TEC Talks Podcast: Jonathan Dellmar
Ep. 09

TEC Talks Podcast: Jonathan Dellmar

Phoenix, Arizona

Episode description

Join us today as we speak with Jonathan Dellmar, a digital forensics specialist who discusses what it’s like to examine digital evidence for the legal system…and reptiles.

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You're listening to Tech Talks, a podcast by the Technology Education Collaborative.

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Tech is an Arizona 501c3 nonprofit that empowers everyday people with useful information about

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the technology they use each and every day. Today, we're sitting down with John Delmar,

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a digital forensics specialist, and he's going to answer our standard five questions

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about what he does every day. Thanks for being here.

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You're welcome. Glad to be here.

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All right. So like I said, the way this works, everyone gets the same five questions. You ready?

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Shoot.

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What is your title and position?

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I am a digital forensics specialist with Epps Digital Forensics, and I work for Epps

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Digital Forensics. However, all the statements in this interview are my personal opinions

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and not the opinion or position of Epps Digital Forensics or any of the operations thereof.

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We provide criminal and civil digital forensics and litigation support in Arizona and many other

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states.

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And so what does that mean? So what specifically do you do on a daily basis?

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We examine evidence or collect evidence and exam evidence collected from all sorts of

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digital devices, whether it's phone, computers, your car, wearables, the cloud, and take that

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information and try and quantify what is there and speak to its truth in support of criminal

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and civil litigation.

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So can you give me a completely not real but generic example?

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Currently, we are doing a brute force unlock on a phone that was collected postmortem from

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a teenager to look through there and see if there is signs of bullying and also to help bring

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closure to the family. We also have a criminal case in which we are looking at cell phone

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tower data and Google location data and speaking to the truth of the police reports used to

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garner the indictment and that are going to be presented in a court of law and make sure that

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that information is presented in a factual and scientifically sound manner.

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So you've mentioned a lot of different technologies. You've mentioned vehicles,

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you've mentioned cell phones, you've mentioned computers. Is it kind of any technological

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device that may have evidence or is there things you don't work on?

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In broad strokes, we work with a lot of the various technologies. There are

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specializations. So if, for instance, we get a sound file, we go through, we collect data,

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and we get a sound file. And if the client needs somebody to speak to whether or not that is an

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original sound file, or if it's been modified or any other information, we will engage a third

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party specialist for that. But we serve as general technology. So we cover a lot of stuff. And in the

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digital age we're in right now, everything is interconnected. You can't walk down the street

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and not generate a thousand bright and shining points of data. So in that kind of environment,

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there's a lot of stuff for us to look at. And that's part of the job is knowing what we

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should look at and what is just going to be digital noise.

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So what is your favorite thing about your job?

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I enjoy the truth. That's going to sound really weird, but I derive a joy from the purity of

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getting past he said, she said to just the basis of this is factual. I can speak to this. There's

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no presumption. There's no assumption. This is what it is. And it can be nothing else. And,

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you know, getting to that point is, you know, where I can answer a question with certainty

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and with that reservation is one of the joys of the job.

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And what is your least favorite thing about your

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job? Because we all got something we don't like to do at work.

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I dislike with a fair amount of passion, the process of paperwork. And I realized there's

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a certain level of, you know, well, it's all about that because you've got to document everything you

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do. But the doing is the fun part. The filling out all the paperwork is the thing I would like

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to leave in the rear view mirror. So what kind of paperwork are you writing reports? Is this like

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administrative paperwork? One of the challenges we have is due to the nature because, like I said,

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litigation support, which means we deal with the courts and anybody who's dealt with the courts.

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It is one of two things, either happens too fast or it happens too slow. And for instance,

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we just recently had to unseal some evidence on a case that we've been working on since 2018,

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and it's still in court. And, you know, there's not been, you know, it's not like it's up for

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appeal. We haven't done the first round, and that's six years. So you have to document stuff

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because rarely can you count on something having an expeditious end. I mean, you know, when

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something wraps up and like, oh, it's done and we're finished and we never need to touch this

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again. That's such a rarity. At a minimum, the simple stuff can hang around for seven years.

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It's just a matter of course. So we have to document. You have to cross your T's, dot your I's,

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and document everything. Because even though like, oh, I'll never forget this.

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Five years down the road, what were we thinking about when we did this five years ago? You know,

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you don't have that in your head space anymore. So if you haven't written it down someplace,

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you get to redo the work. And that's never fun. So what would the one practical thing that you

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would tell someone who's interested in getting into this particular facet of tech, like what is

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a practical thing they could do or should do? Because of the nature of the business and because

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the tools and the training can be, can be punitively expensive. I would recommend anybody

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who's looking to get into this, you know, somebody who this job speaks passion to, is you are really

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going to want to get in with law enforcement, whether it be at a federal level, a city level,

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state level, the digital forensics, the tools, the techniques, the tools you use,

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and the reasons why you have to use those have become so commonplace. They're using vehicle data

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in accident investigations now. There's been a recent spat of, this was kind of one of those

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interesting things, where police in California are now seizing Teslas that are parked on the street

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if there's a violent crime in the area because the Teslas have cameras in them. And the police,

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this hasn't been officially declared, but I'm assuming that it's much, much easier to, you know,

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get somebody to give a copy of the vehicle's camera data when you're threatening to throw their

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$60,000 car into impound than it is to issue a subpoena for that information from Tesla and fight

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through their legal department. So there's a different level of motivation there in between

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the two parties to comply. So with even a traffic accident, having a digital forensic side of it,

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law enforcement is on the leading edge of the daily use of it. So if you don't have a strong

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technology background and you're just looking to get started into this, the suggestion is, is get

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into the law enforcement side of it. We see a lot of our compatriots, a lot of people in this

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industry have got a law enforcement, either at our federal, state, city level background. And that

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seems to be a very common thing. So, you know, keep your nose clean and, you know, a lot of it

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isn't sworn positions anymore. For a long time, you saw a lot of people that were sworn police

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officers. So they'd gone through the police academy and stuff like that. And I think that

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law enforcement is waking up to the fact that there's a different set of skills that benefits

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digital forensics than, you know, beat copper detective or investigative. There's some overlap

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there, but, you know, they're hunting for kind of a little bit of a different breed of cat when

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they're hunting for somebody who's a digital examiner, you know, so they're much more amicable.

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We're starting to see more civilian people that are working in support positions with the cities.

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And since I haven't heard of a bunch of programs that teach this because it's all, you know,

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there's one company doing computer forensics, there's one doing Macintosh forensics, there's

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another one doing cell phone forensics, there's another one that does CDRs, which is your cell

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data dumps or locationality. There's a bunch of small players in the market out there. I say

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small, but, you know, there's a bunch of disparate players in the market. So there's not one place

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where you go to get all of it. It's fragmented. And, you know, so having a government agency foot

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the bill for that fragmented training site, a wonderful, wonderful thing. And it'll give you

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an Apple opportunity to actually practice your trade because there's always somebody,

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there's always somebody committing a crime and everybody's got a phone in their pocket.

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So we're all walking around computers, they're all connected, they're all collecting data.

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And that's where that need to be able to parse that data out for law enforcement is critical

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for them. All right. So our final question, kind of a personal question. Do you have any passion

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projects, any organizations you support, any other interests, anything you're working on that you'd

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want to share with people? It does not have to be related to your occupation. I do a lot of,

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you know, the additive manufacturing. So 3d printing, laser cutting, small scale CNC,

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that maker space where you sit back here and you, you try and create something that's always been,

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you know, the, the, the ability to create is divine, you know, so being able to have that

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creative and, you know, it, you're always having to keep up to date. So it's something that exercises

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your mind. So yeah, that maker space is fun. I keep probably more reptiles than I should.

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I was going to call you out on the herpetology if you didn't mention it. Cause I know you've

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done some good work in that space too. I, you know, once a year I get together and I

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do a presentation for a bunch of seventh and eighth graders. And then I usually get

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Shanghai for a bunch of kindergarteners or first graders to do the same presentation for them

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after school. But at one of the local schools, I do that. And then, you know, I have, I have

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participated with nonprofit organizations for that, you know, for, to, to push the responsible

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pet ownership. You see a lot of overly dramatic or sensationally idiotic things out there in

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YouTube space that's, that are done for the purposes of gathering attention. Cause that's

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how you get views these days. And I think that some of those choices that those people make

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are self-serving and are very detrimental to both the animals and the hobby. And you know,

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they're cool critters and they can be very interactive and very intelligent and, you know,

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can bring people joy and peace and contentment. And as long as they're kept responsibly,

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they're safer than goldfish. I have got, let's call it eight boa constrictors right now. The

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biggest is about seven and a half, eight foot long. And then I have got a, let's call it

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precocious Argus monitor that we're working on bringing civility to, but it's not the friendliest

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little thing in the world, but an amazing animal. And if you've ever sat back and watched the

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velociraptors in Jurassic park and they look into the eye and you can see the cunning going on,

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you see the, you know, as blue sits back here and figures out exactly how she's going to cover

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that 15 feet. I see that every time I walk past that lizard. It's, there's something going on in

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there. There isn't subtitles for what it is, but there's something going on in there. And it's more

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than, you know, it's doing some complex thought. That's all of them for me right now. My daughter's

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got a hog nose. I don't know if, I don't know if teenagers count as pets, but you know, it depends

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on who you're talking to that, you know, it depends. You catch them right before dinner

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and you can see them kind of reverting back to their base forms, you know, and you kind of like

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throw a Cheeto at them or something like that. And, you know, hopefully they don't take a hand

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off. All right. So thank you so much for coming, John. A pleasure to be here.

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This podcast was recorded at the Advanced Cyber Systems Lab at Gateway Community College at the

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Washington campus. The ACSL is a tech hub for the general public, where you can use a 3D printer,

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record a podcast, practice advanced tech skills on one of our servers and do a whole lot more,

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all free of charge.