There is a very large overlap between criminal justice and cybersecurity with anything relating to cybercrime and a lot of the time other crimes as well. Any cybercrime still has to be investigated and tracked back to the source, however, cybercrime is new and the punishments usually go to max sentencing since many crimes done over the internet usually cross state borders or connect to places in other states which causes some more minor crimes to be felonies. Because of this, there are specific cybercrime divisions that deal with these cases, usually a lot of fraud and scams. But because these crimes can happen to anyone it is a very wide base of investigation that also overlaps with forensics and IT to help track down anything related to the crimes. Certain cases can become much easier when you know who the victim was in contact with and why, for that, you would need to get into their messages and know who it was sent to. Because of this sometimes lawyers will use screenshots of chat logs between people as evidence in court now overlapping cybercrime and law. In some cases, the victim’s computer has gotten hacked(especially for bank information) to figure out how and why you would have to track down the virus and where it originated from. This would be related to forensics and detective work. If a company gets hacked then its cybersecurity team could work with the police or the cybercrime division in order to track who hacked them and reclaim the information that was taken. Cybercrime and criminal law relate to many fields because acts of cybercrime can happen anywhere with a computer and nowadays almost everywhere has a computer. With the constantly expanding world of cybersecurity, cybercrime will expand with it and it is best to use every field of study we can to gain information and bolster our defenses against the growing threats.