Document Verification & ExaminationQuestioned document may consist of identification cards, contracts, wills, titles and deeds, seals, stamps, bank checks, handwritten correspondence, machine-generated documents (such as those from photocopiers, fax machines, and printers), currency and electronic documents. In some circumstances, digital signatures may be examined. Documents that don’t contain visible identifiable marks may contain valuable impression evidence if they were underneath other documents when the writing was performed. Even documents that were shredded or burned may prove useful if reconstructed.Contact UsDocument Verification & ExaminationQuestioned document may consist of identification cards, contracts, wills, titles and deeds, seals, stamps, bank checks, handwritten correspondence, machine-generated documents (such as those from photocopiers, fax machines, and printers), currency and electronic documents. In some circumstances, digital signatures may be examined. Documents that don’t contain visible identifiable marks may contain valuable impression evidence if they were underneath other documents when the writing was performed. Even documents that were shredded or burned may prove useful if reconstructed.Contact UsDocument Verification & ExaminationQuestioned document may consist of identification cards, contracts, wills, titles and deeds, seals, stamps, bank checks, handwritten correspondence, machine-generated documents (such as those from photocopiers, fax machines, and printers), currency and electronic documents. In some circumstances, digital signatures may be examined. Documents that don’t contain visible identifiable marks may contain valuable impression evidence if they were underneath other documents when the writing was performed. Even documents that were shredded or burned may prove useful if reconstructed.
Document Verification & Examination
Questioned document may consist of identification cards, contracts, wills, titles and
deeds, seals, stamps, bank checks, handwritten correspondence, machine-generated documents (such as those from photocopiers, fax machines, and printers), currency and electronic documents. In some circumstances, digital signatures may be examined.
Documents that don’t contain visible identifiable marks may contain valuable impression evidence if they were underneath other documents when the writing was performed. Even documents that were shredded or burned may prove useful if reconstructed.
In addition, writing instruments, rubber stamps, envelopes and makes/models of office equipment in the suspect’s possession may be collected by the investigator. In digital documents, evidence could even be culled from the metadata of electronic signature files, providing information such as who the author is and when the document was written.