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Make a difference, and make $100 an hour detecting forgeries TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. FEATURE STORY: Document examiners needed. ($)
Welcome to the series of newsletters spotlighting various ways to make money examining handwriting. If you are thinking about a part time income - this might be right for you. There are many ways in which handwriting analysis can be marketed for profit. These include: employee screening, document examining, personality/compatibility evaluation, grapho-therapy, and entertainment. This issue of Weekly Strokes Newsletter will focus on Document Examining, which involves examining questioned documents, such as checks or contracts, to detect forgery. With proper training, you can make as much as $1,000 a day.... read on to learn how.
For a victim of forgery, it can be challenging to prove their case. Some people's entire life savings or their whole business is at stake because of a forgery. And unfortunately, many attorneys lack experience to properly handle fraud and forgery cases. That's where a trained expert document examiner comes in. And often, these cases never even get to a jury; they are settled out of court or even dropped because of the powerful sworn testimony of a handwriting expert. That expert.... could be YOU! There is a nationwide shortage of document examiners, and even fewer who are qualified to testify as an Expert Witness. Which means there is a tremendous opportunity, if you are interested in applying your knowledge and skill to a very specialized area of handwriting expertise. Curt Baggett is one of the foremost Expert Document Examiners in the country.
(You may recognize Curt's voice from the audio tapes of
Handwriting University.com's Handwriting Analysis Home Study course,
or you might have seen him on CNBC.) I spoke to Curt recently about his experience in the field, and how to get started. Asked to summarize what he does, he says simply, "My job is to decide who wrote what." First and foremost, this requires a natural curiosity. "Anyone can do this, but you have to have a Sherlock Holmes tendency to investigate." He is frank when asked about the degree of difficulty in doing this work. "It's not rocket science. Anyone can go through the training and learn the techniques." To train, he recommends a 2-year on-the-job training and apprenticeship program. The School of Forensic Document Examination is now accepting enrollments for the FALL 2006 program. You still have time to submit your application. Click below for details and view the 8-page course catalog:
SUBMIT YOUR APPLICATION TODAY, READ MORE
Find out more here: http://www.handwritinguniversity.com/docexam/
Curt's services are very much in demand. He flies
all over the country to give court testimony, at a rate of $1,000 per day, plus expenses.
While he fully appreciates that he's well compensated for his time and expertise, Curt has also had the very personal gratification of
seeing clients exonerated for crimes they did not commit. In one case, a man served more than 10 years on death row before finding Curt. One of the pieces of evidence used to convict him were love letters to the victim, forged by a man who set him up for the crime, and even testified against him at the trial. Curt's expert testimony was the key piece of evidence that re-opened the case and got the death row inmate a new trial. Curt saved an innocent man's life. Wow. It's what keeps him hard at work, and why he recommends the field so highly. "It's a great satisfaction... if you can make money helping people." Q. Can you tell if someone is a criminal by his handwriting? A. No. By definition, a criminal is someone who has been convicted of a crime. STUDENT TESTIMONIALS:
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