This page features a series of PowerPoint projects completed during CRJS 310: Cybercrime Foundations. The course introduced major types of cybercrime and how digital evidence is used in investigations. I participated in group projects that explored cybercrime categories, case studies, and theoretical perspectives. These collaborative presentations strengthened my skills in research, analysis, and teamwork while deepening my understanding of real-world cybercrime challenges.

Below are the group projects I contributed to during the course:


Categories of Cybercrime

This presentation explored the different types of cybercrime, including hacking, identity theft, cyberbullying, and financial fraud, and discussed how they are classified in criminological research.


Categories-of-Cybercrime_-The-Uniqueness-of-Cyberviolence


What do Social Scientists Know about Cybercrime

This project examined how social science disciplines study cybercrime, highlighting theories and research findings on offender behavior and victimization trends.


What-Do-Social-Scientists-Know-About


Cybercrime Case Study: Blackcat

This presentation provided a detailed case study on the Blackcat ransomware group, analyzing their methods, targets, and impact within the broader cybercrime landscape.


Cybercrime-Case-Study_-BLACKCAT-compressed


Why Cybercrime?

This project explored the motivations behind committing cybercrime, including financial gain, ideology, revenge, and social pressures, linking theories to real-world examples.


Why-Cybercrime-1

Why-Cybercrime-A-Written-Reflection-2024-11-08-15_32_24-1


Cybercrime as a Social Problem

This presentation discussed how cybercrime affects society on a larger scale, including issues like public trust, economic impacts, and challenges in law enforcement and policy making.


Cybercrime-as-a-social-problem-1

Cybercrime-as-a-Social-Problem-Reflection