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NGH Group Founder Discusses Deepfakes on DivorceLawyer.com

Image of Podcast on Deepfake Detection Challenges

NGH Group CEO Nicholas G. Himonidis recently appeared on the DivorceLawyer.com Podcast to discuss “Deepfakes, Divorce, and Deception” and how artificial intelligence (AI) is presenting huge challenges for evaluating digital evidence in divorce and custody proceedings.

Advancements in AI technology make it easy for laypeople to fabricate audio and video evidence. “When people think about AI, they think about ChatGPT and other large language models,” Himonidis noted. “You ask it questions, you feed it information, you ask it for some output.” But AI can also make audio or video forgeries, or deepfakes.

In divorce and custody cases, NGH Group forensic examiners frequently encounter AI-created audio recordings because they’re so easy to make. “They’re so effective, and they are incredibly difficult for anyone other than a forensic expert to detect as not real.”

Previously, if a client told an attorney that a recording or photo wasn’t real, the attorney may have been unsure how to assess this claim and its applicability to the divorce or custody case. Now, said Himonidis, with audio, video, text messages, and other digital evidence being easier than ever to fake, attorneys have a “serious obligation” to vet the material professionally and determine its authenticity.

The episode highlights the technological challenges that attorneys face, as well as new legal frameworks that Himonidis considers critical to address potential AI-generated deception.

Listen to this free, 33-minute episode on the legal and ethical challenges posed by AI.

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NGH Group Founder Discusses Financial Investigations in Divorce Cases

Podcast Image for Hidden Assets and Forensic Investigations on DivorceLawyer.com

The DivorceLawyer.com Podcast recently featured NGH Group CEO Nicholas G. Himonidis, who shared his expertise in “Hidden Assets and Forensic Investigations.”

Himonidis explains how financial investigation, through digital forensics and other means, differs from forensic accounting. Specifically, forensic accountants examine financial accounts and transactions—the “known universe of financial information.” Their efforts may reveal gaps or other discrepancies, requiring additional information, but financial investigation through digital forensics and other means focuses on the unknown.

“A big part of our job,” says Himonidis, “at least in the financial due diligence that goes on in divorce cases, is to . . . see what else may be out there.” Over the years, the NGH Group has uncovered a wide range of undisclosed assets, from real estate holdings and offshore accounts to business enterprises and, increasingly, cryptocurrency.

In one divorce case, NGH Group crypto forensic experts identified a cryptocurrency account with a little-known exchange in the U.S. holding roughly $15 million in undisclosed cryptocurrency assets.

The episode highlights common red flags that could indicate hidden assets, as well as the challenges of cryptocurrency, which makes financial investigation through digital forensics increasingly critical in asset discovery.

Listen to this free, 33-minute podcast on the complexities of uncovering hidden assets in divorce cases.