Intro to Digital Evidence - Cyber Clues Unveiled
- Definition: Probative information stored or transmitted in binary form, crucial for legal proceedings.
- Characteristics:
- Volatile & fragile: easily altered, damaged, or erased with proper acquisition and preservation techniques essential.
- Often circumstantial; can be direct.
- Common Sources/Types:
- Devices: Computers, mobiles, USB drives, HDDs, IoT devices, wearables, vehicle systems.
- Data: Emails, messages, browser history, social media, cloud storage, encrypted platforms.
- Logs: Server logs, network logs.
- Metadata: Data about data (e.g., timestamps, file origin).
⭐ Admissibility of electronic records is governed by Sec 63 of the Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023, requiring a certificate.
Indian Legal Framework - Bytes & Barristers
- Core Statutes:
- Information Technology Act, 2000 (IT Act): Defines "electronic record", "digital signature"; legal framework for e-transactions, cybercrime.
- Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023 (BSA): Provides framework for electronic evidence admissibility.
- Key BSA Admissibility Sections:
- Sec 63: Special provisions for electronic records and conditions for admissibility.
- Sec 63(4): Certificate requirement for electronic evidence admissibility.
- Sec 45: Opinion of Examiner of Electronic Evidence.
- Relevant BSA Presumptions:
- Sec 85: Re: electronic agreements and digital signatures.
- Sec 86: Re: electronic records & digital signature certificates.
- Sec 87: Re: presumptions concerning digital signatures.
- Admissibility Pathway:
⭐ The Supreme Court ruling in Anvar P.V. vs P.K. Basheer & Ors. (2014) mandates a certificate under Section 63(4) of BSA for secondary electronic evidence admissibility.
Admissibility & Authentication - Proof & Pixels
- Admissibility: Governed by Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam (BSA), 2023. Electronic records admissible if relevant & authentic.
- Sec 63 BSA: Mandatory for admissibility of secondary electronic evidence.
- Requires certificate under Sec 63(4) detailing computer output circumstances.
- Sec 63 BSA: Mandatory for admissibility of secondary electronic evidence.
- Authentication: Verifying integrity & genuineness.
- Methods:
- Hash values (e.g., MD5, SHA-256) to ensure data integrity.
- Digital signatures with BSA framework compatibility.
- Chain of Custody: Documented trail of evidence handling.
- Expert Opinion (BSA provisions for electronic evidence).

- Methods:
- Proof: Establishing facts using digital data ("pixels").
- Challenges: Tampering, steganography, deepfakes.
⭐ The certificate under Sec 63(4) BSA is pivotal for the admissibility of secondary electronic evidence.
Doctor's Role & Digital Data - Docs & Data Detectives
- Identification: Recognize relevant digital evidence: EMR/EHR, logs from medical devices (pacemakers, insulin pumps), CCTV footage, patient communications, mobile health app data.
- Preservation: Ensure data integrity. Prevent unauthorized access, alteration, or destruction. Understand the critical importance of metadata.
- Documentation: Meticulously record all steps for collection, handling, storage, and transfer. Essential for establishing chain of custody.
- Legal & Ethical Compliance: Strictly adhere to data privacy laws (e.g., DPDP Act, 2023) and professional ethical guidelines.
- Expert Testimony: Clearly and objectively explain digital findings and their medical significance in legal proceedings.
⭐ Section 61 of the Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023, mandates a certificate for the admissibility of electronic records as primary evidence.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Section 63, Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023, governs admissibility of electronic records.
- A certificate under Sec 63(4) is mandatory for proving electronic evidence.
- Hash values (MD5, SHA-256) ensure integrity of digital evidence.
- Meticulous chain of custody is vital for digital evidence.
- Forensic imaging (bit-stream copy) preserves metadata, preferred over simple copying.
- Admissibility hinges on authenticity, reliability, and integrity.
- Expert opinion (Sec 44, BSA) is key for examining electronic evidence.
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING — FREEor get the app