[ISN] Group targeting cyber-criminals gets a new home

From: InfoSec News (isn@private)
Date: Thu Feb 05 2004 - 03:04:15 PST

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    http://www.lasvegassun.com/sunbin/stories/lv-other/2004/feb/04/516294521.html
    
    By Jace Radke 
    February 04, 2004 
    <jace@private>
    LAS VEGAS SUN
    
    The Nevada Cyber Crime Task Force has a new home in its hunt for
    hackers and cyber criminals.
    
    The new, larger "cyber-laboratory" is located in North Las Vegas near
    the task force's old lab site that was housed in the Energy Department
    complex at 232 Energy Way.
    
    The group's new base of operations offers more space for forensic
    laboratories, training and includes on-site evidence vaults, FBI
    Special Agent Alan Peters said.
    
    "We've been growing since we started in 1999, and the new lab allows
    us to really bring all the agencies in under one umbrella," said
    Peters, who added that the exact location of the lab is confidential.  
    "Before we had only enough space for three or four chairs in areas of
    the lab, but now we can fit 30 in the forensic sections."
    
    The multi-agency task force got its first true base of operations in
    December 2001, after the group was created by an act of the 1999
    Legislature to investigate the growing number of computer-related
    crimes.
    
    Along with the FBI, the task force also includes Metro, North Las
    Vegas and Henderson Police, the Nevada Department of Investigation,
    Internal Revenue Service, U.S. Postal Service inspectors and the
    attorney general's office.
    
    The task force is charged with investigating and arresting those who
    use computer technology to commit fraud, steal identities, invade
    private records, conduct industrial espionage, engage in information
    warfare or traffic in child pornography.
    
    In addition to going after cyber criminals, the task force also works
    to train law enforcement officers in stopping computer-related crimes,
    said Tara Shepperson, executive director of the task force.
    
    The task force uses special tools, such as Encase -- a computer
    program that unlocks deleted and hidden files from computer hard
    drives -- to find clues cyber criminals have left behind, Peters said.
    
    The task force also has a facility in Reno at the Washoe County
    sheriff's office to help combat the growing numbers of cyber crimes.
    
    The Internet Fraud Complaint Center, a partnership between the FBI and
    the National White Collar Crime Center, recorded 75,063 cyber crime
    complaints in 2002, including auction fraud, credit card fraud, child
    pornography and computer intrusions among other offenses. The number
    of complaints rose from 49,957 in 2001.
    
    Numbers of complaints in 2003 are not yet available through the
    Internet Fraud Complaint Center.
    
    Those wishing to report a cyber crime can contact the task force at
    295-1818, or can file a complaint with the Internet Fraud Complaint
    Center online (www.ifccfbi.gov).
    
    
    
    
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