Preservation before interpretation
Devices, account records, exports, and available logs are considered for preservation before conclusions are formed from incomplete material.
St. Louis, Missouri
Forensic consulting for matters involving civil litigation, health care and business records, email evidence, mobile devices, and independent forensic review in St. Louis, Missouri.
Local forensic support
Rune Forensics supports attorneys, businesses, insurers, and individuals when records from devices, accounts, email systems, cloud services, or prior forensic work need careful review.
St. Louis matters may involve health care entities, businesses, professional services, personal injury disputes, and digital records that need reliable explanation.
Common issues include disputed communications, device usage, account access, cloud storage activity, email evidence, deleted data questions, file transfers, metadata, location related artifacts, and timelines that need to be explained clearly.
Services relevant to this market
The work begins with the question that needs to be answered, then follows the records that can address it.
Forensic method
Devices, account records, exports, and available logs are considered for preservation before conclusions are formed from incomplete material.
Findings are tied back to source artifacts, metadata, timestamps, logs, application records, and surrounding context.
Missing records, uncertainty, tool limitations, and alternate explanations are identified when they affect the strength of a conclusion.
Matters supported
FAQ
Yes. Phones, computers, email records, cloud accounts, and business systems can be reviewed when they relate to the dispute.
Yes. Available records can be reviewed with attention to source, completeness, metadata, access history, and the limits of the data.
Yes. Timelines can often compare device usage, logins, communications, file access, and account activity.
The original device may contain system artifacts, deleted data, encryption material, and metadata that copied files do not preserve.
Yes. Findings should be clear enough to use, detailed enough to review, and restrained enough to defend.
Confidential consultation
Send a brief summary of the matter, the evidence sources, and any deadline that may affect preservation or review.
Contact Rune Forensics