Quote:
The video or audio clip will stand on it's own and the best the opposing party can do is ask the court for a forensic examination of the clip to be sure it's unaltered.


To me it sounds like this may be what is occurring; they don't want a merged file (in a given format and all one event) but rather the original audio (and a way to examine it).
I was asked to participate in such a lawsuit once and politely declined.
I was offered a wav file to examine and eventually said 'nope'.

I could mix 20 tracks in PT/RB and in the end (since it ends up as one contiguous file as merged) conceivably convince someone in forensics it really happened, but it might not be accurate .. and since I did not record the above example I wasn't gonna vouch for it.
May be the same thing is happening here.

/It was a strange request but they were willing to pay .. like I said my reply was 'Nope'.





I do not work here, but the benefits are still awesome
Make your sound your own!