Kenosha trial update:
"ENHANCE!" argument continues, going so far as to make the judge get off his chair and walk up to the 4K display, squinting.
And the judge allows it.
Earlier police expert is called in to testify that the image has not been altered by the zooming, and is shown on cross to be uncertain if there has been any alteration. As a software engineer who has worked with signal processing, I don't buy the prosecution's assertion.
And then, when the pictures are finally shown on the live feed, not only can you see that the image has been altered by some form of "lossless" method of zooming in, but the frequency of details that the prosecution is looking for is too damn close to the Nyquist frequency for the pictures to be reliable proof of anything.
On the first image, where the shooter is supposedly pointing a gun at Ziminski/Rosenbaum, you can't even see the gun because of the darkness, and the left arm isn't even visible on the original. The prosecution hasn't even brought in the Ziminskis to testify. For all I know, the little white splotch on the left of the shooter is light being reflected from the dumpster. Even if it is his left arm, the fact that you can't even see the gun could mean that the shooter is merely holding out his left hand with his palm out. You can't even tell the angle that a gun would be pointing.
The second image, I can't even tell what I'm looking at. The live feed commentators claim it may be a frame-averaged image, where you essentially take the average of multiple frames to reduce noise. One, I don't see how that would work with moving objects. Two, I don't see how that can't possibly not alter the image.
How the judge could have possibly allowed those images into evidence, I have no idea. Definitely grounds for a mistrial, IMO.