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How device-level cell phone forensics differs from carrier-issued cell-site location information and call detail records, including 2026 retention windows, legal standards, and when each is the right evidence.
TL;DR. Cell phone forensics examines the device itself to recover messages, photos, app data, deleted artifacts, and device location history. Cell tower records come from the carrier and show which towers a phone connected to and when (CSLI), and metadata about calls and texts (CDR). They are different evidence with different methods, different legal posture under Carpenter v. United States, and different retention windows.
| Cell Phone Forensics | Cell Tower / CDR / CSLI | |
|---|---|---|
| Source | The physical phone (and its cloud backups) | The wireless carrier |
| What you get | Messages, photos, app data, deleted artifacts, on-device location, app-level location | Tower/sector connections, call/text metadata (CDR), per-call measurement data (PCMD, NELOS) |
| Access method | Examiner acquires the device with consent or lawful authority | Subpoena, court order, or warrant served on the carrier |
| Legal standard | Riley v. California (warrant required incident to arrest) | Carpenter v. United States (warrant required for 7+ days historical CSLI) |
| Retention | Limited by OS (iOS 30-day Recently Deleted, etc.) | 47 CFR 42.6 minimum 18 months toll records; CDR ~1–7 yrs by carrier; SMS content days or none |
| Location precision | GPS (meters) when present | Tower sector (hundreds of meters to miles) |
| Best for | What was said, what was in the photo, what was deleted | Where the phone was and who it called |
Retention windows vary and carriers change them. For active matters always send a 18 U.S.C. § 2703(f) 90-day preservation request immediately.
Use cell phone forensics when you need message content, photos, app data, deleted artifacts, or device-level location history.
Use cell tower records when you need to place (or rule out) the phone in a geographic area, prove call patterns, or analyze contact frequency between phones.
Use both when the matter is contested: device forensics provides the content; tower records provide the corroborating location and contact pattern. They are most powerful together.
Our examiners handle the device side and work alongside qualified CDR/CSLI analysts on the tower side. For matters where tower analysis is decisive, we coordinate with a vetted historical cell-site analyst and integrate their findings into the case timeline. Free 20-minute consultation to scope which side (or both) your matter needs.
Tell us about your device, account, or incident. We will tell you what is recoverable, what isn’t, and what it will cost, in a free 20-minute consultation.
This page is published for general educational purposes by Elite Digital Forensics. It is not legal advice and does not create an attorney-client or examiner-client relationship. Facts and platform behaviors can change; always confirm with a qualified examiner or attorney before relying on any specific statement for a real case.
Elite Digital Forensics Assistant