The National Standard for Cell Phone Investigation, from Collection to Prosecution
Course Overview
Almost every criminal investigation involves a cell phone. The evidence needed to arrest and convict is contained on the device itself, the records of calls kept by the cell phone company, and in the cell towers covering the crime scene.
The course covers the search and seizure basics specific to mobile devices, determining what information is available from the cell phone companies and how to obtain it, how to recover digital evidence and intelligence from the handset using free software tools, and how to avoid legal landmines.
This class is designed for law enforcement officers at any stage in their career. Experience or training in cell phone investigations is not required. Students will be receive samples of search warrant templates, comprehensive guides to major cell phone carriers, model report language for cell phone searches.
Agenda
Day One
- Search and Seizure - Phones and phone company records
- Search Warrants, Court Orders, and Subpoenas – How to write them
- Investigating a Phone Number - From beginning to end
- Who to Contact - When cellular companies fail to produce the records
- “Blocked” Phone Numbers - How to obtain calling cards and “dropped” phone numbers
- Disposable or “Burner” Phones – What to do with them and how to investigate them
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Day Two
- Remotely Deleting Data – Preventing it
- Cell phone handsets - Obtaining physical evidence from the device, how to recover deleted information
- Dealing with locked phones - Security code bypass techniques and how to still recover evidence when they don’t work
- Free and Low Cost Tools - Where to find them and how to use when the expensive forensic devices don’t work
- ‘Hidden’ EXIF Data – Best Practices
- Cell Tower Data - How to request and use it to locate suspects, fugitives, and missing persons
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Mark Bilski
Mark Bilski is a Detective with the Dearborn Police Department in Michigan. A 12-year law enforcement officer, he began his career working the patrol division as a road Officer/Evidence Technician before advancing to the Dearborn Tactical Unit which is a patrol supplement operating in uniformed/directed capacity as well as in plain clothes capacity. Mr. Bilski is also assigned to the Dearborn Bomb Squad, often working in conjunction with the FBI, Michigan State Police, Detroit Police Department and ATF Bomb Technicians to handle suspicious packages and unexploded ordinances throughout southeast Michigan. After 7 years on the road, Mr. Bilski was assigned to the Detective Bureau where he has investigated a range of cases including Homicides, Sex Crimes, Property Crimes, Robberies and Fraud and has authored hundreds of search warrants. He is also a Certified Fire Investigator and acts as the department’s sole Fire/Arson Investigator.
Host: POLICE TECHNICAL
Location: Online Seminar 647 Ohio Street Online Seminar, 47807 Get Directions
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