Experts recommend common tools but caution on enhancement, codecs and emotional toll of crime-scene recordings
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Maher recommended Adobe Audition, Audacity and MATLAB for analysis, FFmpeg/ExifTool/MediaInfo for metadata, and warned that enhancement, codec compression and live-stream artifacts can complicate timing; he also addressed strategies to manage emotional toll on examiners.
During the webinar Q&A, Dr. Rob Maher named specific software and practical limits for working with user-generated recordings and addressed examiner wellbeing.
Software recommendations: Maher said most of his waveform and spectrogram figures come from Adobe Audition because he is familiar with it, and he uses MATLAB for signal processing. "There's a freeware program called Audacity that's available ... and I can recommend that as well," he said, noting that familiarity and availability guide tool choice. On metadata readers, he confirmed the common toolset: FFmpeg, ExifTool and MediaInfo, but advised that proprietary device metadata can require specialized readers.
Enhancement and codec cautions: On noise reduction and other enhancement, Maher stressed transparency: "Be very clear if that's happening, what the purpose of that enhancement may be." He warned that filters altering time or spectral content may undermine subsequent timing analyses, and he urged examiners to document any processing. He also cautioned analysts to be hesitant about drawing very precise timing conclusions from files produced by perceptual coders (MP3/AAC) or live-stream channels.
Emotional toll: Asked about disturbing content in crime-scene files, Maher said he copes by focusing on professional duty: "There are people involved in such a situation ... who deserve to have an objective and complete analysis of what occurred," and that focusing on that responsibility helps manage emotional strain.
Practical guidance: Use commonly available tools for initial inspection, preserve originals, document any enhancements and their purpose, and quantify uncertainty introduced by codecs, clipping or packet loss when reporting results.
