here for optimism. sergeant sinclair, it would seem, was vindicated. he said they were coming right all the him. the new evidence suggested that sinclair had hit the brakes, not because he was going too fast, as the highway patrol contended, but because he saw danger ahead. the california highway patrol investigators dismissed the new evidence, calling it the phantom skid mark. the chp experts covered that ground on their hands and knees, literally inch by inch, and never saw that skid mark. why they didn t find it wasn t clear, but the discovery gave new impetus to brunn s team of forensic accident reconstruction experts. paul kayfetz, a photographer and engineer, is an expert in something called photogrammetry. it s a $6 word for making measurements from photographs
sergeant sinclair, it would seem, was vindicated. he said they were coming right all the him. the new evidence suggested that sinclair had hit the brakes, not because he was going too fast, as the highway patrol contended, but because he saw danger ahead. the california highway patrol investigators dismissed the new evidence, calling it the phantom skid mark. the chp experts covered that ground on their hands and knees, literally inch by inch, and never saw that skid mark. why they didn t find it wasn t clear, but the discovery gave new impetus to brunn s team of forensic accident reconstruction experts. paul kayfetz, a photographer and engineer, is an expert in something called photogrammetry. it s a $6 word for making measurements from photographs or using photographs to make
sergeant sinclair, it would seem, was vindicated. he said they were coming right all the him. the new evidence suggested that sinclair had hit the brakes, not because he was going too fast, as the highway patrol contended, but because he saw danger ahead. the california highway patrol investigators dismissed the new evidence, calling it the phantom skid mark. the chp experts covered that ground on their hands and knees, literally inch by inch, and never saw that skid mark. why they didn t find it wasn t clear, but the discovery gave new impetus to brunn s team of forensic accident reconstruction experts. paul kayfetz, a photographer and engineer, is an expert in something called photogrammetry. it s a $6 word for making measurements from photographs or using photographs to make measurements. brunn s experts needed a map