{
"$type": "site.standard.document",
"description": "Day 11 opens with Trooper Connor Keefe completing his testimony on chain of custody for physical evidence at 34 Fairview Road and the voluntary surrender of Jennifer McCabe's and Kerry Roberts's phones, before Yannetti's cross establishes that lead investigator Michael Proctor exercised singular control over all analytical work and report-writing. After a sidebar ruling excludes a Maryland Daubert decision that would have been used to preemptively attack Hyde's methodology, prosecution digital forensics expert Jessica Hyde takes the stand and delivers her central opinion: the 'how long to die in cold' search occurred at approximately 6:24 a.m. and was not user-deleted, directly contradicting the defense's 2:27 a.m. theory. Defense attorney Alessi then cross-examines Hyde for the remainder of the day, confronting her with her own May 2023 report calling the 2:27 timestamp 'unknown' and her June 2024 sworn testimony that 'we cannot tell' when the search occurred — positions she has since refined into a definitive 6:24 a.m. opinion. Alessi further establishes that O'Keefe's phone was never secured in a Faraday bag or placed in airplane mode, a best-practice failure Hyde acknowledges, and that Cellebrite removed the disputed 2:27 timestamp from its tools while offering no substantive explanation for the decision.",
"path": "/trial-2/day/11/",
"publishedAt": "2025-05-07T00:00:00.000Z",
"site": "at://did:plc:vd3vzujxkxsthkswrc2zzupm/site.standard.publication/krt",
"title": "Day 11 — Keefe, Hyde",
"updatedAt": "2026-06-08T13:28:24.184Z"
}