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Forensic Science Questioned Documents

Forensic Science Questioned Documents. 1. Questioned Documents. Any object that contains handwritten or typewritten/printed markings whose source or authenticity is in doubt is considered a question document. These include: Letters Checks Driver’s license Contracts Wills Passports

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Forensic Science Questioned Documents

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  1. Forensic ScienceQuestioned Documents

  2. 1. Questioned Documents Any object that contains handwritten or typewritten/printed markings whose source or authenticity is in doubt is considered a question document.

  3. These include: Letters Checks Driver’s license Contracts Wills Passports Lottery tickets 1. Questioned Documents

  4. 1. Questioned Documents Questioned documents may also include writings or markings found on walls, windows, doors, etc.

  5. Questioned Documents The document examiner must ascertain the authenticity or source of a document through handwriting examination and the use of microscopy, photography, chromatography to note any change or alterations. The examiner must be able to recognize erasures and overwriting in attempt to change the original meaning of a document. The examiner must be able to reconstruct charred or burned paper.

  6. Forensic Document Examiner--involves the analysis and comparison of questioned documents with known material in order to identify whenever possible, the author or origin of the questioned document. Unfortunately, no federal licensing exists. There is certification through the ABFDE. Graphologist--attempts to predict character traits from handwriting examination 15. COMPARISON OF EXPERTS

  7. Handwriting Analysis Handwriting Sample of President George Bush According to Sheila Lowe in her book, Handwriting of the Famous and Infamous, President Bush’s handwriting is “fast and highly simplified in fairly well-organized writing field”. Is this a forensic document examiner or a graphologist??

  8. Related Fields • Historical Dating—the verification of age and value of a document or object • Fraud Investigation—focuses on the money trail and criminal intent • Paper and Ink Specialists—date, type, source, and/or catalogue various types of paper, watermarks, ink, printing/copy/fax machines, computer cartridges • Forgery Specialists—analyze altered, obliterated, changed, or doctored documents and photos • Typewriting Analysts—determine origin, make, and models • Computer Crime Investigators—investigate cybercrime

  9. 8. Types of Forgery • Simulated forgery—one made by copying a genuine signature • Traced forgery—one made by tracing a genuine signature • Blind forgery—made without a model of the signature

  10. Check Fraud Forgery Counterfeit Alterations Paper Money Counterfeit Identity Social Security Driver’s license Credit Cards Theft of card or number Art—imitation with intent to deceive Microscopic examination Electromagnetic radiation Chemical analysis Contracts—alterations of contracts, medical records Documents Forged

  11. Compare Two Checks

  12. Forged Check

  13. Famous Forgersand Forgeries • Major George Byron (Lord Byron forgeries) • Thomas Chatterton (Literary forgeries) • John Payne Collier (Printed forgeries) • Dorman David (Texas Declaration of Independence) • Mark Hofmann (Mormon, Freemason forgeries) • William Henry Ireland (Shakespeare forgeries) • Clifford Irving (Howard Hughes forgery) • Konrad Kujau (Hitler Diaries) • James Macpherson (Ossian manuscript) • George Psalmanasar (Literary forgery) • Alexander Howland Smith (Historical documents)

  14. Handwriting Comparisons Although no two individuals write exactly alike, there may be resemblances is their general style. As a student learns and practices their handwriting, they are making a conscious effort to copy a standard letter form. The two most widely used methods taught in nearly all fifty states in the U.S. are the Palmer method (1880) and the Zaner-Blosser method (1895).

  15. Palmer MethodZaner-Blosser Method

  16. Handwriting Comparisons 2. Unconscious handwriting of two different individuals can never be identical. Several factors, such as, mechanical, physical, and mental functions, make reproduction of another’s handwriting unlikely. 23. Variations of angularity, slope, speed, pressure, letter and word spacing, relative dimensions, connections, pen movement, writing skill, and finger dexterity are distinguish.

  17. 23. Characteristics for Comparisons • Line quality – Do the letters flow or are they written with intent strokes? • Spacing of words and letters – an average • Ratio of height and width of letters • Connecting strokes – Are capital letters and lower case letters connected? • Unusual letter formations • Pen pressure • Slant – Left, right, slight or pronounced • Baseline habits – Do the letters stay even on the baseline? • Placement of diacritics – How are the t’s crossed and the I’s dotted?

  18. 23. Handwriting Comparisons Margins, spacing, crowding, insertions, and alignment are personal habits. Spelling, punctuation, phraseology, and grammar individualize each writer. A final conclusion of comparison between two documents must be based on a sufficient number of common characteristics.

  19. Jack the Ripper

  20. Galileo

  21. Signature Comparison

  22. Writing Alignment

  23. 6. Personal Rights • The courts consider handwriting to be a personal characteristic (like eye color) therefore: • Examples may be obtained before counsel is assigned. • Are not a violation of the 4th Amendment (search and seizure) • The 5th Amendment does not apply.

  24. 24. Handwriting Comparisons Circumstances may prevent a positive conclusion: Insufficient number of known handwriting samples are available Questioned writing may contain only a few words, deliberately written in disguise 3. Drugs and alcohol can alter writing habits

  25. 5. Collection of Handwriting Exemplars In gathering known writing samples for comparison, or (4.) exemplars: Known writing should resembled the questioned document Should contain some of the words and combinations of letters present Give the range of natural variations Should be fairly recent, usually within 2-3 years

  26. 5. Collection of Handwriting Exemplars When handwriting exemplars can not be obtained for comparison, a voluntary submittal from the suspect is requested. To help minimize attempts at deception, investigators can: Require several pages of writing Writing of dictation Allow the writer to sit comfortably Furnished with pen and paper similar to the questioned document Give no instructions on grammar or punctuation

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