The release of a unanimous U.S. Supreme Court decision dictating that police need a warrant in order to search a cell phone coincides with a request by the Buffalo Police Department to purchase equipment that would transfer all data from a cell phone so it could be
examined by detectives.
Not exact matches
Metropolitan Police
detectives are scouring CCTV footage, interviewing witnesses and
examining forensic evidence in the hope of identifying those responsible, according to a statement
by Assistant Commissioner Mark Rowley.
Examining absurd theories around Mad Men and True
Detective, Julia Yost characterizes this phenomenon as a shift from the aesthetic to the forensic: «Everything on screen and soundtrack is a clue, and the viewer's challenge is to suss out the secrets encoded
by the creators» choices in writing, casting, wardrobe, and art direction.
It revealed
detectives are
examining «three separate pieces of evidence» passed to the force
by the police watchdog and a «third party».
She was arrested
by appointment at a London police station [180][181]
by detectives working on Operation Weeting, the Metropolitan Police's phone hacking investigation, and Operation Elveden, the probe
examining illicit payments to police officers.