Introduction To Forensic Science Questioned Documents
Introduction To Forensic Science Questioned Documents
Introduction To Forensic Science Questioned Documents
Albert Osborn, American handwriting expert, noticed that there needed to be a basis of handwriting knowledge.
Did this through inviting penman, throughout the country, to share their experiences and expertise in handwriting cases.
Questioned Documents.
Albert Osborn and Lindbergh Baby Case Result of his work and national attention, the QD field was included in many Federal and State Agencies. Now called Questioned Document Examiners
Graphologist VS QD Examiner
Graphologist
Profiles character or personality by drawing conclusions from certain types of characteristics in the handwriting sample. They do not compare handwriting to determine authenticity or origin. Remember, most of graphology lack scientific proof. On the other hand, some of the principles of graphology are correct like:
Handwriting can be effected by illness, old age, etc
Graphology Examples
Handwriting Theory
Handwriting is just as unique as your fingerprints. Difference between fingerprint and handwriting
Fingerprints are permanent and do not change Handwriting is a learning process and lends itself to change as a normal process
Child gets better at remembering letter formations and now draws them from memory
This is where variations and deviations come from and he/she begins their own handwriting.
Individual Characteristics
These are characteristics that are true only to a specific writer. It is a combination of individual characteristics that make handwriting unique to him/her.
Skill level
The way a writing looks. Important characteristic of identification or non-identification. High skill level VS Low skill level
Slant
This is the angle of writing and can be forward or backward. This alone is not a good basis for judgment. Forwards and backward slants are not indicative to handedness.
Form
Most basic individual characteristic and is very important to QDE. Form is the way a writer makes a letter or movement of letters.
Baseline Alignment
The value of this show the questioned writing in correlation to the baseline Helps QDE examiners determine whether the writing was altered or is consistent with the rest of the writing or other examples
Speed
The speed of a writer is a key indicator for QDE in the examination process. Fast and slow speeds are difficult to duplicate leaving behind inconsistencies in the writing.
Entry/Exit Strokes
Entry/Exit Strokes is the way a writer begins certain letter or words and can be very specific to an individual. Also includes the idea of connecting stokes.
Retracing
Retracing is considered fixing a portion of writing that is not readable or pleasing to the writer. In some cases, this can indicate forgery but is very common in normal handwriting to retrace letters or words.
Spelling/Spacing
Spelling is an individual characteristic because of education or habits and can be an easy fix to eliminate or pin point suspects. Spacing is the area between letters or words and is usually specific to the writer.
Case is a characteristic of a writer who might use upper case letters where a lower case should be present.
Character of Handwriting
No single handwriting characteristic can in itself be taken as the basis for a positive comparison. The final conclusion must be based on a sufficient number of common characteristics between the known and questioned writing samples. There are no hard and fast rules for a sufficient number of personal characteristics; it is a judgment call made by the expert examiner in the context of each case.
Ink Analysis
The U. S. Secret Service has an ink analysis program and maintains a library of over 6,000 inks. Handwritten notes as well as printed documents can be analyzed. Chemical tests of ink (ink solubility, paper chromatography and thin layer chromatography) can be performed on printed or written material. Samples can be removed up to 10 plugs, approximately 1 millimeter each, of the paper containing the printing from the questioned sections and from control sections.
In order to do this, the individual type characters style, shape, and size are compared to a complete reference collection of past and present typefaces.
Digital Technology
In the cases of photocopiers, fax machines, and computer printers an examiner may be called on to identify the make and model of a machine or to compare a questioned document with test samples from a suspect machine. A side by side comparison is made between the questioned document and the printed exemplars to compare markings produced by the machine. Examiners compare transitory defect marks, fax machine headers, toner, toner application methods, and mechanical and printing characteristics.
Alterations
Document examiners must deal with evidence that has been changed in several ways, such as through alterations, erasures, and obliterations. Erasures by rubber erasers, sandpaper, razor blade or knife to remove writing or typing disturb the fibers of the paper and are readily apparent when examined with a microscope. If an alteration is made to a document with ink differing form the original, it can sometimes be detected due to differences in the luminescence properties of the inks.
Obliteration of writing by overwriting or crossing out to hide the original writing can be revealed by infrared radiation, which may pass through the upper layer of writing while being absorbed by the underlying area.
Types of Examinations
Handwriting Comparisons Ink Examinations Indented Writing Alterations Paper Analysis Photocopy Analysis Typewriting And other related sections