Tampa Federal Criminal - Defense - Attorney Tell Us Your Story Call 1-877-793-9290

Florida Federal Defense Attorney - We use a forensics expert to sort through data used in prosecution of federal indictments and state charges, fraud, hacking, theft of trade secrets, and other cybercrimes and civil litigation. Office: Tampa, Florida 1101 Channelside Drive Number 244, Tampa, FL 33602. Licensed in Florida, Federal Middle District of Florida, and the 11th Federal Circuit

Saturday, March 29, 2008

eDiscovery Tampa - 2008 Super Lawyer

eDiscovery Computer LawyerTampa eDiscovery Attorney, W.F. Casey Ebsary Jr., was selected as a Super Lawyer for the second time. That adds to his credentials - Board Certified by the Florida Bar and his AV rating by Martindale Hubbell. The Super Lawyer selection process allows a credible, comprehensive and diverse listing of outstanding attorneys that can be used as a resource to assist in the search for legal counsel.

eDiscovery Tampa Attorney Lawyer

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Sunday, December 09, 2007

eDiscovery Florida - First Birthday for New Federal Rules of Civil Procedure

eDiscovery - For Florida and the Federal Courts, this marks the first anniversary of an overhaul of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (FRCP), which mandated the quick and accurate recovery of electronically stored information. Soon e-discovery will explode in the wake of the the subprime mortgage crisis.

eDiscovery Computer Lawyer Tampa Florida

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Sunday, November 04, 2007

Feds Claim No Privacy in Emails

On October 8, 2007, the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit granted the USA's request for a full-panel hearing in US v. Warshak. The case centers on the right of privacy for stored electronic communications. Can the Government merely subpoena mail and skip judicial review of a search warrant? The case presents the Government's position on Constitutional email and electronic privacy - that there isn't any.

Get your encryption keys ready for this one.

Cybercrime eDiscovery Attorney Tampa

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Thursday, June 21, 2007

Forensic Computing and E Discovery Walks Hacking Suspect

A charge of planting a trojan horse was dropped because of "lack of sufficient evidence." A hacking suspect had been charged with computer tampering, a Class D felony that carries a penalty of six months to three years in prison and a maximum fine of $10,000, upon conviction.

The case started when a system operator reported a system crash of its servers and its backup systems. It was allecged that suspects had remote access to the computer network through personal computers The suspect denied any responsibility for the transmission and maintained his innocence.The alleged victim "concluded we lacked sufficient evidence," The victim admitted it could not prove that the suspect was "the person who used the computer at the time the . . . system was infected by the virus." South Bend Tribune

E Discovery Computer Forensics Attorney Lawyer Tampa Bay Florida

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