Computer Forensics
OVERVIEW
Computer forensics is simply the application of computer
investigation and analysis techniques in the interests of determining potential
legal evidence. Evidence might be sought in a wide range of computer crime or
misuse, including but not limited to email abuse, denial of service attacks,
theft of trade secrets, theft of or destruction of intellectual property, and
fraud. Computer specialists can draw on an array of methods for discovering data
that resides in a computer system, or recovering deleted, encrypted, or damaged
file information. Any or all of this information may help during discovery,
depositions, or actual litigation.
Electronic and High-Technology Crime
The effects of electronic crimes are, at least so far, not
as apparent to most of the public as crimes of violence and traditional property
crimes. These new age crimes present a significant, real, and immediate threat
to public order and national security.
Electronic Crime Is Unique
- Provides hidden criminality and anonymity
- Violates secretly the integrity of a normal process
- Limits the number of reported incidents to law
enforcement
- Leaves oftentimes no trace
- Necessitates experts to prove case
- Poses greater difficulty identifying the perpetrator
- Outpaces the laws enacted to curb new technology offenses
BENEFITS OF PROFESSIONAL FORENSIC METHODOLOGY
The impartial computer expert who helps during discovery will
typically have experience on a wide range of computer hardware and software.
This is always beneficial when your case involves hardware and software with
which this expert is directly familiar. But fundamental computer design and
software implementation is often quite similar from one system to another, and
experience in one application or operating system area is often easily
transferable to a new system.
Unlike paper evidence, computer evidence can often exist in many forms, with
earlier versions still accessible on a computer disk. Knowing the possibility of
their existence, even alternate formats of the same data can be discovered. The
discovery process can be served well by a knowledgeable expert identifying more
possibilities that can be requested as possibly relevant evidence. In addition,
during on-site premises inspections, for cases where computer disks are not
actually seized or forensically copied (see below), the forensics expert can
more quickly identify places to look, signs to look for, and additional
information sources for relevant evidence. These may take the form of earlier
versions of data files (eg. memos, spreadsheets) that still exist on the
computer's disk or on backup media, or differently formatted versions of data,
either created or treated by other application programs (eg. word processing,
spreadsheet, e-mail, timeline, scheduling, or graphic).
Protection of evidence is critical. A knowledgeable computer forensics
professional will ensure that a subject computer system is carefully handled to
ensure that:
- no possible evidence is damaged, destroyed, or
otherwise compromised by the procedures used to investigate the computer.
- no possible computer virus is introduced to a subject
computer during the analysis process.
- extracted and possibly relevant evidence is properly
handled and protected from later mechanical or electromagnetic damage.
- a continuing chain of custody is established and
maintained.
- business operations are affected for a limited amount
of time, if at all.
- any client-attorney information that is inadvertently
acquired during a forensic exploration is ethically and legally respected
and not divulged.
STEPS TAKEN BY COMPUTER FORENSICS SPECIALISTS
The computer forensics specialist will take several careful
steps to identify and attempt to retrieve possible evidence that may exist on a
subject computer system:
- Protects the subject computer system during the
forensic examination from any possible alteration, damage, data corruption,
or virus introduction.
- Discovers all files on the subject system. This
includes existing normal files, deleted yet remaining files, hidden files,
password-protected files, and encrypted files.
- Recovers all (or as much as possible) of discovered
deleted files.
- Reveals (to the extent possible) the contents of hidden
files as well as temporary or swap files used by both the application
programs and the operating system.
- Accesses (if possible and if legally appropriate) the
contents of protected or encrypted files.
- Analyzes all possibly relevant data found in special
(and typically inaccessible) areas of a disk. This includes but is not
limited to what is called 'unallocated' space on a disk (currently unused,
but possibly the repository of previous data that is relevant evidence), as
well as 'slack' space in a file (the remnant area at the end of a file, in
the last assigned disk cluster, that is unused by current file data, but
once again may be a possible site for previously created and relevant
evidence).
- Prints out an overall analysis of the subject computer
system, as well as a listing of all possibly relevant files and discovered
file data. Further, provides an opinion of the system layout, the file
structures discovered, any discovered data and authorship information, any
attempts to hide, delete, protect, encrypt information, and anything else
that has been discovered and appears to be relevant to the overall computer
system examination.
- Provides expert consultation and/or testimony, as
required.
WHO CAN USE COMPUTER FORENSIC EVIDENCE?
Many types of criminal and civil proceedings can and do make
use of evidence revealed by computer forensics specialists:
- Criminal Prosecutors use computer evidence in a variety
of crimes where incriminating documents can be found: homicides, financial
fraud, drug and embezzlement record-keeping, and child pornography.
- Civil litigations can readily make use of personal and
business records found on computer systems that bear on: fraud, divorce,
discrimination, and harassment cases.
- Insurance Companies may be able to mitigate costs by
using discovered computer evidence of possible fraud in accident, arson, and
workman's compensation cases.
- Corporations often hire computer forensics specialists
to ascertain evidence relating to: sexual harassment, embezzlement, theft or
misappropriation of trade secrets and other internal/confidential
information.
- Law Enforcement Officials frequently require assistance
in pre-search warrant preparations and post-seizure handling of the computer
equipment.
- Individuals sometimes hire computer forensics
specialists in support of possible claims of: wrongful termination, sexual
harassment, or age discrimination.
NetConcept will not handle computer forensic cases from
the Criminal Defense Bar for moral and ethical reasons, foreseeable conflicts,
and for security reasons.
NetConcept will not use computer forensics to help
criminal defendants and civil case plaintiffs or defendants engaged in
litigation against the government, government agencies, or law enforcement
personnel.
NetConcept will ONLY handle computer forensic cases
with high moral and ethical standards.
Forensics@NetConcept.com