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Jan 20, 2010

Crime Scene Evidence Extracted From Mobile Phones


Cyber forensic researchers designed a device to extract the memory of a mobile phone for crime scene evidence. The phone's memory card is placed in the device where computer software extracts and decodes the information--revealing call history, text messages, emails, images, video and the calendar. This information is then used by police as evidence in crimes.
Category: General
Posted by: Tanja

A good fingerprint at a crime scene isn't always the smoking gun for solving crimes. Thanks to new technology, crime solving is going digital.

Ernest Brice had plans to rent out his house, but it became a target for burglars instead. Thieves stole almost everything inside.

"I feel victimized," said Brice.

Brice's crime was never solved, but police say digital evidence left behind from cell phones, computers or PDAs can be found at nearly every crime scene.

"A lot of times, it's evidence that will take you to your next step in the investigative lead, so it will tell us who this person has been in touch with or who they've been emailing or texting," said Richard Mislan, Ph.D., a cyber-forensic researcher at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind.

To help dig up digital evidence and catch criminals, cyber-forensic researchers use a device called a flasher box. It finds clues hiding in cell phones.

"A flasher box is used for extracting a full memory from a mobile phone," Dr. Mislan said.

A phone's memory card is removed and plugged into a flasher box. Computer software extracts the phone's coded information and decodes the information to reveal the phone's call history, text messages, e-mails, calendar, images and videos. This information is then used by cops as clues to solve crimes.

"It's an inside look into that person, much more than just a fingerprint," Dr. Mislan said.

The technology also helps victims of serious crimes by finding clues from computers to show who last contacted the victim and last visited Web sites or e-mails.

"It's a way of helping us find the perpetrator or the suspect and taking us to that next step," Dr. Mislan said. Solving crimes isn't easy. Just ask Brice -- but now, technology may help cops get one step ahead of the bad guys. Researchers are now developing a first-responder digital evidence collection kit to gather evidence immediately at the scene of a crime.

WHAT IS CYBER FORENSICS? The subset of forensic science concerned with interpreting evidence contained in computers and digital media is called cyber forensics. The field is concerned with issues such as recovering lost data, and revealing and decrypting data hidden on a suspect's computer. In addition to computers, cyber forensics specialists can also recover information from cellular phones, mp3 players, CDs, DVDs and more. Approximately 80 to 90 percent of legal cases today involve some sort of digital evidence.

WHAT'S A FLASHER BOX? A flasher box is a device that transfers data from a cell phone to a computer, where people unfamiliar with the device in question can examine files for evidence. With one of these devices, non-experts are able to check for clues that may help them solve cases, even if they have never before seen a similar device.

Tags: Robert O'Block, forensics, mobile phone, evidence, cyber forensics

Articles

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Jun 4, 2010
Category: General
Posted by: Laura
Police in northwest Indiana say the owner of a home rigged with more than a dozen propane and gasoline cannisters before exploding and catching fire sent a suicidal e-mail message before the blast.
Tags: Jonathan Krantz, Merrillville, Dr. Robert O'Block
Jun 4, 2010
Category: General
Posted by: Laura
The FBI has completed a six-fold expansion of a unique facility at Savannah River Site designed to examine and process radiologically contaminated evidence.
Tags: FBI, Savannah River National Laboratory, radioactive materials, Dr. Robert O'Block
Jun 3, 2010
Category: General
Posted by: Laura
Sorenson Forensics is providing intensive forensic DNA training for Nigerian scientist-police officers to help them prepare for establishing and operating a law enforcement DNA laboratory in Africa’s most populous nation.
Tags: Nigeria, Sorenson Forensics, DNA, Dr. Robert O'Block
Jun 2, 2010
Category: General
Posted by: Laura
The Transportation Security Administration wants information about commercially available computer security forensics technologies it could use for information technology security.
Tags: Transportation Security Administration, computer security, IT forensics, Dr. Robert O'Block
Jun 2, 2010
Category: General
Posted by: Laura
Forensic tests are being carried out on a black suitcase containing tools discovered in the river close to where the dismembered body parts of one of three murdered prostitutes were found in Bradford, England.
Tags: Forensic, Bradford, Stephen Griffiths, Dr. Robert O'Block
May 28, 2010
Category: General
Posted by: Laura
Former FBI forensic expert Douglas Deedrick took the stand Thursday as a key government witness in the case against three Dupont Circle housemates accused of covering up the 2006 murder of D.C. attorney Robert Wone.
Tags: Douglas Deedrick, fabric imprint identification, Robert Wone, Dr. Robert O'Block
May 27, 2010
Category: General
Posted by: Laura
The Libyan government has enlisted the help of Dutch forensic experts to identify victims from the recent plane crash in Tripoli that claimed the lives of more than 100 people.
Tags: Tripoli, plane crash, Dr. Robert O'Block
May 26, 2010
Category: General
Posted by: Laura
GlobalOptions Group, Inc., a leading provider of domestic and international risk management services, today announced that Bode Technology, its forensic DNA analysis and solutions unit, is unveiling radio-frequency identification (RFID) solutions to improve the overall efficiency, accuracy, and security of the forensic analysis and chain-of-custody control process.
Tags: DNA analysis, forensic, RFID, chain of custody, Dr. Robert O'Block
May 26, 2010
Category: General
Posted by: Laura
For Murray Marks and others at the Knox County Medical Examiner's Office, the end of life is where their job starts. The staff, based in the University of Tennessee Regional Forensic Center, work with law enforcement to investigate who dies, how and why.
Tags: Forensic anthropology, University of Tennessee Regional Forensic Center, Dr. Robert O'Block
May 24, 2010
Category: General
Posted by: Laura
Michelle Lee was well on her way to becoming a top specialist in narcotics investigations for the NYPD, until, prosecutors say, Lee tragically became a murder victim, beaten and stabbed to death in April 2009 by Gary McGurk, who Lee met when they were both criminal justice students.
Tags: Forensic investigator, Michelle Lee, Gary McGurk, Dr. Robert O'Block

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