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DIGITAL FORENSICS
It's a Bull Market
05/07/07
When the U.S. went to court against Enron, prosecutors arrived with a virtual mountain of evidence gleaned from data—more than 31 terabytes of data—gathered and analyzed during the FBI's five-year investigation. To put that into perspective, a terabyte is equivalent to about 250 million pages of text, which would stack 10 miles high if printed on both sides of the page.
How did investigators digest and make sense of the sheer volume of information? They turned to the Greater Houston Regional Computer Forensics Laboratory, one of our 14 RCFLs, as they are called, that provide digital forensics services and training for more than 4,300 law enforcement agencies across 16 states. The RCFL in Houston processed data from 130 computers, thousands of e-mails, and more than 10 million pages of documents, culling evidence that helped deliver convictions of the company's top executives, among others.
The Enron case is one of the many success stories highlighted in an annual report of the RCFL Program, which began as a pilot in San Diego in 1999 and has evolved into a network of cutting-edge digital evidence labs created to meet the burgeoning need. Last year alone, RCFLs—staffed by the FBI and trained computer analysts from more than 100 other agencies—collectively analyzed 59,677 media items, including CDs, cell phones, hard drives, and PDAs.
"Computers are the crime scene of the new millennium," U.S. Attorney Patrick Meehan said at last year's opening of the Philadelphia RCFL.
Among the Fiscal Year 2006 highlights of the RCFL Program: