Intelligence is only as useful as its admissibility. Next 72's principal is a Daubert-qualified federal expert witness — so the work isn't just produced, it's defended.
A report that can't survive a Daubert challenge is a liability, not an asset. Next 72's principal has been qualified as a federal expert witness in complex high-tech criminal matters, including geolocation intelligence — the rare combination of an investigator who both produces the analysis and defends it on the stand.
That changes how the work is built from the first day. Methodology is transparent, every conclusion is calibrated to the confidence it earns — stated limits and all — and the chain from raw signal to stated finding is documented to be explained to a court, not just delivered to a client.
Expert support is available on a case-by-case basis: affidavits, declarations, deposition, and trial testimony, in civil and criminal matters.
Federal-court-qualified expert testimony in geolocation and high-tech intelligence matters.
Sworn, affidavit-ready intelligence reports built for filing.
Deposition and trial testimony, civil and criminal, retained per matter.
Clear articulation of method, sources, limits, and reliability under challenge.
Review and rebuttal of opposing location and digital-evidence experts.
FBI InfraGard, NCFTA, HSI IPR, and USSS Financial Crimes Task Force affiliations.
Names redacted, methodology preserved.
A geolocation analysis was tested on its sourcing, reliability, and limits — and held, because the method had been built transparent and calibrated from the outset rather than reverse-justified after the fact.
In a federal matter, grand-jury materials were analyzed for whether the evidence supported the charged theory — surfacing gaps in the proof of agreement central to the conspiracy count.
Being direct about what the data does and doesn't prove isn't a hedge — it's the foundation of admissibility. A signal places a device with high confidence; its absence proves only that none was captured. An expert who states limits plainly before opposing counsel does is an expert a court trusts. That discipline runs through every report Next 72 produces.
Bring us the matter. We'll tell you where we can support — affidavit, deposition, or trial.