Trial & Litigation Forensic Animation
Digital Trace Forensics, LLC provides a variety of litigation and trial demonstrative aid solutions to include 2D and 3D Computer Generated Animation (CGA) re-enactment animations to help enhance your case.
2D & 3D Accident Reconstruction
Witness testimony and crash scene photographs are useful during litigation and/or trial, however, these pieces of information often leave much to the jury’s imagination. With our accident reconstruction Computer Generated Animation (CGA) services, you can be sure jurors fully understand the facts of the crash along with the injuries sustained and the aftermath.
Continuing Legal Education (CLE) Training
Continuing Legal Education (CLE) training by Digital Trace Forensics, LLC / Jeremy Gibson focuses on 2D & 3D demonstrative aids for use in civil cases and criminal trials. Course reviews several cases where demonstrative aids and forensic animation assisted in achieving a favorable outcome. Further, the course introduces applicable case law, limitations, and rules of admissibility.
Digital Timelines & Visual Chronology
Often considered a crucial strategic element of litigation or trial, visual timelines are valuable in conveying information that occurred over minutes to years. Timelines and visual chronology are produced to be a static image or a fully digital, interactive experience.
Medical Illustrations
Medical demonstrative illustrations and CGA are useful in helping showcase complex conditions within human anatomy such as surgery or injury. Medically accurate and authenticate by an expert ensures your medical demonstrative aid is impactful and memorable.
Video Production / Editing
If a picture is worth 1,000 words, a video developed by Digital Trace Forensics, LLC is worth a million.
Are you stuck with a pile of hours long surveillance video for an incident that occurred within 10 minutes? Let Digital Trace Forensics, LLC help trim, compile, and organize these clips into one seamless, to the point, video.
PowerPoint / Trial Presentations
Well-designed trial presentations are imperative to properly convey information to a judge and jury effectively and seamlessly.
Multimedia and Interactive Presentations
Timelines and Visual Chronology
Charts & Diagrams
Expert Witness Testimony
Digital Trace Forensics, LLC / Jeremy Gibson has been afforded expert witness status in several counties throughout the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania regarding Computer Generated Animation (CGA), homicide re-enactment, and computer / cell phone forensics.
“The Bar Association truly appreciates your contribution to its efforts to provide quality continuing legal education programs and those who participated were very positive with their feedback.”
“This was the first (but certainly not the last) time my office called Jeremy Gibson from Digital Trace Forensics to help us give the jury an actual visualization of a homicide. This CGA was so crucial to this 1st degree murder conviction because it showed the jury – rather than just telling them and hoping they could picture it in their minds – why a claim of self-defense was an absolute fabrication.”
“We wanted to take a moment to extend to you our gratitude for your valuable expertise during the criminal trial against Alois Kudlach. Your input, knowledge, and testimony were instrumental to this conviction and we are grateful that you took the time out of your busy schedule to be a part of this important case. We could not do these cases without you.”
“The demonstration of trial graphics was extremely helpful to introduce us to a means of providing juries with complicated evidence…in an effective and easily understood manner.”
“I am writing to thank you for the trial graphics that Jeremy Gibson of your group prepared for our firm’s needs. His creativity, quick-study and understanding of how trial graphics need a proper evidentiary foundation, made working with Jeremy a pleasure.”
“Your presentation was informative from the prospective of a litigating attorney as it so very clearly made the point of how that which is so complicated can be reduced to a level which is understandable to jurors.”