Country for PR: United States
Contributor: PR Newswire New York
Wednesday, July 14 2021 - 21:00
AsiaNet
2021 Digital Intelligence Benchmark Report: Despite Lockdown Drop in Crime, Investigations Still Slowed by Digital Evidence
PETAH TIKVA, Israel, July 14, 2021 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

Cellebrite, the global leader in Digital Intelligence (DI) solutions for the 
public and private sectors, today published its annual Digital Intelligence 
Benchmark Report for 2021, an analysis of responses from 2,000 agency managers, 
investigators, analysts and forensic examiners working in law enforcement 
agencies across 117 different countries.

Logo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1193846/Cellebrite_Logo.jpg  

The study into DI -- which makes digital data accessible and actionable in 
legally sanctioned investigations -- reveals that despite a drop in certain 
crime types across some of the world's biggest economies as a result COVID-19 
lockdown, agencies are still struggling to keep pace, process and analyze 
digital evidence quickly and effectively.

Nearly half the world's population -- 3.9 billion people -- was under some form 
of lockdown by the first week of April 2020. A United Nations report ( 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=3226720-1&h=336657890&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.unodc.org%2Fdocuments%2Fdata-and-analysis%2Fcovid%2FProperty_Crime_Brief_2020.pdf&a=A+United+Nations+report 
) based on data from 30 countries revealed that reported robbery, theft, and 
burglary declined significantly because of the pandemic, falling by more than 
50% in most countries, with larger decreases where lockdown measures were 
stricter. In certain countries, homicides also fell by an average of 25% during 
March/April 2020 in the immediate aftermath of the pandemic. However, according 
to an April 2021 CNN report ( 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=3226720-1&h=3480597960&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.cnn.com%2F2021%2F04%2F03%2Fus%2Fus-crime-rate-rise-2020%2Findex.html&a=according+to+an+April+2021+CNN+report 
) the US saw a significant rise in violent crime (33%) in major cities in 2020 
and it is not letting up in 2021.

Despite this temporary dip in certain crimes, the Digital Intelligence 
Benchmark Report ( 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=3226720-1&h=1077668883&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.cellebrite.com%2Fen%2Findustry-report%2F&a=Digital+Intelligence+Benchmark+Report 
) reveals the amount of overtime worked by examiners in 2020 declined by just 3 
per cent compared to 2019 levels. On the other hand, investigators are spending 
an average of 48 hours a week reviewing photos, recorded videos, and text 
messages from devices, along with CCTV and security videos, and creating 
reports. Furthermore, investigators reported a 5 to 7-day average turnaround 
time to receive data and an initial report from examiners in the lab. 

The implications of not speeding up the digital investigation process for 
solving crimes and saving lives are significant because, according to the 
study, digital evidence plays a role in almost two thirds (63%) of all 
investigations. Of those investigations, smartphones were an evidence source in 
96%, followed by Windows computers (52%), feature phones (45%), tablets (39%) 
and even emerging technologies such as wearables (8%) and cryptocurrencies (8%).

Mark Gambill, EVP at Cellebrite comments: "We could see there was no 
improvement against many KPIs our industry tracks despite the dips in crime 
we've seen throughout 2020. Law enforcement's ability to lawfully access locked 
devices continues to slow-down investigations. And, we were not at all 
surprised to see the importance of digital evidence to solving crimes clearly 
reflected in the data, as well as new technologies such as crypto and wearables 
playing a role in advancing investigations. Agency managers, investigators, 
analysts and forensic examiners didn't have any respite last year and the 
situation is about to worsen as crime rates, particularly violent crime, are 
rising quickly across major metropolitan areas across the world."

The report also reveals that managers within law enforcement agencies recognize 
that there are still major inefficiencies in the investigation ecosystem. 55% 
of agency managers said they have a poor or no digital transformation strategy 
and are likely to prioritize digital transformation.

The report highlights five major development areas that are inhibiting law 
enforcement agencies from fully leveraging their digital evidence as part of 
their investigative workflow:

    -- Staffing shortages: Despite recruitment and retention challenges that 
       law enforcement agencies are grappling with, the Digital Intelligence 
       Benchmark Report revealed just 7% of agencies hired or plan to hire 
       additional examiners to help process digital evidence. This resource 
       crunch is placing an additional burden onto agencies that are at or 
       above their existing investigative capacity.

    -- Skills shortage: Most law enforcement agencies are still lacking 
       sufficient IT expertise to implement and operationalize new digital 
       technologies to speed up the investigative workflow of collecting, 
       analyzing, managing, and storing digital evidence. Investigators also 
       lack the additional training needed to effectively use tools such as 
       analytics.

    -- Tools & technologies: 97% of investigators feel key evidence is 
       missing or lost when reviewing digital data and 47% of examiners feel 
       they miss significant amounts of data from device examinations. They 
       agreed that with so much time and energy spent on reviewing digital 
       data, more effective tools are needed to accelerate time to evidence. 

    -- Inter- and intra-agency silos: Digital evidence from multiple devices 
       often needs to be compared, contrasted, and investigated alongside 
       other data sources such as cloud, CDRs, data from RMS and internal 
       police databases. However, because of silos between different 
       departments and IT systems, and evidence storage on removable media 
       rather than a centralized evidence management system, it takes longer 
       than it should to surface insights and leads. The report stated that 1 
       in 3 agency managers are not satisfied with the collaboration 
       capabilities within their agency and with agency partners.

    -- DI Strategy and foresight: 55% of agency managers said they have a 
       poor or no digital transformation strategy and are likely to 
       prioritize digital transformation. A staggering third (34%) of agency 
       managers reported that they were dissatisfied with their agency's 
       strategy for collecting, preserving, managing, and safeguarding 
       digital evidence and 35% said they were dissatisfied with their 
       agency's strategy for processing and analyzing digital evidence. 

The Digital Intelligence Benchmark Report also makes a series of 
recommendations for how agencies can get back on the front foot: 

    -- Assess the gaps and outline a solid DI strategy to ensure your path to 
       digital policing is charted. Along the way you will surely need to 
       course-correct, but setting the direction is paramount.

    -- Recruit tech-minded talent that are so integral to the future of 
       policing by changing traditional approaches to hiring and creating 
       career pathways that are attractive for skilled technology workers.

    -- Invest in new technologies and training that enable investigators to 
       efficiently collect and review evidence from any device or source and 
       accelerate the analysis of that evidence to solve crimes quicker.

    -- Break down information silos within the agency, and between agencies, 
       by building a culture of collaboration through first-class 
       investigative workflow for the digital age -- operations, systems, 
       personnel, and processes.

The full report can be downloaded at: 
https://www.cellebrite.com/en/industry-report/ 

About Cellebrite
Cellebrite's mission is to enable its customers to protect and save lives, 
accelerate justice, and preserve privacy in communities around the world. 
Cellebrite is the global leader in Digital Intelligence solutions for the 
public and private sectors, empowering organizations to master the complexities 
of legally sanctioned digital investigations by streamlining intelligence 
processes. Trusted by thousands of leading agencies and companies in more than 
140 countries, Cellebrite's Digital Intelligence platform and solutions 
transform how customers collect, review, analyze and manage data in legally 
sanctioned investigations. To learn more visit us at www.cellebrite.com and 
https://www.cellebrite.com/en/investors/.

Contacts

Media 
Adam Jaffe 
VP of Global Communications
+1 973 206 7643
adam.jaffe@cellebrite.com 
- or -
RapidResponse@cellebrite.com 

Investors
Anat Earon-Heilborn 
VP, Investor Relations
+972 73 394 8440
investors@cellebrite.com 

SOURCE Cellebrite
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