By Local News | MyWabashValley.com
Apr 15, 2021 11:21 AM
TERRE HAUTE, Ind. Three students majoring in Cybercriminology and Security Studies at Indiana State University will be sworn in as digital forensic investigators for the Vigo County Prosecutor s Office.
Students Courtney Hughes from New Middletown, Ohio; Carla Morales from Downers Grove, Illinois; and Christinea Winesberry from San Francisco, California, will intern at the prosecutor s office as part of a digital forensics pilot project. A swearing-in ceremony will be held Friday.
The interns will have law enforcement powers while on duty under the supervision of a law enforcement officer. They will help law enforcement recover and review evidence from digital devices for investigations and prosecutions in Vigo County. The work, to be done in a lab on ISU s campus, will allow officers access to digital evidence in a timely fashion, and that data can have an impact on criminal investigations.
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In this June 28, 2019, file photo, Tremayne Nez stands outside the Coconino County courthouse in Flagstaff. In June 2019, police wrongfully arrested him on suspicion of selling LSD after they mistook Nez, who is Navajo, for the actual suspect, also Native American. PHOTO BY FELICIA FONSECA/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tremayne Nez felt defenseless after Flagstaff police wrongfully arrested him in June 2019 on suspicion of selling LSD.
Police mistook Nez, then 20, for someone else, and the fallout from the arrest was immediate on him and his family.
His father, a pastor on the Navajo Nation, saw no one show up for his Sunday service following his son’s arrest.