Legal Question in Civil Litigation in Illinois

Fraud involving a notary public

I placed this question under General Civil Litigation because I'm not sure where it belongs. Situation involves several rounds (2-6) of falsifying a person's signature on legal documents (Affidavits etc) and somehow having this signature notarized. It's my understanding that a notary can affix his seal to a document only after verifying--name removed--least 2 forms of identification.--name removed--least 2 people are involved in this conspiracy. I currently have samples submitted to a large US banking institution in my posession, including notary information. What type of a legal specialty would this case fit under -- banking/finance? criminal fraud? civil litigation? Would--name removed--attorney take this case on a contingency basis? Can I pursue both criminal and civil litigation and seek compensation for damages?

Thanks


Asked on 7/11/05, 6:38 pm

2 Answers from Attorneys

Kevin Plachta The Law Office of Kevin F. Plachta

Re: Fraud involving a notary public

You should contact the Illinois Attorney General office.

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Answered on 7/11/05, 10:09 pm
Kenneth J. Ashman Ashman Law Offices, LLC

Re: Fraud involving a notary public

Your instincts are correct in that you may have a civil claim. The critical question, of course, is: "what are your damages?" If what the person forged was your signature to, say, a contract obligating you to pay something, then you would have damages against the person for the amount of the obligation.

Pls. feel free to contact me if you would like a consultation.

-- Kenneth J. Ashman; www.AshmanLawOffices.com; [email protected]

The information provided by Ashman Law Offices, LLC (�ALO�) is for general educational purposes only. No attorney-client relationship is established by this communication and no privilege attaches to such communication. ALO is not taking and will not take any action on your behalf and will not be considered your attorney until both you and ALO have signed a written retention agreement. There are strict deadlines, called statutes of limitation, within which claims or lawsuits must be filed. Therefore, if you desire the services of an attorney and decide not to retain ALO on terms acceptable to ALO, you should immediately seek the services of another attorney.

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Answered on 7/16/05, 12:40 am


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