Guide To Computer Forensics and Investigations Fourth Edition
Guide To Computer Forensics and Investigations Fourth Edition
and Investigations
Fourth Edition
Chapter 5
Processing Crime and Incident
Scenes
Objectives
• Digital evidence
– Can be any information stored or transmitted in
digital form
• U.S. courts accept digital evidence as physical
evidence
– Digital data is a tangible object
• Some require that all digital evidence be printed out
to be presented in court
Identifying Digital Evidence
(continued)
• Business-record exception
– Allows “records of regularly conducted activity,” such
as business memos, reports, records, or data
compilations
• Generally, computer records are considered
admissible if they qualify as a business record
• Computer records are usually divided into:
– Computer-generated records
– Computer-stored records
Understanding Rules of Evidence
(continued)
• Innocent information
– Unrelated information
– Often included with the evidence you’re trying to
recover
• Judges often issue a limiting phrase to the
warrant
– Allows the police to separate innocent information
from evidence
Understanding Concepts and Terms
Used in Warrants (continued)
• Guidelines (continued)
– Bag and tag the evidence, following these steps:
• Assign one person to collect and log all evidence
• Tag all evidence you collect with the current date and
time, serial numbers or unique features, make and
model, and the name of the person who collected it
• Maintain two separate logs of collected evidence
• Maintain constant control of the collected evidence
and the crime or incident scene
Processing an Incident or Crime
Scene (continued)
• Guidelines (continued)
– Look for information related to the investigation
• Passwords, passphrases, PINs, bank accounts
• Look at papers, in drawers, in trash cans
– Collect documentation and media related to the
investigation
• Hardware, software, backup media, documentation,
manuals
Processing Data Centers with RAID
Systems
• Sparse acquisition
– Technique for extracting evidence from large
systems
– Extracts only data related to evidence for your case
from allocated files
• And minimizes how much data you need to analyze
• Drawback of this technique
– It doesn’t recover data in free or slack space
Using a Technical Advisor
• Technical advisor
– Can help you list the tools you need to process the
incident or crime scene
– Person guiding you about where to locate data and
helping you extract log records
• Or other evidence from large RAID servers
– Can help create the search warrant by itemizing
what you need for the warrant
Technical Advisor Responsibilities
• Spector
• WinWhatWhere
• EnCase Enterprise Edition
Sample Criminal Investigation