FBI ANNOUNCES COMPUTER FORENSICS ADVISORY BOARD
The FBI today
announced the successful launch of the National Steering Committee
(NSC), an inter-governmental advisory board that provides advice
and recommendations to the FBI leadership on a range of issues surrounding
the Regional Computer Forensic Laboratory (RCFL) program.
Computer forensics
is one of the fastest growing disciplines within law enforcement.
Since 9/11, the RCFL Program has provided technical support for over
200 cases involving terrorism, and is available to over 900 law enforcement
agencies in five states. Kerry E. Haynes, Assistant Director, Investigative
Technologies Division said, “Computer forensics is one of the
most specialized sciences available to law enforcement, making the
RCFL Program one of the most dynamic tools we have to fight crime
and terrorism.”
Because of the
explosive growth of computer forensics within law enforcement, the
FBI recognized that an advisory board comprised of a cross section
of stakeholders could benefit the national program overall. NSC Co-chair,
Tony Whitledge, who is also the Director of the Internal Revenue
Service’s Electronic Crimes Program, said “This is a
very exciting development for RCFLs and the science of computer forensics.
Because the NSC has brought together experts in computer science
and security, forensic science, prosecutors and law enforcement,
the NSC is positioned to make an immediate and meaningful contribution
to the RCFL program.”
An RCFL provides
computer forensic expertise to any law enforcement agency in their
specific service area in support of federal, state, and local criminal
investigations and prosecutions. Today, FBI-sponsored RCFLs are operating
in San Diego, CA; Dallas, Texas; Kansas City, MO; and Chicago, IL.
Eight more RCFLs will join the Program by the end of 2004 in Buffalo,
NY; Denver, CO; Houston, TX; Newark, NJ; Philadelphia, PA, Portland,
OR; Salt Lake City, UT; and San Francisco, CA.
The NSC membership
includes federal, state and local prosecutors and law enforcement
officials, representatives from the Departments of Defense and the
Department of Justice, renowned computer scientists and security
experts from academia and key law enforcement associations, and the
director of one of the most sophisticated crime labs in the country.
The NSC meets
bi-annually. For more information about this initiative and the RCFL
Program, visit the NPO Web Site at www.nationalrcfl.gov.
Individuals and
organizations represented on the NSC:
- Michael Battle,
U.S. Attorney for the Western District of New York, member of the
U.S. Attorney General’s Advisory Committee
- Craig Chval, Missouri Attorney General’s Office, member of the National
Association of Attorneys General
- Benny Del Re, Director, Santa Clara County Crime Laboratory, member of the
American Society of Crime Laboratory Directors
- Kenneth Laursen, Department of Defense Computer Forensic Laboratory
- Mark Eckenwiler, Deputy Chief, Computer Crime & Intellectual Property
Section, U.S. Department of Justice
- Jerry Estes, District Attorney General, 10th Judicial District, Tennessee,
member of the National District Attorneys Association
- Aaron Kennard, Sheriff of Salt Lake City County, Utah, member of the National
Sheriffs Association
- Russell Laine, Chief, Algonquin Police Department, member of the International
Association of Chiefs of Police
- Douglas A. Schmidtknecht, Director RCFL National Program Office, Federal
Bureau of Investigation
- Dr. Sujeet Shenoi, University of Tulsa, representing the Governor of Oklahoma
- Professor Eugene H. Spafford, Purdue University CERIAS, representing the
Governor of Indiana
- Tony Whitledge, Director, Electronic Crimes Program, Internal Revenue Service
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