By Mike Brunker
msnbc.com writer and editor
If you are unfortunate enough to land in court after a serious automobile accident, the star witness against you may not be an eyewitness or even a human being. It could be your car.
Todayâs high-tech automobiles increasingly rely on computers to maximize performance and monitor operating systems. But while the under-the-hood computers are doing that, they may also be recording data about your driving.
Typically, that information is collected by a vehicleâs âevent data recorder,â or EDR, a computer module that is often compared to the âblack boxâ on a commercial airliner. Among other things, EDRs are capable of recording a number of driver behaviors, including brake application, steering, speed at time of impact in the event of a crash and whether the driver and passengers were using seatbelts.
Such information is primarily intended to help improve federal safety standards, but increasingly it is being used in court cases in which vehicles were involved in a serious accident or the commission of a crime.
For example, electronic evidence played a key role in a criminal case at the center of Friday nightâs âDateline NBCâ (10 p.m. / 9 p.m. Central). The case involves a heartbroken Montana teenager, a dangerous stretch of highway and some ominous text messages.
Justine Winter's mother, father, and brother talk about the girl they know and love, and how this tragedy will affect the rest of her life. This web exclusive is part of the Dateline report 'Crossing the Line' from Friday, November 11.
âEssentially, vehicles nowadays are a huge conglomeration of computer chips and modules,â said Mike McCullough, a retired Phoenix police detective who investigated serious crashes for many years. âAnd the electronic data they collect is going to become more and more common as evidence down the road.â
Among the drivers of that anticipated growth are new National Highway Traffic Safety Administration regulations that take effect next year.
The rules do not require EDRs â" already in use in more than 85 percent of U.S. vehicles â" but they mandate that in cars that have them, the devices must capture and preserve at least 15 types of crash data, including pre-crash speed, engine throttle, changes in forward velocity and airbag deployment times. And one day, the agency noted in its final rule, they may even play a role in getting emergency medical service quickly dispatched to the scene of an accident by automatically sending a 911 alert.
'Staggering' amount of information
Even now, however, such information could be cross-checked with information from devices like cellphones and GPS units to build what could be an air-tight court case.
âNow youâre in a situation where, if someone has the time and expertise, they can say you drove from here to there at this speed, you parked at Whole Foods, hereâs what you bought, then you got back in your car and drove here and made a call to this number,â said Dean Gonsowski, eDiscovery counsel with Clearwell, which is part of the security firm Symantec. â... Itâs staggering how much information can be collected.â
Drew Findling, an Atlanta attorney and chairman of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyersâ Forensic  Disciplines Committee, notes that e-evidence might just as easily create an unshakable alibi, which is why he routinely hires experts to examine equipment and data.
âYou want to have the equipment examined to determine the reliability, both from a chronological and content standpoint,â he said. âAnd there are times when that evidence is of an exculpatory nature, so you want to make sure that you gain access to it â" whether itâs a computer or an iPhone or whatever â" and that you preserve that evidence immediately.â
Courts already are wrestling with the challenges presented in general by electronic evidence, which has become almost ubiquitous in both civil and criminal cases.
âElectronic evidence is admitted in almost every trial in America, whether itâs a phone bill or electric bill or a document thatâs created, stored or transmitted electronically,â said Mark D. Rasch, director of cybersecurity and privacy consulting at the technology services company CSC and former head of the Justice Departmentâs computer crime unit. â⦠When you think about it, even a crime scene photograph is electronic evidence now.â
New layers of complexity
The increasing use of digital evidence has spawned a new legal specialty â"Â e-discovery â"Â and has added layers of complexity that didnât exist when cases were won or lost on paper documents. In some cases â" particularly those involving corporations â" the amount of digital data that must be retrieved and sorted through prior to trial is immense.
âState crime labs are adding high-tech pieces, but if you think itâs hard to examine urine and blood samples, try working through a zip drive, a hard drive or an iPhone,â said Findling, the defense attorney.
Evidentiary laws also have failed to keep pace with rapidly changing technology, said Rasch.
 âWe changed the discovery laws eight or 10 years ago, but we need to change a bunch of different laws, including electronic privacy laws,â he said. âAnd we need to continue to tweak the laws on chain of custody, validation and verification, authentication, corroboration and the scope and extent of discovery.â
While lawmakers struggle to catch up, judges and courts are taking wildly varying positions on the reliability and admissibility of digital evidence.
âRight now it depends on the state, depends on the judge,â said McCullough, president of the Southwestern Association of Technical Accident Investigators. âA lot of information has to be established to show that itâs reliable.â
Gonsowski said much of the variation is attributable to the differing technology comfort levels among judges, prosecutors and defense counsels.
âYou see some inconsistent decisions because a case may require that the litigants and the judge all understand how Facebook works, for example,â he said. ââ¦Â So thereâs a lot of sort of groping around â" not quite the blind leading the blind, but folks wrestling with these new technologies as they apply to traditional legal concepts.â
Stricter rules for digital evidence
Experts have different views of those to-and-fro battles.
Rasch, the former Justice Department official, said that courts often impose higher requirements on digital evidence than they do with physical documents, such as letters.
âWe demand a (greater) degree of certitude for certain kinds of electronic evidence than is demanded in the physical world. ⦠A lot of it has to do with the general unease we have with electronic evidence. Weâre not sure itâs reliable, that it hasnât been tampered with.â
But others worry that current laws â" and the judges who enforce them â" have failed to adequately consider that electronic evidence is âinherently malleable or ephemeral.â
Among them is Steven Teppler, a partner in the Chicago law firm Edelson McGuire and co-chair of the American Bar Associationâs Digital Evidence Committee. He is part of what he describes as a growing movement within the legal profession to have digital evidence deemed âhearsay,â and thus generally inadmissible in legal proceedings unless its reliability can be demonstrated.
âUnless we change the rules of evidence to require a higher level of reliability, you have this built in problem where people say, âIt comes out of the computer, therefore it must be reliable,ââ he said.
But that doesnât account for the fact that programmers create the software that instructs those machines to generate data, Teppler said.
âComputers will repetitively create bad information if they are programmed incorrectly,â he said. âJust because a computer generates it doesnât mean itâs true.â
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