TY - GEN
T1 - Preventing Spoliation of Evidence with Blockchain
T2 - 3rd International Conference on Blockchain Technology, ICBCT 2021
AU - Shahaab, Ali
AU - Hewage, Chaminda
AU - Khan, Imtiaz
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Owner/Author.
PY - 2021/7/20
Y1 - 2021/7/20
N2 - Evidence destruction and tempering is a time-tested tactic to protect the powerful perpetrators, criminals, and corrupt officials. Countries where law enforcing institutions and judicial system can be comprised, and evidence destroyed or tampered, ordinary citizens feel disengaged with the investigation or prosecution process, and in some instances, intimidated due to the vulnerability to exposure and retribution. Using Distributed Ledger Technologies (DLT), such as blockchain, as the underpinning technology, here we propose a conceptual model - 'EvidenceChain', through which citizens can anonymously upload digital evidence, having assurance that the integrity of the evidence will be preserved in an immutable and indestructible manner. Person uploading the evidence can anonymously share it with investigating authorities or openly with public, if coerced by the perpetrators or authorities. Transferring the ownership of evidence from authority to ordinary citizen, and custodianship of evidence from susceptible centralized repository to an immutable and indestructible distributed repository, can cause a paradigm shift of power that not only can minimize spoliation of evidence but human rights abuse too. Here the conceptual model was theoretically tested against some high-profile spoliation of evidence cases from four South Asian developing countries that often rank high in global corruption index and low in human rights index.
AB - Evidence destruction and tempering is a time-tested tactic to protect the powerful perpetrators, criminals, and corrupt officials. Countries where law enforcing institutions and judicial system can be comprised, and evidence destroyed or tampered, ordinary citizens feel disengaged with the investigation or prosecution process, and in some instances, intimidated due to the vulnerability to exposure and retribution. Using Distributed Ledger Technologies (DLT), such as blockchain, as the underpinning technology, here we propose a conceptual model - 'EvidenceChain', through which citizens can anonymously upload digital evidence, having assurance that the integrity of the evidence will be preserved in an immutable and indestructible manner. Person uploading the evidence can anonymously share it with investigating authorities or openly with public, if coerced by the perpetrators or authorities. Transferring the ownership of evidence from authority to ordinary citizen, and custodianship of evidence from susceptible centralized repository to an immutable and indestructible distributed repository, can cause a paradigm shift of power that not only can minimize spoliation of evidence but human rights abuse too. Here the conceptual model was theoretically tested against some high-profile spoliation of evidence cases from four South Asian developing countries that often rank high in global corruption index and low in human rights index.
KW - blockchain technology for evidence preservation
KW - distributed ledger technologies
KW - evidence protection
KW - spoliation of evidence in developing countries
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85120980544&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1145/3460537.3460550
DO - 10.1145/3460537.3460550
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:85120980544
T3 - ACM International Conference Proceeding Series
SP - 45
EP - 52
BT - ICBCT 2021 - 2021 the 3rd International Conference on Blockchain Technology
PB - Association for Computing Machinery
Y2 - 26 March 2021 through 28 March 2021
ER -