New gadget extracts evidence from cell phones – The New Britain Herald News : New Britain, Conn., and surrounding areas (newbritainherald.com)

With the help of an upgraded piece of  equipment, city police Detective Michael Grossi was able to discern in less than a minute Monday that his superior officer had 93 text messages and 512 e-mails listed on his Blackberry.

He could also individually read each one. If any had been deleted, Grossi could have accessed the contents.

“With these tools we can interpret the data and get it off the phone,” said Lt. James Wardwell, who turned over his BlackBerry for the demonstration. “Right now he’s connected and sucking the data off. It took him about a minute to retrieve the data and hand me back my phone.”

If any of the information had contained child pornography, the quick analysis time could prevent a child from being molested again. That’s what Heather Steele. president and CEO of the Innocent Justice Foundation, was hoping for when she arranged for the city police department to receive two $2,500 grants from the Michael Bolton Charities, Inc. and the J. Walton Bissell Foundation earlier this year.

The police “are the vanguard of people who understand what these crimes are,” Steele said. “With the Internet it has exploded, but a lot of chief and command officers didn’t understand and chose to put their resources in things like burglary or homicides.”

Steele’s California-based non-profit organization connects law enforcement agencies in need of tools and training to investigate crimes against children with charities who are willing to fill the funding gap.

She was on hand Monday along with Jacqueline Smaga from Michael Bolton Charities and Dan Anthony from the West-Hartford based J. Walton Bissell Foundation to accept recognition from the city for their contribution and tour the department’s Digital Forensics lab to view the investigative techniques that their money helped buy.

“Our unit is probably the best in the state,” Mayor Timothy Stewart told the visitors minutes before he awarded them with plaques for their participation. “We started several years ago, way before most other departments. They’ve solved some pretty interesting cases, not just for our department, but for others as well.”

The department used the money to purchase upgrades to two pieces of equipment used to analyze mobile digital devices including BlackBerries, iPhones and other cell phones.  Detectives must either obtain consent from the owner or a search warrant before they can search the digital devices, police said.

Wardwell created the digital unit in the 1990s as computer technology was increasingly becoming a factor in crimes and criminal investigations.

via New gadget extracts evidence from cell phones – The New Britain Herald News : New Britain, Conn., and surrounding areas (newbritainherald.com).

Police get Webcam pictures in school spy case | Safe and Secure – CNET News

Two IT employees at Pennsylvania’s Lower Merion School District have been put on administrative leave, and pictures taken from Webcams on school-issued computers have been turned over to the local police department, according to the attorney of one of the employees now on leave.

Attorney Charles Mandracchia, who represents school district information coordinator Carol Cafiero, told Philadelphia TV station Fox 29 that that “they had a private Web site for some of these pictures for the Lower Marion Police Department to view and they were the only ones who could view it.”

In February, the family of Blake Robbins, a 15-year-old student at Harriton High School filed a civil complaint in federal court against the district for allegedly using the Webcam on his school-issued laptop to take a photo of the student while he was at home. The district contends that cameras were only activated if a laptop had been reported lost or stolen. The district has since stopped using the tracking software to activate Webcams.

Speaking about his client and Michael Perbix, the other suspended IT staff member, Mandracchia said, “It was their duty to turn on the camera, but they would only do that if they received a request from the two high schools.” He also said the pictures were “taken by the computer itself…every 15 minutes once the computer was open, but it was only supposed to be done if the computer was lost or stolen.”

via Police get Webcam pictures in school spy case | Safe and Secure – CNET News.