Reviewer in QD
Reviewer in QD
B. QUESTIONED. Any material which some issue has been raised or which is under scrutiny.
C. QUESTIONED DOCUMENT. One in which the facts appearing therein may not be true, and are
contested either in whole or part with respect to its authenticity, identity, or origin. It may be
a deed, contract, will, election ballots, marriage contract, check, visas, application form, check
writer, certificates, etc.
D. DISPUTED DOCUMENT. A term suggesting that there is an argument or controversy over the
document, and strictly speaking this is true meaning. In this text, as well as through prior usage,
however, “disputed document” and “questioned document” are used interchangeably to signify a
document that is under special scrutiny.
E. STANDARD a.k.a. STANDARD DOCUMENT - Are condensed and compact set of authentic
specimens which, if adequate and proper, should contain a cross section of the material from
a known source.
"Standard" in questioned documents investigation, we mean those things whose origins
are known and can be proven and which can be legally used as examples to compare with
other matters in question. Usually a standard consist of the known handwriting of a person
such case, "standard" has the same meaning as is understood by the word "specimen" of
handwriting.
F. EXEMPLAR. A term used by some document examiners and attorneys to characterize known
material. Standard is the older term.
G. HOLOGRAPHIC DOCUMENT. Any document completely written and signed by one person;
also known as a holograph. In a number of jurisdictions a holographic will can be probated
without anyone having witnessed its execution.
H. REFERENCE COLLECTION. Material compiled and organized by the document examiner to
assist him in answering special questions. Reference collections of typewriting, check writing
specimens, inks, pens, pencils, and papers are frequently maintained.
2. In the case of People vs. Nillosquin, CA, 48 O.G. 4453: every deed or instrument executed by
person by which some disposition or agreement is proved, evidenced or setforth.
3. In relation to Criminal Jurisprudence under the Best Evidence rule: any physical embodiment of
information or ideas; e.g. a letter, a contract, a receipt, a book of account, a blur print, or an X-ray
plate (Black’s Law Dictionary).
B. KINDS OF DOCUMENT:
1. PUBLIC DOCUMENT - notarized by a notary public or competent public official with solemnities
required by law.(Cacnio vs. Baens, 5 Phil. 742)
2. OFFICIAL DOCUMENT - issued by the government or its agents or its officers having the
authority to do so and the offices, which in accordance with their creation, they are authorized to
issue and be issued in the performance of their duties.
3. PRIVATE DOCUMENT -executed by a private person without the intervention of a notary public
or of any person legally authorized, by which documents, some disposition or agreement is
proved, evidenced or set forth (US vs Orera, 11 Phil. 596).
4. COMMERCIAL DOCUMENT - executed in accordance with the Code of Commerce or any
Mercantile Law, containing disposition of commercial rights or obligations.
III. WRITINGS WHICH DO NOT CONSTITUTE DOCUMENTS - based on some Supreme Court Rulings.
1. A draft of a Municipal payroll which is not yet approved by the proper authority (People vs.
Camacho, 44 Phil. 484).
2. Mere blank forms of official documents, the spaces of which are not filled up (People vs.
Santiago, CA, 48 O.G. 4558).
3. Pamphlets or books which do not evidence any disposition or agreement are not documents but
are mere merchandise (People vs. Agnis, 47 Phil. 945).
I. DEFINITION OF TERMS
A. ADDITION - Any matter made a part of the document after its original preparation may be referred
to as addition.
B. CONCLUSION - A scientific conclusion results form relating observed facts by logical, common-
sense reasoning in accordance with established rules or laws. The document examiner's
conclusion, in legal term is referred to as "opinion".
C. DOCUMENT EXAMINER. One who studies scientifically the details and elements of documents in
order to identify their source or to discover other facts concerning them. Document examiners are
often referred to as handwriting identification experts, but today the work has outgrown this latter
title and involves other problems than merely the examination of handwriting.
D. ERASURE - The removal of writings, typewriting or printing, from a document is an erasure. It
maybe accomplished by either of two means. A chemical eradication in which the writing is
removed or bleached by chemical agents (e.g. liquid ink eradicator); and an abrasive erasure is
where the writing is effaced by rubbing with a rubber eraser or scratching out with a knife or other
sharp with implement.
E. EXAMINATION - It is the act of making a close and critical study of any material and with
questioned documents, it is the process necessary to discover the facts about them. Various
types are undertaken, including microscopic, visual photographic, chemical, ultra violet and infra-
red examination.
F. EXPERT WITNESS. A legal term used to describe a witness who by reason of his special training
or experience is permitted to express an opinion regarding the issue, or a certain aspect of the
issue, which is involved in a court action. Hi purpose is to interpret technical information in his
particular specialty in order to assist the court in administering justice. The document examiner
testifies in court as an expert witness.
G. HANDWRITING IDENTIFICATION EXPERT. A common name for the document examiner.
H. IDENTIFICATION (Identity) – as used in this text it is the state of being identical or absolutely the
same as in similarity of source or authorship of the questioned document and the standard
document.
I. INSERTION OR INTERLINEATION - The term "insertion" and "interlineations" include the
addition of writing and other material between lines or paragraphs or the addition of whole page
to a document.
J. NON-IDENTITIFICATION (Non-identity) – as used in this text it means that the source or
authorship of the compared questioned and standard specimens is different.
K. OBLITERATION - the blotting out or shearing over the writing to make the original invisible to as an
addition.
L. OPINION. In legal language, it refers to the document Examiner's conclusion. Actually in Court, he
not only expresses an opinion but demonstrates the reasons for arriving at his opinion. Throughout
this text, opinion and conclusion are used synonymously.
M. QUALIFICATION. The professional experience, education, and ability of a document examiner.
Before he is permitted to testify as an expert witness, the court must rule that he is qualified in his
field.
II. RATIONALE
Generally, examination of questioned documents is restricted to “Scientific Comparison” which
means that determination of authenticity, genuineness, falsification or forgery lies on the availability of
known standards for comparison. After thorough comparison, the following principle of identification
is applied:
B. SECOND - ANALYZE THE DETAILS: Synthesize the elements, date, circumstances, conditions,
technical problems and the like.
1. The examiner after ascertaining the facts, should have detailed information as to the
circumstances of the document in questioned, the condition of an alleged writer, or of any
condition that may have affected the writing or typewriting or any facts that are part of the
technical problem with the document that is submitted to the expert.
2. He should inquire about the circumstances and conditions as far as the client knows, such as;
was the document signed sitting on the wall, on the lap, or lying in bed? Sitting on bed, lying on
his back or side? For example, a document could have been signed in a moving automobile or
while having a drink at the bar.
In scientific study of signatures/handwritings, we learn the basic facts and then reason
carefully and logically from these facts according to established and recognized rules in order
to form an opinion or conclusion as to whether a questioned signature/handwriting is genuine
or forged.
3. Are the signatures of the witnesses genuine and were they written in the order as they appear?
4. Does the signature touch the other writings? Or was it written last?
5. Are there remains of pencil or carbon marks which may have been an outline for the signature of
other writings?
6. Is the signature shown in an embossed form on the back of the sheet?
7. Is the writings written before the paper was folded?
8. Is the signature written before or after the paper was folded?
9. Is more than one kind of ink used in the preparation of the document?
10. Are the several sheets of the document exactly the same sizes, thickness and colors?
11. Is the paper torn, burned or mutilated in any way, and if so, for what purpose?
12. Is the paper unnecessary soiled or crumpled?
13. Does the document contain abrasion, chemical/pencil erasures, and alterations/substitutions of
any kind?
14. Does the document show abrasion, erasure or lack of continuity when viewed by transmitted
light?
15. Has the document been wet in any way and if so, for what purpose?
16. If typewritten, are the contents of the document all written on the same machine?
17. Was each sheet written continuously at one time without being removed from the typewriter?
18. Are there added figures, words, clauses, sentences, paragraphs or pages written on a different
typewriter?
19. Do the perforations agree with the stubs from which the alleged document came?
20. If the document is a carbon copy, does it conform in the size, position, and arrangement of
matters with original letterheads?
21. If the document is a letter, does postmark, postage stamps, manner of sealing and opening of
envelope have any significance?
22. Are there indentations in the paper from handwriting or typewriting on a sheet placed above the
paper examined?
23. Is the rubber-stamp impression if any appears made from a genuine stamp?
24. Is the attached seal of proper date or the seal impression made from a genuine seal and is it
made in proper sequence?
D. Who is a Questioned Document Expert? A Questioned Document Expert is one who has:
1. Attained the appropriate education and training;
2. Sufficient knowledge on the technical, scientific, and legal aspects of document examinations;
and
3. A broad experience in handling questioned document cases.
F. What is an “OFF-HAND OPINION”? Off-hand opinion is usually a conclusion that is not based on
thorough scientific examination.
G. THE DANGER OF OFF-HAND OPINIONS - It has happened in some cases that an off-hand
opinion, has sent an innocent man to prison, while a murderer was given a chance to escape.
B. SHADOWGRAPH – a pictorial image formed by casting a shadow, usually of the hands, upon a
rightful surface or screen.
C. STEREOSCOPIC BINOCULAR MICROSCOPE – a tri-dimensional (3D) enlargement is possible.
D. MEASURES AND TEST PLATES (TRANSPARENT GLASS) – those used for signatures and
typewritings.
E. TABLE LAMPS WITH ADJUSTABLE SHADES (Goose Neck Lamps) – used for controlled
illumination; needed in sidelight examination wherein light is placed at a low-angle in a position
oblique to plane or document.
F. TRANSMITTED LIGHT GADGET – a device where light comes from beneath or behind glass on
document is placed.
G. ULTRA VIOLET LAMP – this is usually used in the detection of counterfeited bills but can actually
be used to detect security features of qualified documents.
H. INFRARED VIEWER – primarily used to decipher writings in a charred document.
I. COMPARISON MICROSCOPE – similar to that of the bullet comparison microscope.
B. INDENTED WRITING - Indented writing is a term usually applied to the partially visible depressions
appearing on a sheet of paper underneath the one on which the visible writing appears. These
depressions or indentation are due to the application of pressure on the writing instrument and
would appear as a carbon copy if a sheet of carbon paper had been properly inserted. Indentation
may also appear on a blank sheet of paper if such is used as a backing sheet while typing out a
message on a typewriter. Methods of examination are:
1. Physical methods maybe used by passing a strong beam of nearly parallel light almost
horizontally over the surface of the paper.
2. Fuming the document maybe of values in some cases.
3. Powders of various kinds maybe used without changing the document.
C. BURNED OR CHARRED PAPER - A piece of paper maybe subjected to the action of a limited
amount of heat, causing it to become scorched and retaining a certain amount of its identity or it
maybe subjected to intense heat, reducing it to ashes and losing its identity. However, if the
combustion is incomplete, a certain amount of success maybe realized provided the pieces are
large enough to form a coherent message.
The following methods maybe applied to decipher the original message contained thereon:
1.Photographic methods, using various types of filters and different angles of illumination may
determine the writing contained thereon without changing the appearance of the charred
fragments.
2.Chemical methods, such as spraying, painting, or bathing charred pieces with solutions of
different chemical reagents.
3.Photographic plates maybe utilized by allowing the charred paper to remain in contact with the
emulsion sides in total darkness from one to two weeks.
D. ADDING MACHINES - The construction of an adding machine differs greatly from the typewriter
but the methods and principles of identification are related.
Manufacturers use different types of numerals and from time to time change their design. The
spacing between columns is also not standardized for all machines. Those factors form the basis of
determining the make of the machine and for estimating the period in which it was built.
Another kind of approach is the ribbon impression, for the ribbon is made and operates very
similarly to the typewriter.
Adding machines are not all alike and technical case study
leads to the discovery of identifying factors.
A SEPARATE, PROPER SIZE ENVELOPE OR FOLDER. This is true not only for the disputed
documents, but for many other important documentary evidence.
2. It is also advisable that right after the document becomes disputed, or questioned, it is
important to make not only the usual photo static copy (Xerox), but also a proper photograph or
photo-enlargement, done if possible by the document expert or under the supervision of the
document expert.
3. When working in the preparation of case, it is often necessary for the lawyer or court to
handle repeatedly the disputed document. Should this be necessary, instead of handling and
working with the original document, the photograph should be used.
4. Every touching, folding, refolding or pointing to certain parts of a document, can change the
physical condition of the case. For example, touching with wet hands or fingers can create
smearing in the ink, pointing with a pencil can leave marks that create a suspicion of previous
pencil marks, or experiments as proof of attempted forgery.
5. Pointing a document with any other instruments, such as sharp stick, can cause slight damage
which although it can not be seen by the naked eye, can show definite marks under the
microscope or on the enlarged photograph.
6. No test should be made to alter the conditions of the document; for example, the old-fashioned
ink test, which was used to determine the age of the ink-writing.
7. Should any test be necessary, insist that it should be done in the presence of a chemist, or in
court, or in front of both parties involved the case.
2. “DONT’S”
a. Do not underscore, make careless markings, fold, erase, impress rubber stamps, sticker,
write on, or otherwise alter any handwriting.
b. Do not smear with fingerprints powder or chemicals.
c. Do not carry handwriting document carelessly in wallet, notebook or brief case on grounds of
interviews.
d. Do not handle disputed papers excessively or carry then in pocket for a long time.
e. Do not marked disputed documents (either by consciously writing instruments or
dividers)
f. Do not mutilate or damage by repeated refolding, creasing, cutting, tearing or punching for
filing purposes.
g. Do not allow anyone except qualified specialist to make chemical or other tests; do no treat or
dust for latent finger prints before consulting a document examiner.
HANDWRITING - It is the result of a very complicated series of facts, being used as whole,
combination of certain forms of visible mental and muscular habits acquired by long, continued
painstaking effort. Some defined handwriting as “visible speech.”
I. KINDS OF WRITINGS:
A. Cursive – connected; writing in which one letter is joined to the next.
B. Script – separated or printed writing.
C. BLOCK – all CAPITAL LETTERS.
Generally speaking, four groups of muscles are employed in writing - those which operate the
joints of the fingers, wrist, elbow, and shoulder. The delicate way in which the various muscles used in
writing work together to produce written form is known as motor coordination.
A. CAUSES OF VARIATION:
1. Function of some external condition i.e. influence of the available space.
2. Abnormal conditions such as physical injury, toxic effects, inebriation's, emotion and deception.
3. Position of letter - all the letters are to be found initially, medially, and finally. The fact of a
different position, especially in combination with another and particular letter, may modify any of
them in some way or another.
B. IMPORTANCE OF VARIATION
1. Personal variation encountered under normal writing conditions is also a highly important element
of identification. The qualities of personal variation include both its nature and its extent. It
becomes necessary to determine the amount, extent, and exact quality of the variations.
2. It is improbable that the variety and extent of the variation in handwriting will be exactly duplicated
in two individuals that such a coincidence becomes practically impossible and this multitude of
possible variations when combined is what constitutes individuality in handwriting.
3. With a group of signatures of a particular writer, certain normal divergence in size, lateral spacing
and proportions actually indicate genuineness. Variation in genuine writing is ordinarily in
superficial parts and in size, proportions, degree of care given to the act, design, slant, shading,
vigor, angularity, roundness and direction of stroke.
VI. SCHOOL COPYBOOK FORM (school model) - refers to the standard of handwriting instruction
taught in particular school. Classes of copybook depend on the standard school copy adopted by a
writer.
A. SYSTEMS of Early American Handwriting:
1. Old English round hand - in fact an Italian hand popular in 1840.
2. Modified round hand - early edition of the Spencerian, and the Payson, Dunton, and Scribners
copybook - 1840 -1860.
3. Spencerian - there is simplification by the omission of extra strokes and flourishes. And a general
tendency toward plainer letters than the preceding system, some of which were very ornate -
1860-1890.
4. Modern Vertical writing 1890-1900
5. The arm movement writing - the manner or method of writing, instead of the form alone is
especially emphasized.
Out of these five divisions of early handwriting, the modern commercial hand systems developed.
This is characterized by free movement. And the forms adopted are best suited to easy rapid writing.
These are the Zaner and Blozer system of arm movement writing and the Palmer system of American
arm movement. The last great revolution in American handwriting was the adoption of vertical writing
which was in fact a reversion to the old system of slow but legible writing. The connecting stroke is
based on the small circle and is the most distinctive "round hand" ever devised. It was very slow
compared with writing based on the narrow ellipse like the Spencerian in which all connections were
almost points instead of broad curves. Most commercial handwritings tend toward straight
connecting strokes and narrow connections.
O. HANDLETTERING. Any disconnected style of writing in which each letter is written separately;
also called handprinting.
P. LEFT-HANDED WRITING. See “wrong hand writing.”
Q. LETTER SPACE – The amount of space left between letters.
R. LINE DIRECTION – Movement of the baseline. May slant up, down, or straight across the page.
S. LINE QUALITY - the overall character of the ink lines from the beginning to the ending strokes.
There are two classes: Good Line quality and Poor Line quality. The visible records in the written
stroke of the basic movements and manner of holding the writing instrument is characterized by
the term "line quality". It is derived from a combination of actors including writing skill, speed
rhythm, freedom of movements, shading and pen position.
T. LINE SPACE – The amount of space left between lines.
U. MANUSCRIPT WRITING. A disconnected form of script or semi-script writing. This type of
writing is taught in young children in elementary schools as the first step in learning to write.
V. MARGINS – The amount of space left around the writing on all four sides.
W. MICROSCOPIC EXAMINATION - Any study or examination which is made with the microscope
in other to discover minute details.
X. MOVEMENT – It is an important element in handwriting. It embraces all the factors which are
related to the motion of the writing instrument skill, speed freedom, hesitation, rhythm, emphasis,
tremors and the like. The manner in which the writing instrument is move that is by finger, hand,
forearm or whole arm.
Y. NATURAL WRITING - Any specimen of writing executed normally without any attempt to control
or alter its identifying habits and its usual quality or execution.
Z. NATURAL VARIATION - These are normal or usual deviations found between repeated
specimens of any individual handwriting.
AA.PEN EMPHASIS - The act of intermittently forcing the pen against the paper surfaces. When
the pen-point has flexibility, this emphasis produces shading, but with more rigid writing points
heavy point emphasis can occur in writing w/out any evidence of shading; the act intermittently
forcing the pen against the paper with increase pressure.
BB.PEN HOLD – The place where the writer grasps the barrel of the pen and the angle at which he
holds it.
CC.PEN POSITION - relationship between the pen point and the paper.
DD.PEN PRESSURE - the average force with which the pen contacts the paper. Pen pressure as
opposed to pen emphasis deals with the usual of average force involved in the writing rather than
the period increases.
EE. PRINTSCRIPT – A creative combination of printing and cursive writing.
FF. PROPORTION or RATIO - the relation between the tall and the short letter is referred as to the
ratio of writing.
GG. QUALITY. A distinct or peculiar character. Also, “quality” is used in describing handwriting to
refer to any identifying factor that is related to the writing movement itself.
HH.RHYTHM – The element of the writing movement which is marked by regular or periodic
recurrences. It may be classed as smooth, intermittent, or jerky in its quality; the flourishing
succession of motion which are recorded in a written record. Periodicity, alternation of
movement.
II. SHADING - Is the widening of the ink strokes due to the added pressure on a flexible pen point or
to the use of a stub pen.
JJ. SIGNIFCANT WRITING HABIT – Any characteristic of handwriting that is sufficiently uncommon
and well fixed to serve as a fundamental point in the identification.
KK.SIMPLIFICATION – Eliminating extra or superfluous strokes from the copybook model.
LL. SIZE – May refer to the overall size of the writing or the proportions between zones.
MM. SKILL - In any set there are relative degrees or ability or skill and a specimen of handwriting
usually contains evidence of the writer's proficiency; degree, ability, or skill of a write proficiency.
NN.SLOPE/SLANT - the angle or inclination of the axis of the letters relative to the baseline. There
are three classes:
1. Slant to the left;
2. Slant to the right; and
3. Vertical Slant.
OO. SPEED OF WRITING - The personal pace at which the writer’s pen moves across the paper.
PP. SPEED (SPEEDY) WRITING - Not everyone writes at the same rate so that consideration of the
speed of writing may be a significant identifying element. Writing speed cannot be measured pre-
cisely from the finished handwriting but can be interpreted in broad terms of slow, moderate, or
rapid.
QQ. SYSTEM (OF WRITING) - The combination of the basic design of letters and the writing
movement as taught in school make up the writing system. Writing through use diverges from the
system, but generally retains some influence of the basic training. See also copy book.
RR.TENSION – The degree of force exerted on the pen compared to the degree of relaxation.
SS. THREADY FORM – An indefinite connective form that looks flat and wavy.
TT. VARIABILITY – The degree to which the writing varies from the copybook model.
UU.VARIATION – The act or process of changing.
VV. WORD SPACE – The amount of space left between words.
WW. WRITING CONDITION – Both the circumstances under which the writing was prepared and
the factors influencing the writer’s ability to write at the time of execution. It includes the writer’s
position (sitting, standing, abed, etc.), the paper support and backing, and the writing instrument;
writing ability may be modified by the condition of the writer’s health, nervous state, or degree of
intoxication.
XX. WRONG-HANDED WRITING. Any writing executed with the opposite hand that normally used;
a.k.a. as “with the awkward hand.” It is one means of disguise. Thus, the writing of a right-
handed person which has been executed with his left hand accounts for the common terminology
for this class of disguise as "left-hand writing".
YY. WRITING IMPULSE – The result of the pen touching down on the paper and moving across the
page, until it is raised from the paper.
B. QUALITY OF MOVEMENT
1. Clumsy, illiterate and halting
2. Hesitating and painful due to weakness and illness
3. Strong, heavy and forceful
4. Nervous and irregular
5. Smooth, flowing and rapid
IX. MOTOR COORDINATION - The special way in which the various muscles used in writing work
together to produced written forms.
2. ARCH - any arcade form in the body of a letter found in small letters
which contain arches.
8. BODY - The main portion of the letter, minus the initial of strokes,
terminal strokes and the diacritic, of any. Ex: the oval of the letter "O"
is the body, minus the downward stroke and the loop.
9. BOWL - a fully rounded oval or circular form on a letter complete into
"O".
14. DIACRITIC - "t" crossing and dots of the letter "i" and "j". The matters
of the Indian script are also known as diacritic signs; an element added
to complete a certain letter, either a cross bar or a dot.
15. ENDING/TERMINATE STROKE OF TOE - the end stroke of a letter.
19. HESITATION - the term applied to the irregular thickening of ink which
is found when writing slows down or stop while the pen take a stock of
the position.
23. KNOB -the extra deposit of ink in the initial and terminal stroke due to
the slow withdrawal of the pen from the paper (usually applicable to
fountain pen).
24. LIGATURE/CONNECTION - The stroke which connects two stroke of
letter; characterized by connected stroke between letters.
25. LONG LETTER - those letters with both upper and lower loops.
26. LOOP - A oblong curve such as found on the small letter "f", "g", "l"
and letters stroke "f" has two. A loop may be blind or open. A blind
loop is usually the result of the ink having filled the open space.
27. MAJUSCULE - a capital letter.
35. STAFF - Any major long downward stroke of a letter that is the long
downward stroke of the letter "b" , "g".
1.
36. STEM OR SHANK - the upright long downward stroke that is the trunk
or stalk, normally seen in capital letters.
37. TICK/HITCH - Any short stroke, which usually occurs at the top of the
letters.
B. INDIVIDUAL CHARACTERISTICS - They are characteristics which are the result of the writer's
muscular control, coordination, age, health, and nervous temperament, frequency of writing,
personality and character. They are found in the following:
1. Writing movement
2. Form and design of letters
3. Muscular control or motor control -
a. Loose writing - this is characterized by too much freedom of movement and lack of regulation.
This is noticed especially in tall letters forms.
b. Restrained writing - there is lack of freedom and inhibited movements. It gives you the
impression that every stroke was made with great difficulty. This writing is small. There is
distortion of letter forms which may lead to illegibility.
4. Motor Coordination
5. Shading
6. Skill
7. Alignment
8. Pen pressure
9. Connection
10. Pen hold
11. Rhythm
12. Disconnections or pen lifts between letters
13. Speed.
14. Slant as a writing habit
15. Proportion of letters as an individual characteristic or habit.
16. Quality of stroke or line quality
17. Variation
CORRECT CONCLUSION
1.To reach the conclusion that two writings are written by the same hand, characteristics or "dents"
and scratches" should be in sufficient quantity to exclude the theory of accidental coincidence;
to reach the conclusion that writings are by different hands, we may find numerous likeliness in
class characteristics but divergences in individual characteristics or we may find divergences in
both but the divergence must be something more than mere superficial differences.
2.If the conclusion of identifying is reached, there must not remain significant differences that
cannot reasonably be explained. This ignoring of the differences or the failure properly to
account for them is the cause of the errors in handwriting identification.
3.Although there is no specific approach, the document examiner always observed: Analysis;
Comparison; and Evaluation.
A. Uniformity- Does the questioned writing have smooth, rhythmic and free-flowing appearance?
B. Irregularities - Does the questioned writing appear awkward, ill-formed slowly drawn
C. Size & Proportion- Determine the height of the over-all writing as well as the height of
the individual strokes in proportion to each other.
D. Alignment - Are they horizontally aligned, or curving, uphill or downhill.
E. Spacing - Determine the general spacing between letters, spacing between words. Width of the left
and right margins, paragraph indentations.
F. Degree of Slant- Are they uniform or not.
G. Formation and Design of the letters, "t" (-) bars, "i" dots, loops, circle formation.
H. Initial, connecting and final strokes.
XVIII. HANDPRINTING
A. The procedure and the principle involved are similar to that of cursive handwriting.
B. In block capital and manuscript writings, personal individual rests principally in design, selection,
individual letter construction, size ratios and punctuation habits. The initial step in handwriting
examination is to determine whether the questioned handwriting and standards were
accomplished with:
1. A fluency of movement and a certainty of execution indicative of familiarity with and a
measure or skill in handwriting of conversely.
2. A conscious mental effort and non-rhythmic execution denoting either unfamiliarity with or
disguise in the subject’s handwriting.
I. DEFINITION
A. STANDARD. They are known writings which indicate how a person writes. A writer manifests fixed
habits in his writings that identify him. This fact provides the basis for an opinion of conclusion
regarding any writing identification problem.
B. EXEMPLARS - Specimen of the writing of suspects are commonly known as exemplars. The term
standards is a general term referring to all authenticated writings of the suspects while exemplars
refers more especially to a specimens of standard writing offered in evidence or obtained or
request for comparison with the questioned writing.
C. SAMPLE - A selected representative portion of the whole is known as a sample. In this text, the term
"sample" follows closely the statistical usage.
B. TYPES OF STANDARDS DESIRABLE FOR COMPARISON USE IN THE TWO MOST COMMON
TYPES OF QUESTIONED DOCUMENTS PROBLEMS.
1.Submit collected and request standards signature from both individual case.
2.When anonymous letter writings other than signature are in questioned:
a. Submit request standards writings of general nature from both victim and suspect's (as much
standards writing as possible to obtain within reason).
b. Submit request standards of the questioned text written (or printed) - at least 3 writings by the
suspect/s and in some instanced by the victim.
E. MISCELLANEOUS
1.The laboratory should be informed of the age apparent health and physical condition of the time
standards are written.
2.Do not fold, staple or pin document: handle questioned documents with care.
3.Indicate in the sample handwriting the time, place, date signature of writer as well as witness of
the handwriting.
III. HOW TO PREPARE AND COLLECT HANDWRITING STANDARDS? – Factors to Consider in the
Selection of standards
A. THE AMOUNT OF STANDARD WRITTEN
B. SIMILARLY OF SUBJECT MATTER. If the questioned writings are hand printed, then get hand
printed standard or exemplar.
C. RELATIVE DATES of the questioned and the standards writing standard signatures or writing
must be those written five (5) years before or five (5)after the date of the questioned signature or
writing.
D. CONDITION UNDER WHICH BOTH THE QUESTIONED AND THE STANDARD ARE
PREPARED. look for standards prepared under comparable circumstances such as: paper rested
on the knee; standing; sitting; lying down; and/or while on moving vehicle.
E. WRITING INSTRUMENT AND PAPER. Same instrument used in the preparation of the
questioned document must be obtained in the standards
B. KINDS OF DISGUISES
1. Change of slant - from right to left or vice versa.
2. Change of letter, either from cursive to block style or vice-versa.
3. Change from cursive (conventional style) to block form or vice-versa.
4. Change of style from small to big or vice versa.
5. Deteriorating one's handwriting.
6. Using the wrong hand (AMBIDEXTROUS).
A. THE FOLLOWING ARE STANDARD WRITINGS WHICH ARE ADMISSIBLE FOR COMPARISON
PURPOSES:
1. Standard writings witnessed
2. Standards writings admitted
3. Record Maintained in Regular Course of Business as Standard Writings
4. Government Document as standard Writings
5. Ancient writings
6. Other Writings Standards - Among writings admissible as standard are signature on spelling
motion or other instruments, such as an appearance bond, which may without further proof of
genuineness be used as a standard.
7. Familiarity Sometimes establishes standard writings.
DBGDelizo File 2008/Reviewer in Criminalistics 24
ANGELES UNIVERSITY FOUNDATION
CRIMINOLOGY REVIEW CENTER
Opinion Evidence - The court seem to be in general agreement that proof of the
genuineness of a standard cannot be established by the opinion of experts testifying
from a comparison of the writing sought to be used as standard with another writing.
Genuineness of standard decided by court - The sufficiency of the proof of the
genuineness of a standard of writing is a matter to be decided by the court.
D. A signature is a word written without conscious thought about the mechanics of its production and is
written automatically.
E. A signature is the only word the illiterate can write with confidence.
C. CARELESS SCRIBBLE - for the mail carrier, delivery boy or the autograph collector.
IV. FORGERY - Forgery is, strictly speaking, a legal term which involves not only a non-genuine
document but also and intent to fraud. However, it is also used synonymously with fraudulent signa-
ture or spurious document.
C. SPURIOUS SIGNATURE (SIMPLE FORGERY) - Forger does not try to copy a model but writes
something resembling what we ordinarily call a signature. For this, he uses a false (spurious) name
and makes a rapid stroke, disturbing his usual writing by adopting a camouflage called disguise.
IX. INDICATIONS OF SIMULATED (Direct & Indirect Techniques) and TRACED FORGERIES
A. Tremulous and broken connecting strokes between letters, indicating points at which the writer has
temporarily struck.
B. no rhythm
C. carefulness or unusual care and deliberation
D. no contrast between upward and downward strokes
E. slow writing- angular writing
F. blunt beginning and endings
G. placement of diacritical marks just over the stem of letters
H. absence of spontaneity - lack of smoothness of letters
I. restrained writing - there is lack of freedom or "inhibited" movements THAT gives the impression
that every stroke is made with great difficulty. This writing is small.
J. no variation
X. INDICATIONS OF SIMPLE OR SPURIOUS FORGERY - Writing habits of the writer (forger) is evident
in the forged signature.
I. DEFINITION OF TERMS
A. COUNTERFEITING - It is the crime of making, circulating or uttering false coins and banknotes.
Literally, it means to make a copy of; or imitate; to make a spurious semblance of, as money or
stamps, with the intent to deceive or defraud. Counterfeiting is something made to imitate the real
thing used for gain.
B. FALSIFICATION – The act/process of making the content/s of a document not the intended
content.
C. FORGERY – The act of falsely making or materially altering, with intent to defraud, any writing
which if genuine, might be of legal efficacy or the foundation of a legal liability.
In forgery, every person who, with intent to defraud, signs the name of another person, or of fictitious
person, knowing that he has no authority to do so, or falsely makes, alters, forges or counterfeits any - checks,
drag - due bill for the payment of money or property - or counterfeits or forges the seal forged, or
counterfeited, with intent the same to be fake, altered forged, or counterfeited, with intent to prejudice,
damage or defraud any person.... is guilty of forgery.
NOTE: In most modern printing, papers have chemicals added to make look
whiter. These chemicals cause brilliant fluorescence under ultraviolet light. Bank
notes paper does not have this filler and does not show.
B. PORTRAIT
1. Appears life-like 1. It appears dead.
2. The eyes sparkle. 2. The eyes do not sparkle.
3. The tiny dots and lines (Vignette) forming the 3. It appears blurred, dull, smudgy and poorly
details of the face, hair, etc. are clear, sharp and printed.
well defined. 4. Hair is lifeless.
4. Each portrait stands out distinctly from 5. The face and/or forehead are often naturally white
background. This is noticeable along the or pale due to absence of most of the details.
shoulders.
5. The background is composed of multi-colored 6. The concentric lines depicting the eyes often
fine pattern of lines in varying tones and shades merged into solid printed areas.
interlacing with each other. These shadings or 7. The background often blends with the portrait and
toning are intricately printed in such a way that is usually “scratchy.”
the contrast or shifting of colors creates the 8. The lines are thick with rough edges.
impression of life & vividness to the notes. 9. The multi-colored prints on genuine notes are
extremely difficult to duplicate and as a result,
counterfeit notes are usually off-color & not of the
right shade or tone.
C. WATERMARK
1. The watermark underneath the security lacework 1. This is imitated by printing white ink or dry block
on the right hand side of the note is the same on on the finished paper.
the colored portrait.
2. The design is placed by means of dandy roll 2. Sometimes wax or other oily medium is stamped
during the manufacture of the paper. to give transparency to the portion where the
designing appears.
3. Sharp details of the outline or the light & shadow 3. Printed outline is placed on the inner sheet where
effect are discernible when viewed with the aid of merely a paper cutout is placed inside. As a result
transmitted light. course or harsh and occasional irregular lines &
4. The relif of the features can be felt by running the sometimes opaque areas are very obvious.
finger on the design.
D. METTALIC THREAD
1. This is a special thread placed vertically on the 1. Counterfeit by means of printing on the back of the
paper during manufacture. note, on the inner side of the paper, insertion of
2. On the surface of the paper where this thread is twin thread or simply folding the note vertically
located are patterns of short vertical lines. where the thread appears on the genuine bill.
F. LACEWORK DESIGN
DBGDelizo File 2008/Reviewer in Criminalistics 29
ANGELES UNIVERSITY FOUNDATION
CRIMINOLOGY REVIEW CENTER
The geometric pattern which looks like a delicate On counterfeit, these geometric patterns are often
lacework along the border on both surfaces, blurred, round on the edges & blotch on the joints. Its
embellishing the portraits, value panel & vignettes are continuity could not be traced. The color appears
multicolored & composed of harp lines which are faded.
continuous & traceable even at the joints.
H. SERIAL NUMBERS
1. The prefix letter/s & numbers (Six of them except 1. On counterfeit, the letters & numbers are poorly
on replacement note) are clearly printed. printed. They are usually of different style.
2. They have peculiar style & are uniform in size & 2. Most often, they are evenly spaced & poorly
thickness. aligned.
3. Spacing of the numbers is uniform & alignment is 3. The numbers are too big or too small, too thick or
even. too thin & in certain cases shaded on the curves.
I. VIGNETTE
1. The lines & dots composing the vignettes are 1. On counterfeit usually dull & poorly printed.
fine, distinct & sharp.
2. The varying color tone gives a bold look to the 2. It appears dirty.
picture that makes it stands out of the paper. 3. The lines are comparatively thicker with rough
edges.
4. There is no variation in color tone so that the
picture appears flat.
J. CLEARNESS OF PRINT
The registry of the different printed features is In general, a spurious not exhibits a Second hand
perfect. The lines are very clear & sharp. There are look. It is dirty due to the sputtering of ink on the interior
no Burrs clinging to the sides. area. Over-inked areas are visible instantly. The
shadings & ornamentations of the letters & figures are
thick & usually merged.
Reserve Bank of issue. Numbers and letters representing the Federal Reserve District in which
that bank is located, are:
1 - Boston - “A” 7 - Chicago - “G”
2 - New York - “B” 8 - St. Louis - “H”
3 - Philadelphia- “C” 9 - Minneapolis - “I”
4 - Cleveland - “D” 10 - Kansas - “J”
5 - Richmond - “E” 11 - Dallas - “K”
6 - Atlanta - “F” 12 - San Francisco - “L”
C. SALIENT FEATURES COMMON TO ALL TYPES: Portrait – every denomination has the following:
$1 - Washington $50 - Grant
$2 - Jefferson $100 - Franklin
$5 - Lincoln $500 - McKinley
$10 - Hamilton $1000 - Cleveland
$20 - Jackson $5000 - Madison
VII. COINS
A. DEFINITION - These are pieces of metal stamped by government authority, for use as money or
collectively referring to metal currency.
B. MAKING OF COINS
CASTING is the most common method of making gold coins. Plaster molds bearing an image of
gold coins are filled (within a low temperature) with alloy made with lead or tin. Some molds are used
for high temperature metal such as copper or silver alloy.
STRIKING OR STAMPING is the making of an impression of a coin or metal blank by pressure.
C. CHARACTERISTICS
1. Genuine coins show an even flow of metallic grains. The details of the profile, the seal of the
Republic of the Philippines, letterings & numerals are of high relief, so that it can be readily felt
distinctly by running the fingers on theses features. The beadings are regular & the readings
are deep & even.
2. Counterfeit coins feel greasy & appear slimy. The beading composed of tiny round dots
surrounding the genuine coin appear irregular & elongated depressions & are not sharp &
prominent as in the genuine. The letterings & numerals are low & worn out due to the lack of
sharpness of details. The readings are uneven & show signs of filing.
The best place to examine a counterfeit coin is on the edge since there are usually special milling
marks or designs which are added to a genuine coin by machinery.
MAKE IT A HABIT to feel and look at all currency being received so that the fingers and
eyes will become familiar with all the features of genuine Central Bank Notes and Coins.
Compare with a known genuine currency of the same denomination when a note or coin is
suspicious.
REMEMBER, not all strangers are counterfeiters, but all counterfeiters are likely to be
strangers.
DBGDelizo File 2008/Reviewer in Criminalistics 31
ANGELES UNIVERSITY FOUNDATION
CRIMINOLOGY REVIEW CENTER
Passports are rarely counterfeit, because they are quite complicated in design and manufacture.
The most usual method of forgery is to steal a genuine passport and make change in it. Many safety
features are incorporated in passport and are easily detected by close inspection. Ultraviolet light is very
useful in this type of examination.
The investigator should look particularly at the photograph in any passport as identification card.
This is always necessary because sometimes forgers remove and change or substitute the picture.
Hence, the position of perforation caused by staples and another pasting device should be studied
carefully.
D. Reason for punishing forgery - Forgery of currency is punished so as to maintain the integrity of
the currency and thus insure the credit standing of the government and prevent the imposition on the
public and the government of worthless notes or obligations.
I. DEFINITION OF TERMS
A. ANACHRONISM – It refers to something wrong in time and in place. This means that the forger
has trouble matching the paper, ink, or writing materials to the exact date it was supposed to have
been written.
B. PAPER – These are sheets of interlaced fibers - usually cellulose fibers from plants, but sometimes
from cloth rags or other fibrous materials, that is formed by pulping the fibers and causing to felt, or
mat, to form a solid surface.
C. WATERMARK - Certain papers are marked with a translucent design, a watermarks impressed in
them during the course of their manufacture.
D. WRITING MATERIALS – Any material used primarily for writing or recording such as papers,
cardboard, board papers, Morocco paper, etc.
A. PAPYRUS - This came into use about 3,500 B.C. - people of Egypt. Palestine, Syria, and Southern
Europe used the pith (soft spongy tissue of the stem) of the sedge (grass-like herb) CYPERUS
PAPYRUS to make a writing material known as PAPYRUS.
B. PARCHMENT - writing material made from skin of animals primarily of sheep, calves or goats - was
probably developed in the Middle East more or less contemporaneously with papyrus. It came into
wide use only in the 2nd century B.C. in the city of PERGAMUM in ANATOLIA.
C. VELLUM - writing materials from fine skins from young calves or kids and the term (name) was
often used for all kind of parchment manuscripts, it became the most important writing material for
bookmaking, while parchment continued for special manuscripts.
Almost every portable surface that would retain the marks of brush or pen was also used as a
writing material during the early period.
D. DEVELOPMENT OF PAPER MANUFACTURING
1. It is widely claimed that invention of paper is generally attributed to a Chinese court official, CAI
LUN (TSAI LUN), in about A.D. 105. He is the first to succeed in making paper from vegetable
fibers, tree barks (mulberry tree), rags, old fish nettings.
2. The art of papermaking was kept secret for 500 years; the Japanese acquired it in the 7th century
A.D.
3. In A.D. 751, the Arab city of Samarkand was attacked by marauding Chinese and some
Chinese taken as prisoners were skilled in papermaking and were forced by the city Governor
to build and operate a paper mill and Samarkand soon became the papermaking center of the
Arab world.
4. Knowledge of papermaking traveled westward, spreading throughout the Middle East, the
Moorish invasion of Spain led to the invention (A.D. 1150) or erection of the first European paper
mill, at JATIVA, province of VALENCIA.
5. Knowledge of the technology spread quickly and by 16th century, paper was manufactured
throughout most of Europe.
6. The first paper mill in England was established in 1495.
7. The first such mill in America in 1690.
8. The first practical machine was made in 1798 by the French inventor Nicholas Louis Robert.
The machine reduced the cost of paper it supplants the hand-molding process in paper
manufacture.
9. Robert's machine was improved by the British stationers and brothers Henry Fourdrinier and
Sealy Fourdrinier, who in 1803 produced the first of the machines that bear their name.
10. The solution of the problem of making paper from cheap raw material was achieved by the
introduction of the groundwood process of pulp making about 1840 and the first of the chemical
pulp processes approximately ten years later.
11. CHLORINE - This was introduced in the 19th century for bleaching and colored linen could
already be manufactured for paper.
12. ESPARTO – This is a grass grown in Libya, also in Spain and North Africa was first introduced in
England in 1861.
13. STRAW – This was used to make paper in 1800.
14. SULPHITE – This is a paper from wood was not attempted until 1869 and paper called
SULPHITE (modern type) was first used between 1880 and 1890.
15. OLDEST MANUSCRIPT - Letters dated A.D. 874 have been found in Egypt and the oldest
manuscript in England on cotton paper dated AD 1890.
IV. TRACING THE AGE OF PAPER (DOCUMENT). The age of the document may be estimated from
paper. Four cases were reported by Lucas where the age of the document was established from the
compositor/composition of the paper.
In one of these cases, a document dated 1213 A.H. (A.D. 1798) was found to be written on
paper composed entirely of chemically prepared wood cellulose. Considering that this type of
paper was not introduced not until about 60 years later, the document is obviously a fake one.
A. WATERMARKS
1. Definition – It is a term for a figure or design incorporated into paper during its manufacture and
appearing lighter than the rest of the sheet when viewed in transmitted light. The earliest way of
identifying the date of manufacture of the paper is by the WATERMARK - a brand put on the
paper by the manufacturers.
2. How watermark is made? The watermark was made when the semi-fluid paper pulp (mixture of
cotton or other fibers) was being drained on a grid of laid (warp) and chain (woof) wires. Fine
wires forming the desired design were tied on top of the grid and impressed into the pulp. This
impression made the paper thinner, and therefore, more transparent, where it appeared.
3. Origin. Watermarks first appeared on papers produced in Italy around 1270, less than 100 years
after the art of papermaking was introduced to Europe by Muslims from the Middle East. Early in
the 19th century, papermakers began to solder the watermark wires to the grid frame, thus
insuring uniformity of impression and aiding in the detection of counterfeiting and forgery. The first
British postage stamps of 1840 bore a watermark, but stamps of the United States were not so
marked until 1895. When paper began to be machine-made, the watermark wiring was simply
transferred to the grid cover of the dandy roll, a turning cylinder that passed over the paper.
4. Concept of document’s age detection thru watermarks.
a. Sometimes a LIMIT may be placed to the age of the document by means of watermark, the
earliest known dating from 1282. Unfortunately, however, not all papers contain watermarks.
b. It is impressed into the paper by wires on the rollers called “DANDY ROLL” that make the
paper, and these designs are changed from time to time.
c. Usually watermarks are requested by their owners/manufacturers with the patent office.
d. If present, watermark is one of the most reliable means of tracing the age of the paper.
However, the questioned documents examiner's finding is limited only to the
APPROXIMATE DATE (YEAR) of the paper manufacture.
e. In determining the age of the paper by watermarks, it is necessary to ascertain the owner of
the watermark in question or its manufacturer.
f. In the FBI, this is done by checking the reference file of the laboratory. Once the
manufacturer is determined, then consideration is given to changes in design and defects
of individual design.
g. In recent years, some large manufacturers have cleverly incorporated inconspicuous
changes in their watermark design in order to date their products.
h. Obviously, document is fraud if it contains a watermark which was not in existence at the time
the document purports to have been executed.
c. The damage on the dandy roll will leave some peculiar markings on the watermark of the
paper manufactured or all papers that will pass through the damaged dandy roll.
d. The investigator, carefully determining the distinct markings caused by the dandy roll's
damaged surface, will coordinate with the paper manufacture regarding when such
damage occurred on the dandy roll used.
B. DISCOLORATION - One way of tracing the age of the paper is through the observance of the
changes in its physical characteristics particularly DISCOLORATION. Naturally, a paper will
discolor after a passage of time due to numerous environmental factors such as moisture,
temperature, dust, etc. In case of papers out of wood pulp, they start to discolor at edges from 2 to 3
years. While RUG-SHIP QUALITY papers, they are very old before discoloration starts.
C. CAUSES OF DISCOLORATION:
1. due to process of oxidation brought about by natural means.
2. brown spots due to mold that are very obvious characteristics both in appearance and
distribution.
3. exposure to dust and dirt.
4. occasional staining of fruit juice, grease.
5. excrete of rats, mice and other insects.
6. may also due to heat, partial burning, etc.
I. DEFINITION OF TERMS
A. FLEXIBILITY OF PEN POINT - One quality of the nib pen is its pliability. This quality varies which
different pens and can be measured by the amount of pressure necessary to cause a spreading of
the nibs or a given degree of shading.
B. FOUNTAIN PEN - A fountain pen is a modern nib which contains a reservoir of ink in a specially
designed chamber. After complete filling the pen is capable of writing a number of pages without
refilling.
C. INK - is a fluid or viscous marking material used for writing or printing.
D. PEN - A tool for writing or drawing with a colored fluid, such as ink; or a writing instrument used to
apply inks to the paper is a pen. It came from the Latin word "PENNA", meaning feather.
E. PEN NIBS - The tow divisions or points which from the writing portion of a pen are its nibs.
F. QUILL PENS - It is a hollow, horny part of large feather usually from goose and was used for
writing on parchment. Poland, Germany, Russia, and the Netherlands were the largest producers
of quill.
G. WRITING INSTRUMENTS (WRITING IMPLEMENTS) - Writing Implements, manual devices used
to make alphanumeric marks on or in a surface.
B. QUILL PEN
1. Although quill pens can be made from the outer wing feathers of any bird, those of goose,
swan, crow and (later) turkey, were preferred. The earliest reference (6th century AD) to quill
pens was made by the Spanish Theologian ST. ISIDORE OF SEVILLE, and this tool was the
principal writing implement for nearly 1300 years.
2. To make a quill pen, a wing feather is first hardened by heating or letting it dry out gradually.
The hardened quill is then cut to a broad edge with a special pen knife.
3. The writer had to re-cut the quill pen frequently to maintain its edge. By the 18th century, the
width of the edge had diminished and the length of the slit had increased creating a flexible
point that produced thick and thin strokes by pressure on the point rather than by the angle at
which the broad edge was held.
D. FOUNTAIN PENS
1. In 1884, LEWIS WATERMAN, a New York insurance agent, patented the first practical
FOUNTAIN PEN containing its own ink reservoir. Waterman invented a mechanism that fed ink
to the pen point by capillary action, allowing ink to flow evenly while writing.
2. By the 1920's, the fountain pen was the chief writing instrument in the west and remained so
until the introduction of the ball point pen after WORLD WAR II.
1. JOHN LOUD, in 1888, patented the first ball point writing tool. A ball point pen has in its point a
small rotating metal ball that continually inks itself as it turns.
2. The ball is set into a tiny socket. In the center of the socket is a hole that feeds ink to the socket
from a long tube (reservoir) inside the pen.
3. As early as the 19th century, attempts had been made to manufacture a pen with a rolling ball
tip, but not until 1938 did Hungarian inventor brothers LADISLAO and GEORG BIRO invent a
viscous, oil-based ink that could be used with such a pen. Hence, they are attributed for the
invention of the first practical ballpoint pen.
4. Early ball point pens did not write well; they tended to skip, and the slow-drying oil-based ink
smudged easily. However, the ball-point pen had several advantages over the fountain pen:
a. the ink was waterproof and almost un-erasable;
b. the ball point pen could write on many kinds of surfaces;
c. could be hold in almost any position for writing; and
d. the pressure required to feed the ink was ideal for making carbon copies.
5. Ink formulas were improved for smoother flow and faster drying, and soon the ball-point
replaced the fountain pen as the universal writing tool.
G. Felt-tip markers are made of dense natural or artificial fibers impregnated with a dye. These
markers can be cut to a variety of shapes and sizes, some up to an inch in width. A modification of
the ball point pen using a liquid dye fed to a metal/plastic ball was introduced in the U.S. from Japan
in 1973.
Air Force needed a writing instrument which would not leak at high altitude and which supplied
quick drying water resistant writing.
1. In principle, the construction of all ballpoint pens is the same. The differences are in the finish,
the precision with which the instrument is made, the size and the material of the ball, and the
composition of the ink.
2. As a rule, the diameter of the ball lies between 0.6 and 1.0 mm, the cheapest makes having
the largest diameter. The ball is made of steel while the more expensive makes of sapphire.
3. The quality of the pen is chiefly to be judged by the writing angle. The best writing angle for a
ballpoint pen is 90 degrees, but a normal hand of writing seldom uses this angle.
4. The cheaper makes have a minimum writing angle of 55-60 degrees. If one writes at too small
an angle, the brass socket holding the ball will scratch a lined into the paper, parallel with
the ink line.
I. Stamp Pad Inks - They are made with the acid of substances such as glycerol, glycol, acetin or
benzyl alcohol and water. Airline dyes are added as coloring matter. For quick drying stamp pad
inks, more volatile organic solvents are used as acetone, ethanol, etc. As a vehicle, dextrine, gum
arabic, or tannin is sometimes added. Through the addition of tannin, the stamp impression
becomes water resistant after drying.
J. Hectograph Inks - These inks very much resemble stamp pad inks and are exclusively made with
basic dyes. To the dyestuff solution several other substances are added such as
glycerol, acetic acid and acetone.
K. Typewriter Ribbon Inks - These inks are usually composed of a blend of aniline dyes,
carbon black and oil such as olein or castor oil. The two-tone ribbons however contain no dyes,
but pigments suspended in oil base. This is necessary because aniline dyes tend to bleed and
would cause the sharp division between the differently colored halves of the ribbon to merge.
L. Printing Inks - Printing inks often consist of a mixture of colored pigments, carbon black and a
"base" which may consist of oil, resins, synthetic resins or a mixture of these. It is possible to
remove printing ink from a document by scrubbing the document with an aqueous solution of a
suitable detergent. The rubbing and breaking up of the surface of the ink and the detergent
facilitates the suspension and eventual removal of the carbon and other ingredients by the water.
M. Canceling Inks - These inks often contain carbon and this fact should be burned in mind when it is
required to decipher faint cancellation marks on a postage stamp and wrappers. Carbon is
opaque to infra-red sensitive plate and be relied upon to improve the legibility of any marking
affected by a carbon containing canceling ink. Erasure of canceling ink on valuable stamps is
usually affected by attack on the medium which bind the carbon to the surface of the stamp and it
is to be regretted that many canceling inks are manufactured with media which offer resistance to
attack so that the resistant carbon can simply be swabbed off. This can be usually be detected by
infra-red photography which will reveal the traces of carbon, which almost invariably remain on the
stamp.
N. Skrip Ink - These are manufactured by W.A. Chaffer Pen Company since 1955. The inks contain
a substance which is colorless in visible light and has a strong affinity for the fibers of the paper,
and yet is not bleached by hypochlorite ink eradicators or washed out by soaking on water.
be proven by identifying a component of the ink, which was not yet included in inks at the alleged
date of the document.
b. Dyestuff Inks
(1) The dyestuff inks lack properties that would permit age determination but the presence of
an obsolete or modern dyestuff may indicate age of writing.
(2) If a phthalocyanine dye is found in the ink, it would be improbable for the document to be
dated prior to 1953.
c. Iron Gallotannate Inks - These inks show a remarkable change of color in maturing. This
based on the chemical change of ferrous to ferric in the course of time. The following are the
methods used to show the gradual change of inks:
(1) Method based on the change of the Color of the Ink – This method is useful in those
cases where the ink writing received for examination is too recent that the process of
maturing can be observed visually. The kind of ink must be known and one or more
writings of known age must be available for comparison.
(2) Methods based on the Solubility of the Ink – The solubility of iron gallotannate ink
decreases considerably as the ink matures. As with the color change, it can only be
applied successfully to a very recent writing. This method can establish a difference in
the age of writings on one and the same document. The solubility is determined by a
visual estimate of the quantity of ink which can be withdrawn with a drop of water from a
stroke. It is necessary however that the drop of water be applied to ink stroke of the
same intensity.
(3) Method based on the amount of ferrous iron in the ink – In iron gallotannate ink, the
iron is mainly present in the complex bound ferrous form. As the manufacturing process
goes on, the ric gallotannate is formed. A drop of aa1-dipyridyl reagent (1% of aa1-
dipyridyl in 0.5N HCL (normal hydrochloric acid)) is applied to the ink stroke. The reagent
is left in contact with the ink for 1 minute and then recovered with a piece of filter paper.
If ferrous iron is still present in the ink, the paper will show a red zone of ferrous aa1-
dipyridyl around the stain of blue dyestuff. By repeating this test daily, it is possible to
check the decrease in the ferrous iron in the ink by the changes in the coloration of this
red zone. However, this method is applicable when the questioned writing is not more
than a few days old.
(4) Estimation of age based on the detection of the dyes – Iron gallotannate inks contain
an organic dye, (soluble blue) which is oxidized or at least becomes insoluble complete
or partially as the ink ages. It is claimed that the organic dye becomes completely
insoluble in four to five years. However, the application of this method appears to yield
results in practice.
I. DEFINITION
TYPEWRITER - A writing machine with a keyboard for reproducing letters, figures, symbols and
other resembling printed ones; a machine that can reproduce printed characters on papers or that can
produce printed letters and figures on paper; a machine designed to print or impress type characters
on paper, as a speedier and more legible substitute for handwriting. .
differ widely in the location of date, address, margins, punctuation, spacing, signing as well as
impressions from touch.
C. In several articles written between1901 to 1907, ALBERT S. OSBORNE, the foremost document
examiner of the early 20th century, defined the principles of typewriting identification used today.
He called it “THE LANDMARKS IN TYPEWRITING IDENIFICATION.”
V. TYPES OF TYPEWRITERS:
A. CONVENTIONAL TYPEWRITERS USING TYPE BARS
1. Pica Type - 10 letter/inch
2. Elite Type - 12 Letters/inch
3. 6 Letters/inch
4. Teletype Machine
5. 14-16 letter/inch - specials typewriters
B. TYPEWRITER USING SINGLE ELEMENT OR BALL - A machine, capable of typing 10 or 12
characters per inch. Change of horizontal spacing is done easily by the flip of a switch.
C. TYPEWRITER USING A PRINT WHEEL (ELECTRONIC TYPEWRITER) –This has a disc type
device called a print wheel, The printwheel contains all of characters represented on the typewriter
keyboard. This machine has the capability of typing 10, 12 and 15 letters per inch.
G. Upper and Lower Strokes of Capital Letter “E” – maybe equal or the bottom stroke maybe longer
than the upper stroke. The serif is either vertical or oblique. The small “e” may have its straight
stroke either horizontal or oblique.
H. Figure “7” – horizontal stroke is either straight or curve.
I. Figure “5” – horizontal stroke is either straight or slightly or fully curved.
J. The comma “,” – tail may extend to the left of the dot or only very slightly to the left of the dot.
K. Parentheses – may vary in curvature.
C. PROCEDURE:
1. Conduct preliminary examination of the questioned document to determine the make and model
of the typewriter.
2. Then study the defects of the stroke which will distinguish the suspected typewriter from the
others.
The defects of the typewriter maybe compared to ailment or sickness and congenital
deformation while its translation on the paper be compared to symptoms of the defects.
This comparison has the advantage of sorting out the exact conditions of the control of questioned
typewritten documents as follows:
a. First, it will show the actual state of the typewriter and consequently that the aspect of the
stroke is not immutable but evolves progressively so that a good identification needs the
comparison of documents from sufficiently adjacent period.
The health of a typewriter tends to change and the defect become more and more
numerous and characteristics. From time to time, an overhead or repairs may help the
ailment definitely or at least give a temporary or partial healing.
b. It will show that the expert does not see the defect of the typewriter right away but only its
translation on the paper by a writing anomaly of which he must appreciate the cause
c. Lastly it will explain that certain anomalies are not even ascribable to an organic cause of
the type writer but to a phenomenon outside it. For example, an error of manipulation by
the typist may give some anomalies of the stroke and have no connection with the
mechanism of the typewriter itself. Others are due to a temporary sickness such as a torn
ribbon which will give an incomplete impression of the character or dust which may choke
the mechanism of the stroke. It is only the permanent faults which permit of a positive
identification.
D. DEFECTS OF A TYPEWRITER:
1. Defects of the Character
a The character may show a distortion in its engraving, a "break" which is shown by an
alteration of the design. Exceptionally, it means a defect of manufacture. Most often, the
break occurs when the machine is working. The metal is locally damaged by the continued
striking of the letter against hard surfaces and according to the general direction of the
striking will dented or deviated. In the first case the altered sign will print an incomplete
design with broken or interrupted lines, in the second case it prints a deformed sign. The
predominant cause of the defect is that corresponding bars one behind the other; the
character of corresponding bars strikes the back of the first and crashes on it.
b Twist of the printing surface which comes in the course of manufacturing. Irregular tempering
gives an abnormal contraction of the metal for the bearing of the character again the
plated and gives a local impression more intense and more heavily inked.
c Misalignment of the two signs engraved on the same character so that they are not set
exactly one under the other. This defect may be due to a bad engraving of the mold.
3. Defects of the Type-bar - The deformation of a type-bar modify the position of the character in
connection with the platen and alter the originally correct writing.
a Any error of place position of the bar in the basket gives an incline to its head and to the
character.
b The type-bars are outer sinuous. Under the effect of an intensive working, the bends are
modified, so that the type-bar elongates or shorten and its head inclines forward or backward.
This deformation causes a misalignment of the character and no longer allows a uniform
impression of its surface.
c Twist of the type-bars is caused by mistakes of the typist. In depressing, by error, two
neighboring keys, two corresponding bars are moved towards the type-bar guide 1, each
bar undergoes the lateral strike of the other and bends along its longitudinal axis. One
error in manipulation does not great damage but its repetition certainly develops the defect.
The type-bar thus bent no long offers a perfectly vertical surface to the axis of the platen
and the character strikes the paper more or less off its feet.
4. Defects of the Ring - On a worn type writer it is not exceptional to find that the more active type-
bars have depressed the metal of the ring at their point of contact. It no longer has any effect on
the type-bars corresponding to the depression -- it no longer stops them in their travel and it does
not send them back to their original position.
These bars strike directly at the platen, stoop their momentarily and fall back by their own
weight giving by this very slow motion a vibration to the character in the vicinity of the platen. At
this time the escapement has already moved and the character gives two impressions instead
of one. The second impression, displaced in connection with the first and much paler
seems to be its shadow. The name given to it is 'veiled stroke'.
5. Disorder of the Type bar guide - If the position of the type bar guide is modified for some reason,
the result is a complete disorder of the writing. A guide moved to the right will raise all signs on
the right of the keyboard and will lower all the signs on the left. If it is moved to the left, it will
cause the opposite effect.
6. Alteration of the Platen - The rubber of the platen gets old and hardens, the surface formally
smooth becomes more and more irregular and rough and does not offer anymore intimate contact
with all surface of the sign. The writing becomes inconsistent and the same sign will print itself
partially or entirely and with a greater intensity and more intensively on the tight or the left, on the
bottom or the top.
7. General Wear of a Typewriter - The typebars are subjected to a lateral play particularly felt at the
top. This gives poor accuracy at the point of impact of the character. The same signs print
themselves on the right or on the left of their theoretical point of impact.
IX. OBTAINING KNOWN TYPEWRITTEN EXEMPLARS - Properly prepared known typewriting samples
not only facilitate the examination in the laboratory but they aid immeasurably in the demonstration in
the court room.
I. METHODS OF PRINTING
A. RELIEF PRINTING (LETTERPRESS)
In this method of printing, the image characters are raised above the level of the non-printing
areas. The ink is applied to a raised surface which in turn is applied to paper. The letterpress process
is the oldest of all printing procedures. It prints with cleaner and sharper letters.
After the type has been set, the next step is the actual printing which is made on one of three
principles:
1. The platen or “flatbed press” opens and closes like a clam shaft; it has raised type on one flat
surface and paper on another flat surface and the two are pressed together. Small hand presses
are generally platen presses.
2. Cylinder presses roll the paper around a cylinder and then across the flat surface of inked type.
3. Rotary presses pass the paper between two cylinders, one of which holds the curved printing
plates.
B. INTAGLIO (GRAVURE PRINTING) – There are four types of printing which employ the Intaglio
principle of placing ink in an area which has been cut out or etched.
1. Gravure – This is a process in which the ink in recessed or sunken letters is drawn out or sucked
out under pressure. The process produces high quality reproduction of photographs and half-
tone illustrations, but the letters of type reproduced have slightly fuzzy edges. The printing is
done from large copper plates or copper covered cylinders on presses of two kinds; sheet-fed
gravure presses and web-fed rotogravure presses for longer runs. The copper plates or cylinders
are produced by making film positives of the art work to be reproduced.
2. Engraving – The paper her is forced into the sunken areas of a metal plate where the ink is. A
special plate is made by the artist who removes or scratches areas in the metal itself into which
the ink is placed. The actual printing process is very slow, and after the paper is removed from
the plate, time must be allowed for the drying of the ink to prevent smudging.
3. Planographic – Lithography is the most well known printing process which employs the principle
of putting ink on a chemically treated surface. The commercial application of lithography is
known as offset. In this process, the copy is placed in front of a big camera and photographed so
that the film is the exact size that the final result is to be. The film is in turn placed over a
sensitized plate make of paper, albumen or chemically treated metal) and exposed to a strong
light.
4. Stencil – Stencil sheets on which the copy is typed or drawn are made of a porous lease tissue,
covered with a coating which is impervious to ink. The typing or drawing pushes the coating
aside and exposes the porous tissue. This stencil wrapped around an inked cylinder and the
cylinder is rolled across the paper, forcing the ink through the porous parts of the stencil.
2. The middle portion and the edges of the letters are more or less of the same density; and
3. There is no indentation of the paper in the area of the printed letters as is sometimes found in
letter press printing.
III. IDENTIFICATION OF PRINTING – The identification of printing is based on the general principles
which consider the existence of an adequate combination of class and individual characteristics
exceeding the limits of an accidental coincidence.
A. CLASS CHARACTERISTICS – maybe grouped under body size and type face designs.
1. Body size of a type – responsible for the width of a line and depth of a column.
2. Unit measurement – six picas making an inch.
3. The body size in metallic type – varies from six points up to seventy points, larger ones being
made mainly in wood.
4. According to the type face – there are eight main designs
REFERENCES:
1. Manual in Question Documents – by Darlito Bernard Delizo (UC)
2. Compilation of handouts and pop-sheets, University of Baguio and Baguio City Foundation
University.
3. Microsoft® Encarta® Reference Library 2003. © 1993-2002 Microsoft Corporation.
4. A Practical Guide to questioned Document Examination. Antonio B. Rotor.
5. Questioned documents. Albert Osborne, 1926. Reprinted, 1996.
6. A Compendium in Criminalistics. Cirilo M. Tradio.
7. Revised Penal Code, Book II.
8. The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Handwriting Analysis. Sheila Lowe, 1999.
9. Handouts in Questioned Documents, Chester D. King-eo, University of the Cordilleras (BCF),
2003.
From: www.rkmfiles.net
Graphology systems tend to be one of three (3) types: (1) those based on individual letter
formations; (2) those based on stroke analysis; and (3) those based on an holistic/gestalt method. Over
3000 private business companies use it routinely (to screen employees), and it enjoys a growing sense of
scientific respectability. The courts appear to be waiting to see college psychology courses on it. It
probably has the most validity with the following domains: (1) intelligence; (2) attitude toward work; and
(3) interpersonal skills. Recent developments have focused on "profiling" of uncaptured criminals and sex
offenders (where handwriting analysts say they can spot a "perversion", not exactly the best word for it).
There's some precedent in art therapy and projective psychological testing for graphology. Many
convictions of child sex offenders have occurred because of what the child victim portrayed in a drawing,
and with psychological testing, there's the famous "Draw a Pig" assignment, which apparently contains
everything you need to make a subjective personality assessment from: where placed on paper; the size
of the pig; the pressure applied; the direction the pig is facing; attention to details; line quality; angular or
curved strokes; and emphasis on head of pig.
Introduction.
Questioned document examination involves a great many areas of expertise. Included under questioned
document examination are the following disciplines, a few of which I will hit on this this section:
handwriting, typewriting, photocopying and computer printers, forgery, paper and inks, writing
instruments, computer disks, gambling machinery, stamps (as in the rubber pad kind) and the dating of
documents.
Handwriting Analysis.
Graphology, the study of handwriting to determine one's personality traits, is not handwriting analysis. It's
not even considered a science; more like a parlor trick. True handwriting analysis involves painstaking
examination of the design, shape and structure of handwriting to determine authorship of a given
handwriting sample. The basic principle underlying handwriting analysis is that no two people write the
exact same thing the exact same way. Every person develops unique peculiarities and characteristics in
their handwriting.
Handwriting analysis looks at letter formations, connecting strokes between the letters, upstrokes,
retraces, down strokes, spacing, baseline, curves, size, distortions, hesitations and a number of other
characteristics of handwriting. By examining these details and variations in a questioned sample and
comparing them to a sample of known authorship, a determination can be made as the whether or not the
authorship is genuine.
Try this at home: Sign your name as you would sign a credit card receipt or some other official document.
Have several friends do the same. Now trade. Take a few minutes and try to forge each others
signatures. Even more difficult, write a paragraph in your natural handwriting, swap those and try to forge
them.
Typewriting.
First, a review of individual characteristics. This topic is first discussed in the firearms page. If you
haven't been there, you might want to go back. Individual characteristics are either inherent in the
machining process of a manufactured item, or come about through the wear and tear in the use of an
object. It is these individual characteristics that allow for the identification of an object to the exclusion of
all others of its general type. As with typewriters, all typewriters of a particular make and model are pretty
much the same but, through use, the develop defects that translate to paper when the machine is used.
These defects on the typed page can be matched back to the typewriter that was used to create it.
These defects in the type face are revealed in a number of ways. If the type bar is bent (the bar on which
the letter element is attached and hammered down to the page) the letter is misaligned or 'off its feet.'
Misalignments can also cause non-printing areas of a specific letter, such as losing the loop on the
bottom of a 'g.' The letter can be displaced horizontally or vertically. Little clumps of plastic can adhere to
the type key during manufacture and are made permanent by the coating process. This defect is called
'flashing.' As wear and tear increases, the defects become more exaggerated.
Just looking at the type style, or font, the spacing (horizontal and vertical) and type size allows for
determining the make and model of the typewriter.
Ribbons are a major evidentiary component. It is possible to read a ribbon to see what it has been used
to type.
Illustrations Concerning Forged Signatures in thumb impressions, typed matter, alleged alterations &
interpolations etc.
Illustration
A)
The upper disputed signature marked Q is a forged signature in 'Devnagari Script' of Hon'ble Ex-Prime
Minister " Sh. Chandrashekhar" on a cheque as compared with his admitted signature marked A-1.
B)
The disputed signature marked Q-3 across the revenue stamp is a forged signature as compared with the
genuine signature marked A-1.
C)
The upper signature marked Q-2 is a forged signature as compared with the admitted signature
DBGDelizo File 2008/Reviewer in Criminalistics 51
ANGELES UNIVERSITY FOUNDATION
CRIMINOLOGY REVIEW CENTER
marked A-2.
D)
The upper signature marked Q across the revenue stamp is a forged signature in 'Telugu Script'
as compared with the specimen signature marked S-4.
E)
The upper fingerprint marked Q is a latent fingerprint developed from the object of burglry and
found to be identical with the specimen fingerprint (S-78) of the suspect on scientific
comparison.
F)
The fingerprint marked X developed with Chemical Powders from the object of burglery was
found to be identical with the specimen fingerprint D-5 of the suspect.
G)
H)
Fescimile of the Magazine " Disputed Documents" edited by Pt. Ashok Kashyap, Handwritting
& Fingerprint Expert, Delhi
I)
Fescimile of the front cover of the Magazine " Document Disputed" edited by our Late Father Pt.
Ugrasen Kashyap (an erninent Handwriting Expert of India) in 1935 for All India circulation to
the Bench & the Bar.
J)
The fescimile of the front cover of the Magazine " The Document Examiner & Scientific
Detective" edited by Late Pt. Ugrasen Kashyap (the founder of Delhi office) from our Branch
Office at Brodipet, Guntur, A.P. in 1956 for All India circulation to the Bench & the Bar.
K)
L)
M)
A case of alleged interpolation on a disputed Bank Cheque. It was contended by the account
holder that the cheque was originally drawn Rs. 8980/- but subsequently raised to Rs. 80980/- &
paid, a contention proved patently false through investigation.
N)
O)
Traced forgeries established by superimposition. Please observe striking coincidence in respect of length,
height and spacing of these Signature.