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Forensic felonies
Mark Rasch, 2006-04-24

A new law in Georgia on private investigators now extends to computer forensics and computer incident response, meaning that forensics experts who testify in court without a PI license may be committing a felony.

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Forensic felonies 2006-04-24
Anonymous
Forensic felonies 2006-04-25
ITDefPat (1 replies)
Re: Forensic felonies 2006-05-02
Craig S Wright
Forensic felonies 2006-04-25
Tim Oman (2 replies)
Re: Forensic felonies 2006-04-25
Mark D. Rasch (1 replies)
Re: Re: Forensic felonies 2006-05-02
Craig S Wright (1 replies)
Re: Re: Re: Forensic felonies 2006-05-12
Kelly Martin
Re: Forensic felonies 2006-05-15
DoktorThomas
See also: 2006-04-25
ChrisH
Forensic felonies 2006-04-25
wpn
Forensic felonies 2006-04-25
Anonymous
PI Qualifications 2006-04-26
John Foster (2 replies)
Re: PI Qualifications 2006-05-15
Ted Wallerstedt
Re: PI Qualifications 2006-06-15
Anonymous
Forensic felonies 2006-04-27
Anonymous
This is crazy. I don't see how being a PI relates to conducting computer forensic investigations or incident response. As mentioned above, the courts should retain control on who they deem an expert for a case. Things like this just unecessarily complicate things, and I think that it will cause much more harm than good.

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Link to this comment: http://www.securityfocus.com/comments/columns/399/33563#33563
Forensic felonies 2006-04-27
Jay C. James (1 replies)
Re: Forensic felonies 2006-05-08
Mark Rasch
Forensic felonies 2006-05-09
Anonymous
Georgia Blinkes 2006-05-10
Mark D. Rasch
Forensic felonies 2006-05-15
DoktorThomas







 

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