Case Notes & Evidence - Disclosurely Investigation Guide
Document investigations effectively with case notes and evidence management. Upload files, maintain chain of custody, and create defensible investigation records.
Case Notes and Evidence
Comprehensive guide to documenting investigations and managing evidence properly.
Overview
Thorough documentation and evidence management are critical for:
- Defensible investigations: Stand up to legal scrutiny
- Audit compliance: Meet regulatory requirements
- Knowledge retention: Maintain institutional memory
- Quality assurance: Enable peer review
- Accountability: Demonstrate diligence
- Consistency: Support fair treatment across cases
Case Notes
What Are Case Notes?
Internal documentation of investigation activities, not visible to reporters. Use case notes to create a chronological record of:
- Investigation actions taken
- Decisions made and reasoning
- Conversations and interviews
- Observations and insights
- Questions and concerns
- Next steps planned
When to Add Notes
After Every Investigation Activity:
- Reviewing new report
- Interviewing witness
- Collecting evidence
- Making key decision
- Communicating with reporter
- Receiving new information
- Changing investigation direction
- Consulting with colleagues
- Taking any significant action
Best Practice: Document immediately while details fresh. Don't rely on memory.
Writing Effective Case Notes
Include These Elements:
-
Date and Time
- Automatically timestamped
- Helps establish timeline
- Critical for audit trail
-
What You Did
- Not just what you found, but what action you took
- "Interviewed John Smith" not just "John said..."
- "Reviewed emails from March-April" not just "Found evidence"
-
What You Learned
- Key information obtained
- Important quotes (verbatim)
- Facts discovered
- Patterns observed
-
What It Means
- How information relates to allegations
- Whether it supports or contradicts claims
- Significance to investigation
-
What You'll Do Next
- Follow-up actions needed
- Additional interviews required
- Documents to request
- Questions remaining
Example - Good Case Note:
2024-03-15 14:30
Interviewed Jane Doe (Senior Accountant, Finance Dept) regarding
allegation of expense fraud by reported subject.
Jane confirmed she noticed unusual expense patterns in Q4 2023:
- Multiple expenses just under £500 approval threshold
- Receipts that "looked odd" - her words
- Same restaurant appearing 3-4 times per week
She said: "I flagged it to my manager in December but nothing
happened. I assumed they dealt with it."
Jane provided:
- Spreadsheet of flagged expenses (uploaded to evidence)
- Email to her manager dated Dec 12, 2023 (uploaded)
- Names of 2 colleagues who had similar concerns
Jane credible and specific. Her evidence corroborates reporter's
allegations about systematic expense fraud.
Next steps:
- Interview Jane's manager about why not escalated
- Review all subject's Q4 2023 expenses
- Interview 2 colleagues Jane mentioned
- Request restaurant receipts for forensic review
Example - Poor Case Note:
Talked to Jane. She said expenses were weird. Got some files.
Note Categories and Tags
Organize notes with tags:
- Interview Notes: Witness interviews conducted
- Evidence: Documents and files collected
- Analysis: Your thinking and conclusions
- Communication: Messages with reporter/subject via secure messaging
- Administrative: Status changes, assignments
- Legal: Consultations with legal counsel
- External: Third party involvement
- Decision: Key choices and reasoning
Benefits:
- Find notes quickly
- Filter by note type
- Generate reports
- Support audit review
Private vs. Shared Notes
Private Notes:
- Visible only to you
- Use for work-in-progress thoughts
- Preliminary opinions
- Questions for yourself
- Personal reminders
Shared Notes:
- Visible to team members on case
- Use for factual information
- Evidence collected
- Actions taken
- Coordination with team
Upgrade Private to Shared:
- When thought becomes conclusion
- When team needs to see
- When audit trail required
- Cannot downgrade shared notes (audit integrity)
AI-Generated Notes
If using AI Case Helper:
What AI Can Do:
- Summarize long interviews
- Extract key points from documents
- Identify patterns across evidence
- Suggest follow-up questions
- Flag inconsistencies
Your Responsibility:
- Review all AI-generated content
- Verify accuracy
- Add your analysis
- Make final decisions
- Note: "AI-assisted summary, verified by investigator"
Never:
- Copy AI output without review
- Use AI conclusions as your own
- Skip critical thinking
- Rely on AI for final decisions
Evidence Management
What Counts as Evidence?
Direct Evidence:
- Witness statements
- Documents proving allegations
- Email communications
- Financial records
- Audio/video recordings
- Photos
- Physical items
Circumstantial Evidence:
- Behavioral patterns
- Timeline analysis
- Opportunity and motive
- Corroborating details
- Context and background
Character Evidence:
- Previous incidents
- Performance reviews
- Disciplinary history
- Reputation (use cautiously)
Uploading Evidence
How to Upload:
-
From Case Page
- Click "Add Evidence"
- Select file(s) from device
- Can drag and drop
- Multiple files at once
-
While Adding Note
- Click attachment icon
- Add files inline with note
- Creates evidence entry linked to note
-
From Reporter
- Files attached to original report automatically added
- Files sent via secure messaging automatically added
- Timestamped and logged
Supported File Types:
- Documents: PDF, DOC, DOCX, TXT, RTF
- Spreadsheets: XLS, XLSX, CSV
- Images: JPG, PNG, GIF, BMP
- Archives: ZIP (automatically scanned for viruses)
- Audio: MP3, WAV, M4A
- Video: MP4, MOV, AVI (Enterprise plan)
File Size Limits:
- Basic plan: 10MB per file
- Pro plan: 50MB per file
- Enterprise plan: 500MB per file
Security:
- All files encrypted before upload
- Virus scanned automatically
- Malicious files rejected
- Encrypted at rest and in transit
- Access logged in audit trail
Organizing Evidence
Categorize Each Item:
-
Evidence Type
- Email/communication
- Financial record
- Interview transcript
- Photo/video
- Company document
- External record
- Expert report
-
Relevant Allegation
- Link to specific claim
- Can link to multiple allegations
- Helps filter evidence later
- Supports analysis
-
Source
- Reporter-provided
- Witness-provided
- Company records
- Public records
- Third party
- Self-generated (interview notes)
-
Relevance Level
- Critical: Directly proves/disproves
- High: Strong supporting evidence
- Medium: Contextual information
- Low: Background only
- Uncertain: Need to assess
-
Tags
- Custom tags for searching
- Date ranges
- Departments
- People mentioned
- Topics
Evidence Index
Automatically Generated:
- List of all evidence on case
- Chronologically ordered
- Filterable and searchable
- Shows who uploaded when
- Links to case notes
- Download as spreadsheet
Use For:
- Investigation report appendix
- Audit review
- Legal disclosure
- Quality assurance
- Knowledge transfer
Chain of Custody
For Physical Evidence:
-
Document Acquisition
- When received
- From whom
- Condition received
- Where originally located
-
Photo Before Handling
- Original state
- Location
- Identifying marks
- Any damage
-
Secure Storage
- Locked location
- Access logged
- Climate controlled if needed
- Tamper-evident seal
-
Track All Access
- Who handled
- When and why
- What they did
- Returned to storage
-
Document in Disclosurely
- Upload photos
- Log all custody transfers
- Note storage location
- Track until disposition
For Digital Evidence:
-
Preserve Original
- Don't modify source file
- Create forensic copy if important
- Hash file to prove authenticity
-
Document Metadata
- Created date/time
- Modified date/time
- Author
- File properties
- Source location
-
Screenshot Context
- Where file was found
- Surrounding files
- Access permissions
- Full headers (emails)
-
Upload to Disclosurely
- Original file
- Forensic copy if made
- Screenshots of context
- Metadata documentation
Evidence Analysis
Creating Evidence Summary:
-
For Each Allegation
- List all relevant evidence
- Note what each item shows
- Identify corroboration
- Note contradictions
- Assess strength
-
Weighing Evidence
- Strong: Multiple sources, contemporary, credible
- Moderate: Single source, credible, consistent
- Weak: Uncorroborated, inconsistent, questionable
- Insufficient: Gaps, hearsay, unreliable
-
Document Analysis
- Add analysis as case note
- Link to relevant evidence
- Show your reasoning
- Consider alternatives
- Note any doubts
Using AI for Analysis:
- AI can identify patterns across documents
- Find inconsistencies in statements
- Suggest connections between evidence
- Flag missing information
- Always verify AI findings independently
Interview Transcripts
Best Practices:
During Interview:
- Take detailed notes in real-time
- Capture exact quotes for key statements
- Note body language, tone (if relevant)
- Record time, date, location
- Note who else present
After Interview:
- Transcribe notes while fresh (same day)
- Expand shorthand into full sentences
- Add context you remember
- Note your impressions
- Don't change or "clean up" quotes
Creating Transcript:
- Header: Date, time, location, participants
- Introduction: Explain purpose, confidentiality
- Question and answer format
- Verbatim for key statements
- Paraphrase routine information
- Note breaks, interruptions
- Closing: Thank participant, next steps
Upload to Evidence:
- Tag as "Interview Transcript"
- Link to relevant allegations
- Note credibility assessment
- Mark as "Interview Notes" category
- Link to any follow-up needed
Photos and Videos
Taking Photos:
- Include scale reference if relevant
- Take wide shot and close-ups
- Capture identifying features
- Timestamp (automatic in smartphone)
- Geotag if location relevant
- Multiple angles
Documenting Videos:
- Note timestamp of relevant segments
- Transcribe relevant audio
- Screenshot key frames
- Document who, what, where, when
- Maintain original file
Sensitive Content:
- Blur faces if privacy concern
- Redact identifying information
- Limit distribution
- Note content warning
- Comply with data protection laws
Document Retention
How Long to Keep Evidence:
Active Cases:
- All evidence retained
- No deletion
- All versions preserved
Resolved Cases:
- Evidence retained per policy
- Typical: 7 years minimum
- Longer for serious cases
- Follow industry standards:
- Financial services: 7+ years
- Healthcare: 7+ years
- Education: 6+ years
- Government: varies by jurisdiction
Automatic Retention:
- Disclosurely automatically retains per your settings
- Configure in Organization Settings
- Set by case category
- Set by severity
- Legal holds override deletion
Destruction:
- Only after retention period
- Secure deletion (military-grade)
- Audit log maintained
- Certificate of destruction
- Approved by compliance officer
Best Practices
Document Contemporaneously
Why:
- Memory fades quickly
- Details lost over time
- Credibility questioned if delayed
- Legal requirement in some jurisdictions
Do:
- Write notes immediately after activities
- Same day minimum
- While impressions fresh
- Before next task
Don't:
- Batch notes at end of week
- Rely on memory days later
- Backdate notes
- Create notes out of sequence
Be Objective and Factual
Do:
- State facts observed
- Quote exact words
- Note sources
- Distinguish fact from opinion
- Show reasoning
Don't:
- Insert personal biases
- Make assumptions
- Draw premature conclusions
- Use inflammatory language
- Speculate without basis
Example - Objective: "Subject's expense submissions show 47 claims for dinner at same restaurant over 3-month period. Each claim between £480-£495. Company policy requires approval for expenses over £500."
Example - Subjective: "Subject clearly knew he was manipulating the system by keeping expenses just under the limit. Obviously fraudulent."
Protect Confidentiality
In Notes:
- Use role instead of names where possible
- "Reporter" not actual name
- "Subject" not actual name
- Note if identity must be shared (investigation requires)
In Evidence:
- Redact unnecessary personal data
- Remove unrelated names
- Protect bystander privacy
- Comply with GDPR/privacy laws
Access Control:
- Limit evidence access to need-to-know
- Log all evidence views
- Restrict downloads
- Watermark sensitive documents
Maintain Integrity
Never:
- Alter original evidence
- Delete unfavorable information
- Hide evidence that contradicts theory
- Create false documentation
- Backdate or forward-date notes
- Share evidence inappropriately
Always:
- Preserve everything
- Document all evidence (even if not using)
- Maintain chronological record
- Create audit trail
- Secure evidence
- Follow procedures
Use Evidence Checklist
Before Closing Case:
✅ All evidence uploaded and categorized ✅ All interviews transcribed ✅ Evidence index complete ✅ All evidence linked to allegations ✅ Chain of custody documented ✅ Sources noted for all evidence ✅ Privileged evidence marked ✅ Redactions appropriate ✅ Retention settings configured ✅ Evidence summary created ✅ Quality review complete
Troubleshooting
Cannot Upload File
Check:
- File size under limit for your plan
- File type supported
- Internet connection stable
- Browser up to date
- Not already uploaded (duplicate check)
Solutions:
- Compress large files
- Convert to supported format
- Try different browser
- Contact support if persists
Evidence Not Appearing
Verify:
- Upload completed successfully
- Correct case selected
- Filters not hiding evidence
- Permissions allow you to view
- Browser cache refreshed
File Infected with Virus
What Happens:
- Automatic virus scan on upload
- Infected files rejected
- Upload fails with error message
- File not saved to system
What to Do:
- Scan file on your system
- Clean if possible
- Upload cleaned version
- Consider if evidence still needed
- Document attempt and rejection
Lost Evidence
Disclosurely Protects Against:
- Automatic backups
- Version history
- Deleted evidence recoverable
- Audit log shows all actions
- Geographic redundancy
If Evidence Missing:
- Check filters and search
- Verify correct case
- Check deleted evidence folder
- Review audit log
- Contact support to recover
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