Spoliation and Preservation Letters for Digital Evidence
Auto-delete features and cloud retention policies destroy evidence every day — and courts are running out of patience with parties who let it happen.
Family courts are demanding broader e-discovery than ever — but proportionality concerns and cost-shifting are starting to push back.
California's computer crime statute has teeth, and forensic examiners who don't understand its boundaries have found themselves on the wrong side of a criminal complaint.
Shared devices and joint accounts create a minefield of consent and access issues in California divorce cases — here's where the legal lines actually are.
Auto-delete features and cloud retention policies destroy evidence every day — and courts are running out of patience with parties who let it happen.
Text messages are among the most contested pieces of digital evidence in litigation — here's how FRE 901 actually works and what forensic examiners need to do to survive a challenge.
The Fourth Amendment doesn't stop at the government's door — under the right circumstances, a private investigator's search can trigger constitutional scrutiny.
Before you access someone's email account or cloud storage as part of an investigation, the Stored Communications Act may already be making you a federal defendant.
Cloud-only evidence breaks every traditional chain-of-custody assumption — here's how to document it in a way that survives court scrutiny.