Anonymous ID: 9e897c Jan. 24, 2018, 6:27 a.m. No.146692   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>https:// www.scribd.com/document/369736335/2018-01-20-RHJ-to-FBI-Re-Federal-Records

 

But the Justice Department also said that it cannot find texts that Strzok and Page sent between December 14, 2016, and approximately May 17, 2017. It blamed a technical glitch.

The department said in a letter to Nunes that the FBI upgraded its phones to Samsung 7s at the time, and that the phones "did not capture or store text messages due to misconfiguration issues related to rollouts, provisioning, and software upgrades that conflicted with the FBI's collection capabilities."

>https:// www.npr.org/2018/01/24/580068641/the-memo-the-bureau-and-the-missing-texts-get-caught-up-on-the-war-over-the-fbi

 

Trent Leavitt, a Utah-based expert whose firm ‎Decipher Forensics recently was absorbed into EideBailly, noted that the FBI uses forensic technology from the company Cellebrite, which he said offers the industry standard for governments and companies that preserve phone records.

Leavitt said FBI analysts may have selected the less-comprehensive Cellebrite “logical” download option, which includes viewable information on the phone, rather than a more advanced “file system capture” option that also includes deleted pieces of information.

 

>www.washingtonexaminer.com/bleachbit-creator-ex-fbi-experts-question-loss-of-peter-strzok-texts/article/2646746

 

After weeks of insisting that only Apple could help the feds unlock the phone of San Bernardino killer Syed Rizwan Farook, the Justice Department suddenly revealed that a third party had provided a way to get into the device. Speculation swirled around the identity of that party until an Israeli newspaper reported it was Cellebrite.

It turns out the company was not the third party that helped the FBI. A Cellebrite representative said as much during a panel discussion at a high-tech crimes conference in Minnesota this past April, according to a conference attendee who spoke with The Intercept. And sources who spoke with the Washington Post earlier this year also ruled out Cellebrite’s involvement, though Yossi Carmil, one of Cellebrite’s CEOs, declined to comment on the matter when asked by The Intercept.

>https:// theintercept.com/2016/10/31/fbis-go-hackers/