Forensic 4 Module 1
Forensic 4 Module 1
Forensic 4 Module 1
MODULE 1
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
OF QUESTIONED DOCUMENT
EXAMINATION
Overview
From the very earliest time, man has put down marks on different materials to make
forms of writing were simple pictures on the walls of caves. Man soon found he could not
express all of his thoughts by means of pictures so systems of writing were developed. Early
writings were on stones and metal. Later skins of animals were used. Paper was first invented
by the Chinese more than 2,000 years ago but it was not common in other countries for a long
time. With the making of paper, writing became more common to many people. Criminalistics
were quick to learn that it was profitable to make false documents. Knowledge of the methods
of making false document is therefore necessary to the police investigator. The examination of
questioned document falls into broad classes.
LESSON 1.2
Colin Evans cited the world’s cases on disputed document are as follows:
John Magnuson case: Date 1922; Location: Marshfield, Misconsin; Significance: From
just a few scraps of bomb-damaged paper, investigator gleaned enough evidence to
capture the Yule Bomb Killer. In his final address, Magnuson’s attorney, Charles Briere,
fulminated against the “so-called experts” who had examined the scraps of the bomb,
sneering that “half of them were here for their share of the gold bag of the state.” It was
a complaint about expert witness that echoes in courtrooms to the present today.
Arthur Perry case: Date: 1937; Location: New York City; Significance: So many factors
were combined in this case that it has come to be regarded as an American detection
classic. It is unnerving to consider the possible outcome of this case had Palm not
happened to work late that night. Without the twin interventions of fate and forensic
science, it is entirely conceivable that he may well have taken Perry’s place in the
electric chair.
Hitler Diaries case: Date: 1981; Location: Hamburg, West Germany; Significance:
History’s greatest publishing fraud was first legitimized and then exposed by scientific
analysis. In all, through outright swindle, royalties, fees, lost advertising, and sundry
other commitments, the Hitler Diaries were estimated to have cost Stern more than
twenty million marks (sixteen million dollars). The cost in careers, reputations, and
personal humiliation was incalculable.
Graham Backhouse case: Date 1984; Location: Horton, England; Significance: This case
provides an example of the interdependence of forensic discipline that helps to solve so
many cases. Piece by piece, the magnitude of Backhouse’s fiendishness became
apparent. In early March, he had increased the insurance on Margaret’s life from fifty to
a hundred thousand pounds, waited a few weeks while spreading word of a nonexistent
hate campaign, then planted the bomb that so nearly killed her. When that attempt
failed, and to divert suspicion from himself, he had lured Bedale-Taylor to his house with
the intention of killing him. The seriousness of his self inflicted wounds almost fooled
the authorities, but he had underestimated the astonishing scope of modern forensic
detection. On February 18, 1985, Backhouse learned the price he would have to pay for
that arrogance-two term of life imprisonment.
LESSON 1.4
Documents record man’s lire. Officially, his birth certificate signal’s mans’ existence on
Earth. Corollary, thereto, his death certificate writes finish to his stay on earth. However, it is
not uncommon to note documents other than these two indicating man’s birth and death. Long
before a child’s birth, we may find an intimate note between Mr. And Mrs. De la Cruz planning
to name the first born as a “Junior or say “Marikit”. The memo from Mrs. Cruz she had started
conceiving her subsequent pre-natal check up with the doctor; the hospital’s certification of the
delivery of a boy or girl de la Cruz, all these proceeds the issuance of the birth certificate, yet
are poignant examples of the finds or man’s repose. The last will and testament, the obituary,
the tombstone with the inscriptions epitaphs, all those are documents testifying to his death.
Man’s life does not center alone on his birth nor on his death. The intervening period
opens for us more documents, reams of them. Take the doctor’s notes on the mother’s
postnatal visits with the child, the first inoculation, subsequent ones with the reams of papers;
notebooks, books report, cards, excuse slips, followed by an array of diplomas from
kindergarten, primary; elementary, high school, college and perhaps post graduate courses.
While studying, the more serious love notes and not to far behind the better proposing
marriage and finally the inking of the marriage bond via the marriage contract and certificate.
This brings us back to where we started. The conception, pre-natal visits and birth of a new
generation.
Again, life is not all schooling nor marriage. Man must find work to feed his family. Thus,
we find him filling up applications for employment. He is accepted by a company, swears him in
and he receives his appointment papers. At the end of every week or every fifteenth and
thirtieth of the month, man signs the payroll and receives his paycheck or cash as the case
maybe. The longer he stays the more the payrolls and pay checks. He goes up the ladder of
success and the more papers and documents he encounters. His membership in the Lions or
the Jaycees or the Kiwanis or the Knights of Columbus or the Freemasonry must be
accomplished. He must sign this and that communication paper. As he grows older, he comes
across his retirement papers and receives his pension checks. As the shadows of life finally set
upon man, the final document testifying to his demises is the death certificate. These, in a
nutshell amplify the importance of documents in man’s life.
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.
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.
LESSON 1.5
LEGAL ASPECT OF DOCUMENTS
A.LEGAL BASIS OF DOCUMENTS:
1. In the case of People vs. Moreno, CA, 338 O.G. 119: any written document by which a right is
established or an obligation is extinguished.
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.
5. Electronic Document (E-Document) – exist only in electronic form such as data stored on a
computer, network, back-up, archive or other storage media. Examples of documents subjects
to e-discovery are e-mails, instant message, e-calendars, audio files, data on handheld devices,
animation, metadata, graphics, photographs, spreadsheets, websites, drawings and other types
of digital data. (Governed by RA 8792).