I believe there are a couple areas in which criminal justice and cybercrime do overlap. Criminal justice put simply is the system of enforcing and apprehending any criminals and cybercrime is essentially illegal acts carried out by criminals but just through the means of technology and cyberspace. In both areas, technological advancements play a huge part. Cybercrime is still a fairly new term even though technology has been around for a few decades. With the rate of technological advancements, the speed and type of cybercrimes increase daily and it is hard within criminal justice to solidify laws and regulations that cover the majority of them. A big issue with pursuing cybercriminals as well is finances. With any business or organization, financial reach can be a benefit or a curse and with criminal justice, typically the financial budget of most organizations is not where they should be so resources are much more limited than those of the attackers they are trying to stop. Trying to track down attackers or those who have committed online identity theft is very difficult when the resources are limited and sometimes by the time an attack or cybercrime has been committed, the attacker is long gone. The financial budget for criminal justice in reference to cybercrime should be greatly expanded because technology is not going anywhere and it is ever expanding and getting faster which leads to faster attacks and more creative cybercrimes. The lack of resources of criminal justice programs and organizations and the increase of cybercrimes can impact industrial systems and even potentially destroy small businesses. If an attacker wanted to hack or attack a small business and was persistent, they could potentially get away with money or resources from a small business and may never be caught. By the time they would be apprehended, the damage would’ve been done and the business could be bankrupt or shut down by then. As far as industrial systems go, if they are lacking they proper security an attacker can disrupt entire cities water supplies or the electric grid or worse and if the law enforcement isn’t equipped sufficiently to track them down, they may never be caught and could attack again. Within cybersecurity it seems it’s a cycle of making sure your company or business is equipped itself with the best security policies, procedures, and devices to help prevent attacks but you must also make sure that the law enforcement knows what to do I there is an attack and hopefully they have the funding and the resources to be able to help and without both of those being upheld, it leaves a hole in security.