Intelligence Reports
Combining decades of experience in the intelligence analytical field our Senior Intelligence Analysts will provide your law firm with Social Media Checkups on your clients to avoid surprises by opposing counsel who are doing their own research. Going on offense, we will provide your law firm with Court-Admissible Open-Source Intelligence (OSINT) Reports on the defendant, lay witnesses, expert witnesses, in preparation for Voir Dire and on sitting jurors (where permitted), saving your law firm both time and money from attempting your own daunting and voluminous research. We look at over 120 social media sites to identify their usernames and analyze their public posts and comments that may be helpful to your case. In addition, we ID any news articles mentioning the defendant, their criminal history, court records, addresses with satellite imagery and Google Street View, cellular telephone numbers, e-mails, family members, vehicle ownership, and, using License Plate Reader technology, we ID the most recent times and locations their vehicles seen by LPR. All of this can help your firm in locating key witnesses who need to be served, and using Intelligence Reports, you can assess potential witnesses and jurors’ credibility, reliability, truthfulness, bias, and prejudice.
Ensuring Admissibility in Court
Metadata and hashing are crucial components in OSINT (Open Source Intelligence) analysis, serving as key digital indicators. Here’s how they collectively support genuine evidence:
- Verification of Authenticity: Metadata provides a contextual background, revealing the origin of the evidence and highlighting its authenticity. Hashing further assures that the evidence has not been tampered with.
- Legal Recognition: Worldwide, legal systems recognize metadata and hash values as standard proofs, validating their importance in judicial processes.
- Historical Tracking: Metadata maps out the digital history of the evidence, detailing its creation, any changes made, and identifying any potential compromises to its integrity.
- Forensic Accuracy: While metadata outlines a chronological context that emphasizes the relevance of the evidence, hashing guarantees the preservation of the evidence’s original state, protecting it from deliberate or accidental alterations.
Understanding Metadata
In OSINT analysis, metadata is crucial for verifying the authenticity and integrity of evidence, as it offers a comprehensive view of a file’s attributes such as creation and modification dates, authorship, size, and location. Metadata analysis can reveal important details, like timestamps for timeline mapping, authorship for content creator identification, and geolocation data from posts or images. Metadata is also essential in analyzing images and videos, providing details like device information and GPS coordinates.
In sum, metadata is data that is automatically created and leaves snippets of information behind which can later reveal when an item was created, edited, revised, printed, accessed, tampered with, or produced.
Understanding Hashing
Hashing plays a vital role in verifying the integrity of digital evidence. It transforms any form of data, such as images or documents, into a distinct sequence known as a hash value. Even slight modifications like resizing, color changes, or format conversions result in a drastically different hash value.
In legal settings, proving that digital evidence remains unaltered since its collection is crucial, and the hash value is instrumental in this regard. Attorneys can ascertain the unchanged nature of a file by comparing its current hash value with the original one. Identical hash values indicate that the file has not been modified, thereby ensuring its integrity against tampering.
Ethics Dealing with Social Media
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