of crimes they did not commit. And innocent people are sentenced to death. There are innocent people on death row. I know because I was one of them.

The entire story can be read at: 

https://www.concordmonitor.com/2026/01/27/my-turn-wrongful-conviction-death-penalty-flaws/

PUBLISHER'S NOTE:  I am monitoring this case/issue/resource. Keep your eye on the Charles Smith Blog for reports on developments. The Toronto Star, my previous employer for more than twenty incredible years, has put considerable effort into exposing the harm caused by Dr. Charles Smith and his protectors - and into pushing for reform of Ontario's forensic pediatric pathology system. The Star has a "topic"  section which focuses on recent stories related to Dr. Charles Smith. It can be found at: http://www.thestar.com/topic/charlessmith. Information on "The Charles Smith Blog Award"- and its nomination process - can be found at: http://smithforensic.blogspot.com/2011/05/charles-smith-blog-award-nominations.html Please send any comments or information on other cases and issues of interest to the readers of this blog to: hlevy15@gmail.com.  Harold Levy: Publisher: The Charles Smith Blog.

SEE BREAKDOWN OF  SOME OF THE ON-GOING INTERNATIONAL CASES (OUTSIDE OF THE CONTINENTAL USA) THAT I AM FOLLOWING ON THIS BLOG,  AT THE LINK BELOW:  HL:

https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/120008354894645705/4704913685758792985

———————————————————————————————

FINAL WORD:  (Applicable to all of our wrongful conviction cases):  "Whenever there is a wrongful conviction, it exposes errors in our criminal legal system, and we hope that this case — and lessons from it — can prevent future injustices."

Lawyer Radha Natarajan:

Executive Director: New England Innocence Project;

—————————————————————————————————


FINAL, FINAL WORD: "Since its inception, the Innocence Project has pushed the criminal legal system to confront and correct the laws and policies that cause and contribute to wrongful convictions.   They never shied away from the hard cases — the ones involving eyewitness identifications, confessions, and bite marks. Instead, in the course of presenting scientific evidence of innocence, they've exposed the unreliability of evidence that was, for centuries, deemed untouchable." So true!


Christina Swarns: Executive Director: The Innocence Project;

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