DFRWS Board of Directors

Chair

Golden Richard III, Ph.D.
Professor of Computer Science
University of New Orleans
Golden G. Richard III is an Associate Professor of Computer Science at the University of New Orleans and co-founder of Digital Forensics Solutions, LLC. He is the developer of Scalpel, a popular file carving application, and co-developer of DELV, a framework for distributed digital forensics. His research interests are in digital forensics, distributed computing, and operating systems internals.

Vice Chair

Frank Adelstein, Ph.D.
Technical Director
ATC-NY
Dr. Frank Adelstein is the Technical Director of computer security at ATC-NY in Ithaca, NY. He is the principal designer of a live forensic investigation product and has worked in the area of live investigation for the last 5 years. He has also been the principal investigator on numerous research and development projects including security, wireless networking, intrusion detection, and training. He has co-authored a book on Mobile and Pervasive Computing, and has participated in DFRWS since its inception in 2001.

Treasurer

Daryl Pfeif
Chief Executive Officer
Digital Forensics Solutions, New Orleans, LA
Daryl Pfeif is drawn to emerging and useful technology like a moth to the flame. She attended her first Digital Forensics Research Workshop in 2004 and they haven't been able to get rid of her since. She is the co-founder of www.DigitalForensicsSolutions.com and has over fifteen years of experience as a communications technology consultant and lead project manager in both the public and private sectors.

Secretary

Eoghan Casey
Johns Hopkins University
Eoghan Casey is an Incident Response and Digital Forensic Analyst, responding to security breaches and analyzing digital evidence in a wide range of investigations, including network intrusions with international scope. He has extensive experience using digital forensics in response to security breaches to determine the origin, nature and extent of computer intrusions, and has utilized forensic and security techniques to secure compromised networks. He teaches at the Johns Hopkins University Information Security Institute and is the author of the widely used text book Digital Evidence and Computer Crime now in its second edition, is editor of the Handbook of Computer Crime Investigation. He is also the editor-in-chief of Elsevier's Digital Investigation journal.

Director

Brian Carrier
Director of Digital Forensics
Basis Technology

Director

Vassil Roussev
Assistant Professor of Computer Science
University of New Orleans

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DFRWS is a US 501(c)(3) non-profit organization.