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The investigators think that your heroine has forged the documents, and now she's pacing in the investigation room, wringing her hands.
What's happening next in your plot?
Enter the QDE!
Questioned Document Examiners (QDE) might analyse such plot points as:
* Wills
* Medical information
* Passports
* Contracts, including life insurance policies
* Letters, including suicide notes
* Threats: ransom notes, hold up notes, blackmail etc.
* Financial papers:
`Stocks and bonds
`Checks
`Counterfeiting
Video Quick Study (3:36) QDE discussing his work
But the two main areas of forensic analysis can be grouped as:
1. Handwriting
2. Material examination
In materials examination a QDE will have specialties that include:
* Paper
* Ink
* Toner
* Typewriters (for older cases or older evidence)
* Other document producing machinery or apparatus (like rubber stamps)
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* Large corporations, auction houses, etc.
* US military
* Larger police agencies
* US Post Office
* IRS
* ATF and E
* FBI
* CIA
* Secret Service
Video Quick Study (2:11) FBI unit talks about their work.
A handwriting expert is not a graphologist. A graphologist's job is to analyse a person's personality by their handwriting. A graphologist might say things like, "Do you see how the writer slants their sentence upward? This means that they are optimistic. And see how they cross the lower case "t"s at the top like a capital letter? This shows that they are strongly focused." Though a graphologist might be a fun character to entwine into your plot - especially if they got the personality all wrong and lead the authorities on a goose chase - it is not what a hand writing expert does.
Video Quick Study (8:11) Does your character need to hire a QDE to help them through the plot line? This is a video that includes costs, questions, and information about hiring a QDE.
The handwritten document is authenticated by comparison with samples called exemplars. There are two types of samples: requested and collected.
A requested sample:
* A suspect will be asked to write out the same words as were found in the evidence.
* The words should be dictated to the suspect.
* The writer will make several copies so that the examiner can understand the full scope of the
writer's range of variation.
* It is optimal to give the suspect the same writing tool as was used in creating the questioned document.
ex. No. 2 lead pencil or black gel pen.
* Same kind of paper should be used
* Same type of writing (block, cursive, print)
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* Is one that is taken from the suspect's surroundings
* This might be done if:
`The suspect is uncooperative with the
investigation
`The investigation is covert
`The suspect is deceased or missing
* Examples might come from:
` Checks
` Handwritten letters
` Diaries
* The QDE MUST be sure that the documents
are authentic. An employer (etc.) might
protect an employee because - they are
lovers, family, they are being blackmailed...
your plot twist potential is endless here.
Handwriting by the subject is informed by:
* Size of the individual's fingers, hands, and arms
* Muscular makeup
* Physical or mental disability
* Schooling (young people entering college now most likely did not study cursive writing in school)
* Individualization of how the writer thinks a letter should look
Characteristics that a QDE considers include:
* Beginning, connective, and ending strokes* Pen lift
Ocey Snead suicide note (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
* Line quality
* Spacing
* Proportion
* Dotting the "i"s and crossing the "t"s
* General overall appearance
The QDE might also look at:
* Tear marks
* Watermarks
* Other paper manufacturing characteristics
that might identify age, for example
* Changes in ink.
Video Quick Study (4:33)
Document Collection
* Handle as little as possible* Never fold, crease, or staple, the samples
* Keep the sample separate from other documents in that ink, handwriting, and other qualities can easily
be transferred.
* Burned or charred documents are fragile and therefore must be hand delivered
* When possible collect: typewriters, check writers, rubber stamps or seals to be examined for microscopic
anomalies.
Analysis:
* Magnification(Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
thousandths of an inch
* Ink
` UV lighting and other non destructive tests
` Chemical analysis: chromotography tests
(destructive test but they can take a
sample with a hypodermic needle.)
* Electrostatic devices - can be used to check for writing that has left and indentation
* Specialized computer analytics
Once they have conducted all of their tests, the QDE offers their interpretations to the investigators and, if necessary, testifies in court.
Perhaps you remember the Alyssa Bustamante case where the teen strangled and stabbed her nine-year-old neighbor:
The most poignant part of Monday's testimony came when a handwriting expert described how he was able to see through the blue ink that Bustamante had used in an attempt to cover up her original journal entry on the night of Elizabeth's murder.
He then read the entry aloud in court:
-Alyssa Bustamante's diary entry
'I just f***ing killed someone. I strangled them and slit their throat and stabbed them now they're dead. I don't know how to feel atm [at the moment]. It was ahmazing. As soon as you get over the "ohmygawd I can't do this" feeling, it's pretty enjoyable. I'm kinda nervous and shaky though right now. Kay, I gotta go to church now...lol.' news article link
From that testimony, Alyssa was sent to prison for life. Another psychopath removed from the streets.