Example Of Forgery Crime


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Criminal Investigation Command (CID) Illustrative Crime Scene Forensics Presentations


Criminal Investigation Command (CID) Illustrative Crime Scene Forensics Presentations

Author:

language: en

Publisher: Jeffrey Frank Jones

Release Date: 2008-01-01


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CONTENTS by CHAPTER: 1. TRACE EVIDENCE, 62 slides 2. LATENT EVIDENCE, 73 slides 3. PATENT EVIDENCE, 67 slides 4. BLOOD SPLATTER ANALYSIS, 24 slides 5. HUMAN REMAINS RECOVERY, 34 slides 6. FORENSIC ENTOMOLOGY, 33 slides 7. CRIME SCENE PHOTOGRAPHY, 127 slides 8. GRID PHOTOGRAPHY, 37 slides 9. ALTERNATE LIGHT SOURCE AND OBLIQUE LIGHTING, 61 slides 10. POST BLAST SCENE PROCESSING, 59 slides 11. HAZARD IDENTIFICATION, 103 slides 12. POST BLAST INVESTIGATION, 59 slides 13. REMAINS PROCESSING, 125 slides ++++ PLUS MORE ++++

Commercial Crime Policy


Commercial Crime Policy

Author: Randall I. Marmor

language: en

Publisher: American Bar Association

Release Date: 2005


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It is an important resource for fidelity professionals, practitioners and anyone concerned with the nature and scope of insurance covering fraud in the workplace.

The House of Forgery in Eighteenth-Century Britain


The House of Forgery in Eighteenth-Century Britain

Author: Paul Baines

language: en

Publisher: Taylor & Francis

Release Date: 2019-07-16


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Published in 1999, this work offers a balanced interdisciplinary account of literary and criminal forgery as they were practised, constructed and theorized in the 18th century as a corollary of the new documents of the financial revolution: banknotes, bills of exchange and promissory notes. The book surveys the crime and its mythology, placing well-known cases such as that of Dr. William Dodd within the pattern of 400 prosecutions from the period 1715-1780. In parallel, accounts of some major instances of literary forgery are rooted in a more pervasive culture in which "forgery" was discovered in many developing areas of literary practice: scholarly editing, historiography and antiquarianism. One surprising aspect of this study is the extent to which literary figures were involved in matters of criminal as well as literary forgery. It is suggested that the two kinds of forgery have unexpected connections with each other through the economy of literature which, following the development of copyright, regarded the signature of authorship as the legal site of literary authenticity, and through the economic and legal culture of forgery prosecutions, in which bogus "writing" came to signify a whole range of problems of personal and literary character. The study is based on a very large body of diverse material, from major texts such as "The Dunciad" and "Lives of the English Poets" to hundreds of minor poems, controversial pamphlets, criminal biographies, newspapers, legal records and manuscripts.