| Abstrak/Abstract |
Digital evidence has a different meaning from physical evidence, but even though it is different, both
are a unity of evidence that supports each other in the investigation process. Unfortunately, laws and
regulations generally have not been oriented to the terminology of digital evidence that should be. It
becomes a research challenge in how the handling of digital evidence also gets the same treatment
as physical evidence. For this reason, technical studies are needed to support the application of law
and regulations for digital evidence handling. This article provides a solution in the form of digital
evidence cabinets as a framework to support the centralization of digital evidence that following the
applicable regulations of procedures for the management of evidence in the territory of Indonesia.
This concept can translate the centralization of digital evidence through the analogy of physical
cabinet and the interpretation of cabinet, rack, bags, and evidence unit with types of criminals, list
of crimes, list of crime scenes and list of digital evidence at one crime scene. |