Just wondering if anyone had to deal with this before.
Someone I know is about to be sued. Lots of different documents will have to come out in court, some of which are notarized documents. The other party is married to a notary public and has bragged about producing falsely notarized documents in the past. Based on this, there is a strong suspicion that fraudulent notarized documents will be in shown in the lawsuit.
Is there any sort of counter to this? Can that kind of fraud easily be found out?
My neighbor is a notary for a mortgage firm. She said:
Quote:
Oooh that's not good. If the notary notarized a falsely signed document then they should be able to show the signature of the signer isn't correct or have that person state they never signed that document. The notary also can't notarize for their own stuff, if their spouse is a party to the document, or if their spouse or themselves have a direct beneficial interest in the document.
It's not required but it is suggested the notary keep a journal record too in case anything is questionable but I don't know any that really do that.
*Assuming
1) Healthy between the ages of 21 and 34 with natural ****
2) Healthy between the ages of 21 and 42 with fake ****
3) "She" was a she at birth
4) Pics are not taken surreptitiously - that's creepy
*Assuming
1) Healthy between the ages of 21 and 34 with natural ****
2) Healthy between the ages of 21 and 42 with fake ****
3) "She" was a she at birth
4) Pics are not taken surreptitiously - that's creepy
bruh u gotta bump the fake titty number in2 the fifties
trust me on this 1 there r some 50+ y/o fake tittled rasslin ladies who r still rollin heavy in my ~fap file~
*Assuming
1) Healthy between the ages of 21 and 34 with natural ****
2) Healthy between the ages of 21 and 42 with fake ****
3) "She" was a she at birth
4) Pics are not taken surreptitiously - that's creepy
*Assuming
1) Healthy between the ages of 21 and 34 with natural ****
2) Healthy between the ages of 21 and 42 with fake ****
3) "She" was a she at birth
4) Pics are not taken surreptitiously - that's creepy