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JimmyJam 1 point ago +2 / -1

When you submit a brief you usually submit it in physical form following the standards set by the court and you deliver it to all appropriate parties. If the court requires a digital submission from the filing party it is going to be an original digital copy. There is no logical reason to rasterize then scan. And no court would require that process if it is likely to damage the original content. Just think.

Trust me.

There is no reason for the originating party to use an optical scan when they have the original digital copy.

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ConTexYankee 1 point ago +1 / -0

This was not released by the parties to the suit. This was released by a website that pulls scans. Let me go find the comment. Happy Thanksgiving.

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JimmyJam 0 points ago +1 / -1

BTW the website this is hosted on is literally her website. Go to the home page.

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JimmyJam 1 point ago +2 / -1

K Gotcha. More plausible. Though I have never seen these types of artifacts in digitized scans.

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ConTexYankee 1 point ago +1 / -0

Anytime I have to OCR a scan at work, I get the same thing. It’s a mess. And obviously the website that released it isn’t going to go through and correct all the errors which is what you have to do after you OCR something. A complete mess.

The Michigan filing is a formatting mess due to this. No way did they file it that way.

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JimmyJam 0 points ago +1 / -1

Hope you are right. My misunderstanding was thinking this was sourced directly from the filing party. Though if it wasn’t, I’m still confused as to how it would have instantly been made available to third parties if it was submitted via paper at midnight.

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ConTexYankee 1 point ago +1 / -0

https://thedonald.win/p/11QS7dT9IH/x/c/4DpKmcWm91J

And it’s not court reporter website, it’s court listener. So they are the ones who pulled and have it out there. Go read the Michigan one. You’ll see all thr massive formatting issues and such.