

We all fail, we succeed, everything is together.Īnd so growing from just a few people to expanding our office to about 10,000 square feet just in Alexandria from just a little closet, just to make sure that one, we have the room, we have the people and continue to make them happy, because obviously, happy employees - especially during a lot of the things that have been going on for the last couple of years - is a good thing. And I think that what I’m really most proud of right now is we’ve become such a - kind of more, I wanted to make it family-type as a team. And then also into computer forensics, but honestly, the growth that we have had in just the six years that I’ve been with Oxygen has been tremendous. I’ve been doing it for awhile on the mobile forensics side of it.

Time flies, I guess, when you’re having fun. Tell us what’s changed for you since you came on board as COO, and what are you proudest of in particular? So it’s been a few years since we last interviewed you, and even a year since you and I talked on your podcast. Good to see you again, as always.Ĭhrista: Yeah. I’m your host, Christa Miller, and welcome Lee. Today on the Forensic Focus podcast, we’re joined by Lee Reiber, chief operating officer at Oxygen Forensics, here to talk with us about many of those changes and more.

As the field diversifies to include cloud storage encryption and the internet of things, digital forensics evolution is only as good as the tools that can keep up. Christa: Increasingly mobile forensics isn’t just about devices.
