The identical co-ordinates
It emerged during Dr Wright’s cross-examination that the .tex file for Image 2 in his so-called White Paper LaTeX Files used identical co-ordinates in the identical order, using identical syntax to those in the Aspose blob (subject to correction of the points mentioned in paragraph 523 above):
Wright’s Image 2 {L21/22.2/2} |
Aspose blob Image 2 {L21/18.1/63} |
When that coincidence was drawn to Dr Wright’s attention, his initial reaction was to argue that this was because “it’s a digital file”, rather than his use of Aspose.
210:14 Q. I mean, just keep that document up on screen but go back
15 to page 63 {L21/18.1/64}, and then can we open up
16 {L21/22.2/1} alongside it. So {L21/22.2/1}, that is
17 the text file for image 2 from your White Paper LaTeX
18 files, Dr Wright.
19 Can we go to page 2 {L21/22.2/2}. Do you see it has
20 exactly identical coordinates to your Aspose document?
21 A. In these sections, they would. It's going into a lot of
22 detail, so ...
23 Q. Down to less than one twentieth of a millimetre.
24 A. Because it's a digital file. So, if I've created
25 something and it's using a digital file, then it's going
211: 1 to come out with the same.
2 Q. There's only one reason for this, Dr Wright. It's that
3 you used Aspose to forge your documents, didn't you?
4 A. No, I did not.