Showing posts with label Crime. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Crime. Show all posts

Monday, November 12, 2012

REPORT: John McAfee, The Antivirus Software Inventor, Is Wanted For Murder

Monday, September 21, 2009

The 5th Amendment, it's really a good thing...

Why You Should Never Talk to The Police, with out your lawyer or immunity
"Dont talk to the Police" is the word of advice of a Professor in law, and a former Criminal Defense Attorney share their views and experiences on the law"


Example Reasons
1) There is no way they can help you. You can not talk your way out of getting arrested.
2) Police cannot testify to your benefit at trial. See Federal Rule of Evidence 801(d)(2)(A). Police can only testify against you.
3) Even if your are totally innocent you will always give information that may be used to convict you (wrongly).
4) Police are not your best friend, priest or buddy they are paid to arist




Thursday, September 17, 2009

MacForensicsLab Inc. Releases Free Tool for Investigating Crimes Against Children

MacForensicsLab Field Agent is the first and only freely available (to law enforcement) tri-platform tool designed specifically to help combat Crimes Against Children. It offers investigators a powerful yet easy to use tool with a skin tone analyzer that makes finding images of child pornography fast and easy.

The ability to quickly and effectively identify files of interest based on the percentage of skin tone contained therein makes MFL-FA an invaluable tool for law enforcement. In fact, MFL-FA was specifically designed to fill the technological gap that sexual predators have exploited for years; the lack of a fast and accurate way to identify images of evidentiary value amidst the seemingly insurmountable volume of data. Therefore, MFL-FA is perfectly suited for any Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force, probation and customs officers and/or any officers dealing with sexual predators. MFL-FA is the answer for all those seeking to gain the advantage over sexual predators who use technology in furtherance of their criminal acts.

Law enforcement only

To order your copy of this freeware tool please click on the "buy now" button at the bottom of this page. There is no charge whatsoever for this software but we do require the name of your agency, and some way to contact you.

You will be provided a serial number for MacForensicsLab Field Agent for Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux via email. It is therefore important to ensure your email address is input correctly.

Designed for non-technical personnel, Field Agent can be run in three easy steps; there is no rebooting, troubleshooting or complex interfaces. Utilizing the computer's USB port, it can run natively on Mac OS X, Microsoft Windows, and Linux to search suspect drives and devices. By quickly providing images relevant to an investigator's interests (typically under 2 minutes), MacForensicsLab Field Agent is an invaluable tool to all law enforcement. Field Agent has the ability to export files of interest or generate an HTML report with thumbnails, path and date information of any or all files.

Typical deployment of MFL-FA is less than two minutes per machine, making it an invaluable tool for locating data of interest and increasing officer safety. Further, MFL-FA has the ability to export files of interest or generate an HTML report with thumbnails, path and date information of any or all files.

MacForensicsLab Inc. makes Field Agent freely available to all law enforcement. To acquire a serial number for MacForensicsLab Field Agent, please submit the request form (purchase order, for a zero cost purchase, no credit cards or payment required) using a law enforcement email address. Field Agent contains just a small subset of the features available in MacForensicsLab. If you like Field Agent, checkout MacForensicsLab for the most powerful cross-platform digital forensic suite available.

How to use MacForensicsLab Field Agent


Wednesday, September 16, 2009

An Amazing Laptop Recovery Story

Using remote access software, a Miami man helps cops track down and recover his two stolen laptops.

"This is a true story about sex, computers, the Internet, spying, theft, intrigue, and the police--and it all began this past February when David Krop made the mistake of leaving his two laptop computers inside a locked SUV in a parking garage.

While Krop, 41, attended a brief business meeting in downtown Miami Beach, Florida, a smash-and-grab thief stole the two laptops, a Toshiba and an Apple Macbook. When he returned to his SUV, Krop saw the shattered passenger window and realized that his computers were gone.

"It's just a terrible feeling in the pit of your stomach," Krop, a vice president of marketing at Nationwide Diabetic says. He reported the theft to the police, who were not optimistic the laptops would be recovered. Then he drove home, thinking about the personal data stored on his laptops. He had never planned for a catastrophic event like this--in fact, he hadn't even bothered to set up a user password to shield the laptops' contents.

When he got home, though, Krop remembered that he had installed a trial version of remote access software called LogMeIn on his Toshiba laptop. LogMeIn is designed to allow a user to access the desktop of a remote PC; it doesn't have laptop recovery features of the type you'd find on, say, Absolute Software's LoJack for Laptops. Connecting to his stolen laptop might be a long shot, but it was the only shot he had."

Continue reading the full story by Todd R. Weiss of PC World