*Associate Professor,
A special feature of the content of this article is the investigation of computer crimes. The lack of special training with the functioning of computers and computer systems to detect and most importantly prove the crime committed, by law enforcement officers. Computer-technology and its carriers can be considered as information and their sources, respectively, in the structure of criminal procedural evidence, but only in such forms as physical evidence and other documents. Indeed, lawyers who have received only a liberal arts education find it difficult to acquire special computer security knowledge at the present level and to operate freely with the most complex technical concepts. Despite the large number of publications that have emerged recently, the common flaw in most of these works can be considered, as adopted in them, the coverage of the issues of the use of special knowledge.
Computerization, Computer-Technologies, Information, Computer-Crimes, Traditional, Nano-Technologies, Expert Research