Forging signatures used to be a skill
From the Spokane News FB page, the usual item asking folks to identify a criminal caught on surveillance cameras, and the usual totally useless picture. Police took a low-quality picture OF THE SCREEN showing the security footage.
Commenters hit the usual point:
Why is it that we can read a license plate on a car from space, but a store security camera cant get a decent picture from 10 feet away?
Our phones take better video than this. Maybe they should download a camera app and tape a bunch of iPhones to the walls... would be better quality
Two commenters hit a different point:
Until retailers and banks change security on using plastic I don't care. Anyone can push credit and no pen required. This is a bank issue. Quit wasting my time
It seems like checking ID and signatures would help, when I worked retail I had to.
Would that make any difference? Probably not. Nobody has a signature now, so checking signatures is meaningless.
Before 1961 signatures were unique and constant identifiers. In 1961 JFK spoiled it. I'm no better than anyone else. My signature follows the JFK model. Initial letter of each name followed by a line.
Compare
previous item, the illuminated check:
Or these signatures on the
Topolobampo utopian scam:
Or these from the
Missoury Fur Traders in 1812:
Or more modern, ET Starkweather on the
1933 Clay Center scrip.
When you know how to use a PEN, you don't need a PIN.
Labels: skill-estate