Jim Christy

Jim Christy (born 1951) retired from the government in 2013 where he was the Director of Futures Exploration (FX) for the Department of Defense Cyber Crime Center (DC3). FX was in charge of establishing strategic relationships between the US Government and private agencies and academia. Christy was the Director of the Defense Cyber Crime Institute from 2003–2006, and Director of Operations of the Defense Computer Forensics Laboratory from 2001–2003.

Christy was chief of the Air Force Office of Special Investigations (AFOSI) computer crime investigations unit from 1989–1996. As the founder of the world's largest digital forensics shop, he is notable for his involvement in high priority government computer security.

Christy joined the Air Force when he was 19.[1] He later became a computer operator at the Pentagon, and got a job as a computer crime investigator at AFOSI in 1986.

In 1986 Christy investigated the notorious Hanover Hackers, a band of West German digital delinquents who stole information from United States Defense Department computers and sold it to the Soviet KGB. It was his first hacker case as an AFOSI agent. In 1991, Christy founded the Pentagon's first digital forensics lab for the Air Force. In 1998, the Air Force Lab became the Department of Defense Computer Forensics Laboratory, supporting all of the investigative agencies of the Department of Defense.

In 2016, Jim Christy was asked by Tom Colbert to join his DB Cooper Cold Case Team. Christy put together a team to go undercover online to help Colbert's team prove the real identity of DB Cooper that he identified in the History Channel's documentary aired in July 2016.

References

  1. Robin Mejia, "CSI:TCP/IP", Wired Magazine, January 2007. Accessed January 19, 2007.


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