Event fully booked!
Objective
Mobile devices such as smartphones and tablets contain personal information such as call history, text messages, e-mails, digital photographs, videos, calendar items, address books, passwords and credit card numbers. They can be useful as sources of digital evidence to be examined when criminal activities occur. This seminar aims to share advanced knowledge and the exchange of experience and best practice between judges, prosecutors and lawyers in private practice who deal with criminal proceedings involving e-evidence on mobile devices.
Key topics
- Technical issues (internet caches, proxy servers, encryption, deep/dark web, etc.)
- Legal implications of e-evidence (collection, evaluation and admissibility)
- The rise of evidence on mobile devices
- Insights into different national criminal justice systems
About the Project
This seminar is part of a large-scale project sponsored by the European Commission entitled “Investigating web 2.0: practice-oriented training on internet searches for EU legal practitioners”. It consists of six seminars to take place in Lisbon, Dublin, Bucharest, Valletta, Barcelona and Madrid.
Registration fee: €200 with no discounts
The number of places available is limited (30 places).
Participation will be subject to a selection procedure. Selection will be first come first served and according to nationality.
Priority will be given to those participants who did not attend an ERA event on e-evidence / online investigations / investigating web 2.0 in 2017-2019.
A response will be sent to every applicant after the deadline. We advise you not to book any travel or hotel before you receive our confirmation.
Travel costs up to €300 and two nights' hotel accommodation will be reimbursed by ERA upon receipt of the original receipts, tickets, boarding passes, invoices after the seminar.
Participants are asked to book their own travel and accommodation. Spanish applicants who work for the prosecution service (CEJ) must apply for this event through CEJ.
Participants should come from eligible EU Member States (UK and Denmark do not participate in the Justice Programme 2014-2020).
Who should attend?
Judges, prosecutors and lawyers in private practice from EU Member States.