Police investigating the cash for peerages scandal will use American software to search for deleted emails on Whitehall computers
Police will use US software to identify deleted emails between civil servants and Whitehall
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Police track deleted UK government emails

US software used in cash-for-peerage investigation

Matt Chapman, vnunet.com 12 Jul 2006
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Police investigating the cash for peerages scandal will use American software to search for deleted emails on Whitehall computers, according to press reports.

Pasadena-based Guidance Software confirmed that it had provided the computer program. 

"We have supplied this regulatory software to Scotland Yard and it is currently being used in the cash for peerages investigation," Tim Leehealey, executive vice president of business and corporate development at Guidance Software, told The Guardian.

"This is a more sophisticated version which can also interrogate individuals' computer hard drives without them realising that this has happened."

John Yates, deputy assistant commissioner at the Metropolitan Police, said that Scotland Yard had already begun the search to try and find any link between the offer of loans and the awarding of honours. 

The program will scan computers and identify any deleted emails between civil servants and Whitehall, including communications to and from Downing Street

The cash for honours issue was first raised when four people put forward for peerages were found to have loaned money to the Labour Party

The police investigation will also look into 20 Conservative Party backers who loaned money to the party. 

Police had previously removed around 1,000 documents from government departments, including the Cabinet Office and the House of Lords Appointments Commission.

See also:

The UK government's websites are unreliable in the level of service they provide, according to a report by an internet performance companyE-Government site in the bottom three  04 Jul 2006
Swedish police have launched an investigation into an attack that brought down the country's official government website on SundayThought to be revenge for Pirate Bay raid  05 Jun 2006
Hand over the keys or it's two years in the slammer  18 May 2006
A federal judge has ruled that the US government can only subpoena a list of URLs from Google's indexJudge grants access to 50,000 URLs, no more  17 Mar 2006
Home OfficeLosses drop, not rise, according to Apacs  03 Feb 2006
Online gamblingEyes down for a full house  16 Jan 2006
Houses of ParliamentBuild it and they will come  14 Nov 2005
Home OfficeLabour supporters complain about 'questionnaire'  09 Nov 2005

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