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

Wednesday, April 08, 2009

Forensic Science in Doubt in Florida Federal and State Courts

Computer Forensics, electronic discovery, eDiscovery, Florida Financial Fraud Defense Attorney, Internet Expert Attorney Florida, Tampa Criminal Defense AttorneyThe National Research Council (NRC) reviewed forensic practices in this country and concluded industry standards are in need of serious upgrading. The results of this study are published in: Strengthening Forensic Science in the United States: A Path Forward. The report found: a lack of mandatory and enforceable standards based on research and testimony; unacceptable backlogs in local and state laboratories; lack of ties to research universities; and lack of central governance to correct weaknesses in the field.

NRC recommended changes:

* Stronger leadership to strengthen forensic science through an independent National Institute of Forensic Science;

* Certification for forensic science professionals and accreditation for laboratories;

* Results which indicate the level of uncertainty in the measurements of DNA analysis;

* Court testimony grounded in science which acknowledge uncertainties; etc.

The computer forensic team used by Board Certified Criminal Trial Lawyer W.F. ''Casey'' Ebsary, Jr., helps level the field when federal or state crime labs line up on the other side. Call Toll Free 1-877-793-9290. Get some help today.

Computer Forensics, electronic discovery, eDiscovery, Florida Financial Fraud Defense Attorney, Internet Expert Attorney Florida, Tampa Criminal Defense Attorney

Labels: , , , , , ,

Friday, June 06, 2008

Computers in Court - eDiscovery Computer Forensics Update

New One Minute Video - Computers in Court - eDiscovery and Computer Forensics

video


Most documents are created and stored electronically. This one-minute video Computers in Court - eDiscovery and Computer Forensics - Most documents are created and stored electronically. This one-minute video covers what to do when a computer lands in a courtroom. CentralLaw.com uses professionals that are certified and experienced in providing computer forensic service and electronic data discovery services to clients. We use state of the art technology and forensically sound procedures and tools. We maintain the appropriate chain of custody. All digital evidence is stored in an access controlled computer lab. We assist our clients with all phases of electronic discovery and computer forensics including: identification, acquisition, analysis, reporting and, if necessary, we provide an expert to testify on evidence from electronic storage mediums such as computer hard drives. Video courtesy of http://www.CentralLaw.com Toll Free 1-877-793-9290

Florida Cybercrime eDiscovery Electronic Discovery Attorney Lawyer

Labels: , , , , , ,

Sunday, May 11, 2008

Internet Drug Indictments

Florida Federal prosecutors in the Middle District have charged physicians and others with running an web-based prescription drug operations and claim they are illegally dispensing millions of doses of medication.

The website operators are charged with hiring pharmacists and doctors to issue prescriptions based on Internet questionnaires, the charges say. According to the United States Attorney, Web sites and representatives are used to sell the drugs.

Prosecutors intend to prove that doctors and pharmacists are paid to review short questionnaires and then never see the patients they were prescribing medicines to. Beyond that, none of the information submitted was ever verified, authorities said.

W F Casey Ebsary and cocounsel Marcelino Huerta III have successfully defended such claims in Federal Court. Call Toll Free 1-877-793-9290 for more details and to get some help today.

Labels: , , , , , ,

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

Labels: , , , ,

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

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

What is eDiscovery? Expert Florida

eDiscovery describes the exchange and disclosure of electronically stored information (ESI). In December 2006 the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure were changed to include specific requirements and guidelines regarding how to handle eDiscovery.

Since more than 90% of documents are now created electronically, and less than 30% of those electronic documents are ever converted to paper, these new rules are likely to have an impact on how everyone conducts business. The new rules on preserving ESI make having an eDiscovery complaint document retention policy more important than ever before. An expert may be needed to search terabytes of data that litigants may have.

eDiscovery Lawyer Attorney Tampa Florida

Labels: , , , ,

Monday, April 16, 2007

eDiscovery, Cybercrime, and Punishment

43 nations have signed on to the Convention on Cybercrime drafted by the Council of Europe with considerable input from the United States. The cost of combating cyber crime committed overseas may now be passed on to American businesses. Under the new treaty, participating countries are given sweeping access to information in United States for cybercrimes that may have been committed overseas.

For example, France has strict laws addressing the sale of Nazi memorabilia. Sale of those items on eBay may not necessarily violate United States laws. However, French authorities may seek information from buyers and sellers in the United States regarding sales that are otherwise legal in the U.S. . Article 12 of the treaty may make businesses liable for "lack of supervision or control" of employees to may have committed criminal offense(s) covered by the convention. Businesses need to watch employee activity that, while legal in the United States, may violate the laws of a participating signer of the treaty.

The record retention requirements in the treaty may require business to address the electronic discovery (eDiscovery) and computer forensics requirements that may be mandated by this new law. The costs of the Treaty will be borne by the private sector.

Labels: , ,