There is much overlap between cybercrime and criminal justice; however, there are three main areas where a significant amount of overlap occurs. Whenever someone hacks into a server, network, or system when a suspect of a cybercrime is prosecuted, and whenever a digital investigation is done to find out how a cybersecurity incident happened. According to the Third Way think tank, β€œan approximated 0.3% of all reported cybercrime complaints are enforced and prosecuted. It translates to 3 out of 1,000 malicious cyber incidents that are arrested and prosecuted.” Less than 1% of cyber incidents are prosecuted which leaves thousands upon thousands of cybercriminals unpunished for their crimes. Without cybercriminals being arrested and prosecuted there seems to be no deterrent that is dissuading people from committing cyber crimes. However, the 0.3% of cyber criminals that are arrested and prosecuted go through the criminal justice system, are given a lawyer to defend them in court and are sentenced to jail if found guilty. Criminal justice and cybercrime are more intertwined than we think because of the devastating impact hackers can have on society and the justice that criminal justice can achieve. In fact, According to the FBI’s Internet Crime Report 2022, β€œ800,944 complaints of cyber-crime were reported to the FBI by the public, a 5 percent decrease from 2021.” Furthermore, when a data breach occurs at a company, organization, or government entity a digital investigation takes place with the security analysts present, and the evidence found is sent to law enforcement. There is cooperation between the criminal justice system and cybercrime investigators to find the guilty party and serve justice and without that overlap, cybercrimes would remain unsolved and unpunished. In short, there is plenty of overlap between cybercrime and criminal justice and the legal, financial, and sociological disciplines taught in this class.