Forensic 4 Module 2 1
Forensic 4 Module 2 1
Learning Objectives
At the end of this chapter, the student will be able to:
- Narrate the history of writing and forgery;
- Enumerate the important events in the USA involving the pioneers of
document examination; and
- Cite historical bases on the development of questioned document
examination.
History of Writing
Writings are letters or symbols that are written or imprinted on a surface to represent
the sounds or words of a language. It consists of messages that convey ideas to
others. Its evolution is based on man’s desire to communicate his thoughts with
others.
- It is a product of complicated mental and muscular customary act forming a
visible combination of certain forms of executions acquired from long
continuous practices.
If you look at the early history of every culture, you would probably find that its
primitive people had an oral language and an early stage of writing. They probably
devised some sort of means to communicate with others through visible signs that
could be understood by others.
Examples of such early writings include records that were engraved into stone,
carved in wood, pressed into clay tablets and marked on animal skins.
Cave drawings are of course the most familiar of early writings. They are, in fact,
the first recorded record of prehistoric people.
Cave drawings are called petroglyphs or petrograms and they developed between
20,000 and 10,000 BC. These paintings gradually developed into word pictures or
ideographs, which were used by Sumerians, Chinese, Aztecs, Mayas, and
Egyptians. Egyptian word pictures are called hieroglyphics (Koppenhaver, 2007).
These word pictures developed into symbols which were then used to represent
sounds or syllables called phonographs. This then developed into simplified
phonetic symbols called the phonetic alphabet, an alphabet of characters intended
to represent specific sounds of speech. The Sumerians are generally credited with
the development of the first alphabet.
The Phoenician alphabet, which was used and spread by Phoenicians throughout
the world between 1700 and 1500 BC, consisted of 22 letters and was written from
right to left. The Phoenician alphabet was assimilated by many other cultures and
became widely used.
The Greek alphabet was derived from the Phoenician alphabet, and has been used
by the Greeks since the 8th century BC. The word alphabet stems from the first two
letters of the Greek alphabet, alpha and beta. Their alphabet consisted of 24 letters
and included vowels. The Greeks changed the writing direction from left to right.
The Greek alphabet evolved into the Roman alphabet or the Latin alphabet, which
initially consisted of disconnected capital letters for several centuries. Roman scribes
invented the lowercase letters that were patterned from the capital letters. These
letters simplified the forms and made it easier to copy manuscripts.
The Greek alphabet is still used in Greece, Cyprus, and Crete. The Cyrillic alphabet
derived from the Greek is used in Russia and Eastern European countries.
3. Chinese-kanji in Asia
- It became a basis for using sound or a thing in order to describe a
particular character. This simply means as ideographs by reading a particular
thing or character for pronunciation.
- It is implied that a person who knows to write must first know how to read. It is
the reading capability of a person that comes first prior to his writing
capability.
Phoenician Script
- Is an important “trunk” in the alphabet tree.
- Arabic, Hebrew, Latin and Greek scripts are all descendant from Phoenician
- Is a direct descendant of the Proto-Sinaitic Script.
- Phoenician is a “consonantal alphabet” also known as “abjad” and only
contains letters representing consonants. Vowels are generally omitted in this
phase of the writing system.
- Two classes of writing that evolved: calligraphy and tachygraphy. Calligraphy
is for book hand forms and tachygraphy is for document hand forms.
Proto-Sinaitic Script
The major change between Proto-Sinaitic Script and Phoenician is graphical. The
Phoenician letter shapes grew to be more abstract and linear, in comparison to the
more “pictographic” shape of proto-sinaitic
STAGES OF CHINESE WRITING
Baybayin script
Tagbanwa script
ALPHABETICAL WRITING
- Common in standard set of letters in basic writing symbols.
- It is being pronounced in the form of language represented by syllables and
classified according to vowels.
- It is written in capital and small letters either in a separate or connected
writing executions.
- This writing is commonly adopted worldwide as medium of writing
communication in order to convey message to someone or anybody.
System of Writing
History of Forgery
The practice of forgery, or the falsification and alteration of writing with intent to
defraud, is as old as writing itself. The crime of forgery has been practiced since
ancient times where writing existed. Below are important events in the history of
forgery (Koppenhaver, 2007).
The English followed the Justinian Code, but only allowed witnesses to testify
regarding the authenticity of signatures if they had knowledge of or had seen the
disputed signature written. Experts were allowed to make comparisons in non-jury
trials, but handwriting samples that were not part of the case were not allowed to be
used for the comparison of handwriting by the Witnesses. This prohibition against
standards of comparison in court cases hampered identification. The English
Parliament changed this practice in 1854 by allowing the introduction of genuine
writing that was not part of the court case for the purpose of comparing.
The United States of America based their laws on the English common law
and permitted comparisons in court cases. Below are important events in the history
of document examination in the USA:
Historical Cases
Below are some historical cases that involved questioned documents and
contributed to the advancement of forensic document examination as a discipline in
the twentieth century.
Handwriting identification played a major role in the Dreyfus Affair, a political scandal
in France that began in 1894. Captain Alfred Dreyfus French general staff officer,
was accused of treason by court martial and sentenced to life imprisonment for
allegedly communicating French military secrets to Germans (Tilstone, Savage, 85
Clark, 2006).
Dreyfus was eventually issued a pardon by the president of the Republic and was
fully exonerated by the court of appeals in 1906. He was reinstated into the army
with the rank of major and awarded the Legion of Honor. All the accusations against
him were confirmed to be baseless when the original incriminating questioned
document was released 1931. Bertillon was embarrassed by his flagrant error, and
the affair cast a dark cloud over the remainder of his career.
Another case that advanced the discipline of questioned document examination was
the kidnap and murder of Bobby Franks in the affluent suburb of Kenwood, near
Chicago in 1924. Bobby Franks, the son of a millionaire in Chicago, was picked up in
a car on his way home from high school and murdered on May 21, 1924. Since he
did not return home by dinnertime that day, his parents started a search, thinking he
may have been with a friend. However, they received a phone call that Bobby had
been kidnapped and a typewritten note demanding ransom the next morning. They
notified the police, but while considering their response to the kidnappers’ demands,
a dead body was found a little distance away and was identified as Bobby’s
(Tilstone, Savage, 85 Clark, 2006).
Eventually suspicion centered on two wealthy and well educated young men,
Richard Loeb and Nathan Leopold, who desired to commit the perfect crime. They
spent months planning the murder, the disposal of the body, and the method of
receiving ransom money with little or no risk of being caught.
Leopold and Loeb had alibis that appeared strong and the defense was
represented by the legendary Clarence Darrow. Leopold owned a typewriter, but it
was excluded as the source of the ransom note. By chance, police discovered that
he used the typewriter of his study group in law school. Pages of notes used in this
typewriter were compared to the ransom demand and demonstrated to be identical.
Leopold and Loeb were tried and convicted for the murder and kidnapping of Bobby
Franks. The trial became a media spectacle and the crime was presented as a cold-
blooded intellectual exercise pursued by two privileged youths who were driven by
the thrill of the kill. The case is significant in the field of forensic document
examination because it established the acceptability of typewriter examination as
evidence.
In 1971, Clifford Irving convinced the publishers of McGraw-Hill that Howard Hughes
authorized him to write an autobiography. Irving forged letters from Hughes to
support the claim that he was requesting Irving’s assistance in writing his
autobiography. Irving even fabricated a contract between himself and Hughes to
divide the money paid by McGraw-Hill for the book. Life magazine also purchased
the rights to run excerpts of Howard Hughes’ autobiography (Koppenhaver, 2007).
By January 7, 1972 Howard Hughes broke his fourteen years of silence and exposed
Clifford Irving. He denounced Irving’s claims, stating that he never met Clifford Irving,
never authorized anyone to write his autobiography, and never cashed any checks
from McGraw-Hill. Clifford Irving and his conspirators pleaded guilty of forgery and
served prison terms. Robert A. Cabanne testified that Hughes had not penned the
questioned documents.
The will had many strange discrepancies, most glaring of which was that it left one-
sixteenth of the estate to a Utah gas station operator named Melvin Dummar. The
purported will was three pages long, allowing ample volume of material for document
examiners to study. Their unanimous conclusion was that it was not authentic.
Dummar claimed that he was awarded a huge part of the vast estate because he
saved allegedly saved Hughes in a Nevada desert in 1967. Dummar’s claims
resulted in a series of court battles which had all ruled that the Mormon will was a
forgery.
In 1983, the world was stunned with the “discovery” of the Hitler diaries. Document
examiners and historians declared mixed reports regarding its authenticity. However,
forensic laboratory testing revealed that elements in the paper contained modern ink
that was not manufactured until 1956 (Adolf Hitler died in 1945). The Hitler diaries
were the most ambitious hoax of the century (Koppenhaver, 2007).
.Linguistic and historical experts initially vouched for the authenticity of the purported
diaries. Document examiners supported this claim because the diaries matched the
samples from which they compared Hitler’s handwriting. The historians were proven
wrong after extensive examination showed that the material contained errors and
historical inaccuracies (Tilstone, Savage, & Clark, 2006).
However, the handwriting experts were correct in claiming that the diaries and the
samples were written by the same person. This is because the samples themselves
were forged. The forger was Konrad Kujau, a dealer in military memorabilia, who had
forged Hitler’s handwriting for many years even before fake diaries. The Hitler
exemplars used by the examiners for comparison were actually forged by Kujau.
This was a significant in the field of forensic document examination because it
highlighted the importance of selecting a competent examiner and ensuring
adequate control of samples for comparison (Koppenhaver, 2007).
Other cases
Frank W. Abagnale – a reformed master forger, describes in his book the art of
stealing of issued parking ticket by receiving a refund out of forgery and falsified
parking ticket and successfully transacted while the proceed was deposited to his
bank account in Argentina. The check was cashed, and the money was transferred.
He was never arrested and the money was never recovered. He started his crime life
as teenager by changing his driver’s license to make him 10 years older. He came
up to print his account number in a magnetic ink on deposit slip and return to the
bank counter. By the time that the bank discovered the fraudulent scheme, he has
penetrated severe monetary losses to the bank,
Frank Abagnale is now a leading consultant in forgery, fraudulence and other
form of falsifications by many refutable financial and banking institutions as security
and protective outfit against frauds and deceptions.
References:
Forensic Examination of Questioned Documents second edition
By PCINSP Mary Grace P. Alvarez, PhD