How Handwriting Expert Helps In Judiciary ?

The admissibility of evidence by a handwriting expert starts with Federal Rules of Evidence, Rule 702. It states that if an expert witness is proved to have advanced expertise, adequate facts / data, and valid principles/methods, they will testify. There is Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., in relation to Law 702. It was a case of the Supreme Court creating the Daubert Standard, which could be used to restrict the testimony of an expert witness since they are unqualified. Rule 702 and the Daubert Standard both clearly allow the court to consider an expert witness adequately competent to testify. Their review is only then prosecutable.

In this article, we would like to talk about such a forensic document examiner job and how he/she analyzes handwriting, whether handwritten or electronic, to confirm the identity of a signer in the event of a lawsuit.

The predominance of our subconscious at the time of signing, and also the moment of handwriting, makes our writing 's graphical peculiarities constant over time, as they come from repetitive gestures and are thus very difficult to change without much effort. If the supposed contract signer made a deliberate effort to amend his / her signature, this effort would leave traces on the signing-in the strain, the pattern, the character spacing, etc. All of the original characteristics are what a handwriting expert can recognize through a comparative study between the doubtful signature and the signature the suspected signer recognizes. It is what is called a forensic examination of handwriting or a 'letter evaluation test.'

A questioned signature is named a dubious signature, in legal terms. In a legal procedure, the questionable signature will be linked to a signature either made in court by the accused signer or taken from official records (such as signatures in notarized actions, signatures on an ID card or passport, etc.). The expert may also equate the suspicious signature to a signature previously acknowledged by the individual challenged in court.


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