In 2006, a U.S. District Court judge in Toledo, Ohio, approved the purchase of six iPods and power adaptor to be used by defendants in a multi-count drug conspiracy case. The goal was to provide the iPods to six defendants so they could listen to the FBI's wiretaps of their conversations before the case went to trial. Defendants were to listen to these wiretaps either at the U.S. Marshal's office -those detained- or at their defense attorney's office. Formatting the wiretaps into CDs cost the tax payers between $80,000 and $100,000 while the iPods and power adaptors cost less than $2,000 (about $330 per iPod). Content from 13 CDs were inexpensively downloaded in each iPod. One of the defense attorneys in that case said "the iPods are easy to use, save a lot of money, and control access to the information pursuant to the orders of the court. This is a promising solution to a real practical problem." Most of the defendants in this case were convicted; and, as for the iPods, it is not reported but our guess is that the court kept them; not the defendants.
Criminal investigators are also using iPods to record conversations; video-tape certain scenes; and take handy photographs; all these with an innocent-looking device. iPods can store movies, encrypted files, contacts, calendar information, etc., and this data can be later downloaded in a PC. Forensic experts have revealed that iPods have some special features that allow certain content to be hidden so secret information is not noticeable. Experts from Kroll Ontrack, a computer forensic company, state that iPods can serve as external hard drive to a host computer so files can be transferred through programs such as Windows Explorer, instead of iTunes. Kroll Ontrack has conducted forensic examinations on iPods and recommends considering the following issues when an iPod forensic investigation is conducted,
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