Live and recorded sessions on forensic video analysis, criminal defense strategies, legal technology ethics, and FrameCounsel workflows.
Body camera footage is now central to most criminal defense cases, yet many attorneys still review it manually -- missing critical details that could change outcomes. This webinar walks through a systematic, AI-assisted approach to body camera analysis that surfaces contradictions, timeline gaps, and exculpatory moments that manual review overlooks.
The Brady v. Maryland standard was established in 1963, but its application to modern digital evidence -- particularly video -- raises questions that most prosecutors and defense attorneys are still grappling with. This webinar examines how Brady obligations apply when evidence exists as terabytes of surveillance footage, body camera video, and digital metadata.
A flawless forensic analysis means nothing if the evidence gets excluded because chain of custody was not properly maintained. This webinar provides a comprehensive framework for documenting every step of the evidence handling process -- from the moment video files are received through final courtroom presentation.
Criminal cases increasingly involve footage from multiple camera sources -- body cameras, dashcams, surveillance systems, and bystander phones -- each with different timestamps, frame rates, and quality levels. Synchronizing these feeds into a coherent timeline is one of the most powerful tools in a defense attorney's arsenal.
Artificial intelligence is transforming criminal defense practice -- from automated transcription to facial recognition to predictive analytics. But the speed of adoption has outpaced ethical frameworks, leaving defense attorneys navigating uncharted territory. This webinar addresses the ethical obligations, practical risks, and best practices for using AI tools in criminal defense.
Most defense practices handle digital evidence reactively -- downloading files, reviewing them ad hoc, and storing them wherever there is space. This webinar presents a structured, end-to-end workflow for digital evidence management that scales from solo practitioners to large public defender offices.
As forensic video analysis becomes more sophisticated, so do the challenges to its admissibility. This webinar provides a deep dive into Daubert and Frye standards as they apply to video forensic techniques -- from basic enhancement and authentication to AI-powered analysis like facial recognition, object tracking, and automated contradiction detection.
Public defender offices face a unique challenge: massive caseloads, limited budgets, and an ever-growing volume of video evidence. This webinar addresses how public defender offices can implement systematic video analysis at scale without breaking the budget or burning out staff.