You dig deeper. You open . You scroll past cn , objectClass , operatingSystem . Still nothing obvious.
That key package is stored in the same msFVE-RecoveryInformation object, right next to the password—silent, invisible, and potentially the last hope for forensic recovery. So, where is the BitLocker key stored in Active Directory? where is bitlocker key stored in active directory
Instead, Active Directory treats each BitLocker recovery key as a linked to the computer. The object class is called msFVE-RecoveryInformation (FVE = Full Volume Encryption, Microsoft’s internal code name for BitLocker). You dig deeper
But you’re smart. You mandated BitLocker. And you told Group Policy to “Save BitLocker recovery information to Active Directory.” Still nothing obvious
Get-ADObject -Filter objectClass -eq 'msFVE-RecoveryInformation' -SearchBase "OU=Workstations,DC=contoso,DC=com" -Properties msFVE-RecoveryPassword, msFVE-VolumeGuid | Where-Object $_.DistinguishedName -like "*CN=ProblemPC*" Or, for a specific computer:
Where is it? The key isn’t stored in a simple text field on the computer object. That would be too easy—and too dangerous.
If you query the computer’s distinguished name in (the low-level LDAP editor), you’ll see: