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AT&T Historical Precision Location records are not cell tower records. They carry latitude and longitude coordinates, accuracy thresholds stated in meters, and source methodology that standard CDR data does not. Courts are increasingly demanding expert testimony to translate what these accuracy thresholds actually mean before allowing location-specific inferences to reach a jury.
AT&T Precision Location records appear in criminal, civil, and post-conviction matters with increasing frequency. These four learning objectives map directly to courtroom and discovery scenarios attorneys encounter.
AT&T itself states in the header of every precision location report: results are a best estimate and location data is sourced from various databases which may cause location results to be less than exact. That disclaimer has direct relevance to any expert opinion that treats these coordinates as confirmed GPS fixes.
Each precision location record is generated from one or more of three network measurement systems. The source determines the accuracy ceiling. Experts who do not account for source heterogeneity are operating outside accepted methodology.
The accuracy statement in each AT&T record is a probabilistic upper bound. Understanding what each threshold level permits and prohibits as a location inference is the foundational analytical step before any expert opinion can be formed.
Federal and state courts have developed a growing body of decisions addressing accuracy thresholds, expert qualification, and the limits of carrier-side location inference.
When reviewing government expert reports or preparing to cross-examine a precision location analyst, these methodological failures materially affect the reliability of the location inference.
Defense attorneys often encounter both precision location records and timing advance data in the same case. Understanding how they differ is essential to avoiding conflation errors in expert reports and cross-examination.
Use this six-step sequence when precision location records appear in discovery. Each step addresses a distinct evidentiary vulnerability.
Elite Digital Forensics provides independent expert analysis of AT&T precision location records for criminal defense, prosecution support, and civil litigation. We map accuracy thresholds, assess source methodology, and produce court-ready expert reports.
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These questions come from defense attorneys reviewing precision location evidence. Answers reflect current case law and standards as of June 2026.
Standard CDR records identify which cell tower sector a phone connected to at the time of a call, text, or data session. AT&T Historical Precision Location records provide latitude and longitude coordinates derived from network-side measurements including NELOS, PCMD, and RTT data. The precision record also includes a stated accuracy threshold in meters, which CDR tower records do not. These are fundamentally different evidence types and should not be conflated in litigation.
Each AT&T Precision Location record includes a statement such as accuracy likely better than 2500 meters. This is a probabilistic upper bound, not a confirmed radius. AT&T states in the report header that location data is sourced from various databases and may be less than exact. A 2500-meter threshold means the phone was estimated to be within a 2500-meter radius of the reported coordinate, which at that scale can encompass many city blocks or multiple neighborhoods and is insufficient to place a device at a specific address.
NELOS, or Network Event Location System, is AT&T's internal platform that aggregates location-relevant measurements from network infrastructure and produces estimated geographic coordinates. It does not require the phone to be in an active call. NELOS draws from multiple signal sources and applies weighting algorithms. The resulting coordinate is a best estimate, not a GPS fix, and carries the accuracy threshold documented in the AT&T report. A forensic examiner must assess which measurement source underlies each record before interpreting its probative value.
Only when the accuracy threshold is sufficiently tight, typically 50 to 200 meters, and the reported coordinate falls consistently near a single address across multiple records. Records carrying thresholds of 1500 to 10000 meters cannot reliably place a device at a specific address and should not be used for that purpose without additional corroborating evidence. Courts have increasingly required expert testimony to contextualize accuracy thresholds before such records are admitted for location-specific inferences.
Defense attorneys should first request the underlying data source documentation for each record to determine whether the coordinate was derived from NELOS, PCMD, RTT, or GPS handoff. Second, they should retain a qualified expert to map accuracy thresholds against the claimed location. Third, they should examine whether any records with wide thresholds are being used to support address-level inferences that the data cannot sustain. Daubert and Frye challenges may be appropriate when the government's expert fails to account for stated accuracy limitations.
PCMD, or Per Call Measurement Data, is a carrier-level dataset capturing signal timing and power measurements during active connections. In the AT&T context, PCMD-derived coordinates tend to carry tighter accuracy thresholds than records sourced from passive network polls. When available, PCMD records can provide more granular location resolution than standard CDR tower sector data. Attorneys should specifically request PCMD records in discovery when precise location at the time of a call or data event is contested.
GPS data extracted directly from a phone via forensic tools reflects the device's own satellite-based position fix, typically accurate to 5 to 15 meters. AT&T Precision Location records are network-side estimates that do not require the device to have GPS enabled. When a phone reports GPS coordinates to the network, those values may be incorporated into the precision record, producing tighter accuracy thresholds. The distinction matters because network-side estimates carry inherent uncertainty that device-side GPS data does not.
AT&T retains Historical Precision Location data for a limited period, typically seven years for law enforcement requests under federal record retention standards. The availability and granularity of records varies by time period, network generation, and geographic coverage. Older records may reflect fewer data sources and wider accuracy thresholds. Attorneys handling post-conviction matters should move quickly to subpoena or preserve these records, as retention windows are finite and data may be purged in the ordinary course of business.
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