United States v. Hidalgo

229 F. Supp. 2d 961, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21633, 2002 WL 31496192
CourtDistrict Court, D. Arizona
DecidedNovember 6, 2002
DocketCR-01-1011-PHX-FJM
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 229 F. Supp. 2d 961 (United States v. Hidalgo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Hidalgo, 229 F. Supp. 2d 961, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21633, 2002 WL 31496192 (D. Ariz. 2002).

Opinion

ORDER

MARTONE, District Judge.

The defendants challenge the admissibility of the opinions of a forensic document examiner on whether certain writings and handprintings are theirs. We have read Hidalgo Sr.’s motion for a Daubert hearing regarding handwriting analysis (doc. 18), Hidalgo, Jr.’s joinder, the Government’s memorandum in opposition, Hidalgo, Sr.’s reply, Hidalgo, Sr.’s notice of expert witness testimony, the Government’s notice of expert witness testimony, the Government’s notice of supplementary testimony, the Government’s second notice of supplementary testimony, Hidalgo, Sr.’s supplemental memorandum re: admissibility of handwriting analysis, and the Government’s post-Daubert hearing brief in support of proffered handwriting expert.

We granted the defendants’ motion for a Daubert hearing and heard testimony from William J. Flynn, a forensic document examiner, and Dr. Moshe Kam, a professor of electrical engineering, on behalf of the government’s position. We also heard the testimony of Dr. Michael J. Saks, a professor of psychology and law, on behalf of the defendants. We first summarize the evidence and our findings. We then describe our understanding of the law on the issue in the post -Daubert, post-Kumho setting. We then reach our conclusions.

I.

A.

Handwriting analysis is based upon the premise that each person’s handwriting is unique. {See Flynn Aff. at 2-3). This assumption is key because it is uniqueness that allows a handwriting analyst to establish authorship against all other writers in the world. To establish uniqueness, the government points to a recent study of Professor Sargur Srihari. Sargur Srihari et al., Individuality of Handwriting, 47 J. Forensic Sci. 856 (2002). Professor Sri-hari’s research team scanned the handwriting samples of 1,500 individuals into a computer. The computer was then programmed to analyze and compare the samples based on a variety of features such as slant, height, the number of interior contours, and the number of vertical slope components. When the computer was asked to match the exemplars, it was able to do so with a 98% accuracy rate. The government argues that this study inferentially proves that handwriting is unique because otherwise the computer would not have been able to differentiate among the exemplars. Yet the Srihari study fails to establish uniqueness. At most, we can reasonably infer that among 1,500 writers, very few write in a similar way. 1

*963 The government also points to the existence of several studies arguably proving that the writing of identical twins, while strikingly similar, is nonetheless distinguishable. Horatio H. Newman et al., Twins: A Study of Heredity and Environment (1937); Mary S. Beaeom, A Study of Handwriting by Twins and Other Persons of Multiple Births, 5 J. Forensic Sci. 121 (1960); D.J. Gamble, The Handwriting of Identical Twins, 13 Can. Soc’y Forensic Sci. J. 11 (1980); J.H. Wanscher, The Hereditary Background of Handwriting: An Investigation of the Handwritings of Mono and Dizygotic Twins, 18 Acta Psy-chol. Et Neurology 23. Each of the four studies in evidence was based on an evaluation of the handwriting of identical twins. In only two of these was the evaluator blind as to whether the exemplars were those of an identical twin. The two blind studies were designed to determine whether handwriting has a genetic basis, not whether the handwriting of identical twins is distinguishable. Because of this, the studies adopted classification schemes that are too imprecise for our purposes. One study classified the writing of thirteen out of twenty-nine identical twins as “identi-eal[ ] or very similar! ].” 2 Wanscher, supra, at 360. The other grouped many twins as writing “alike.” Newman, supra, at 125-26. We thus do not know whether any of those who wrote “alike,” wrote identically.

That leaves us with the two non-blind studies directed at the question of whether identical twins ever write identically. The authors reported differences in the handwriting of identical twins. Yet in each study a single evaluator applied an intrinsically subjective protocol. Because forensic document examiners assert that no person writes the same way twice (see Flynn Aff. at 2-3), it is hard to say how the examiners accurately concluded that none of the participants wrote identically. Forensic document examiners were not asked to distinguish between the handwriting of identical twins in any of these studies. We therefore do not know whether the handwriting of identical twins is sufficiently differentiated for practical purposes.

We are, of course, aware that it would be impossible to analyze and compare the handwriting of every literate person. Uniqueness must therefore be demonstrated, if at all, inferentially. Although we can speculate as to one way in which such a demonstration might be made, 3 no such showing is in evidence. At the end of the day, we are left with the assertion of the forensic document examination community that, in their experience, handwriting is unique.

B.

The government has been more successful in establishing that forensic document examiners possess skills that exceed those of lay persons. A study by Professor Moshe Kam is the most useful. Moshe Kam et al., Writer Identification by Professional Document Examiners, 42 J. Forensic Sci. 778 (1997). Professor Kam asked more than one hundred forensic document examiners and forty-one non-professionals to determine the authorship of six unknown documents from a library of twenty-four exemplars. Although professionals and non-professionals made correct *964 matches at about the same rate, the false positive rate for professionals was 6.5% compared to 38.3% for non-professionals. In other words, the non-experts were almost six times as likely to make a match where no such match should have been made. 4

Additional studies by Professor Kam and others provide support for the conclusion that forensic document examiners are more accurate than laypersons. Professor Kam conducted a study on the ability of forensic document examiners to identify signatures. 5 Moshe Kam et al., Writer Identification by Professional Document Examiners, 42 J. Forensic Sci. 778 (1997). Forensic document examiners demonstrated a false positive error rate of just .5%.

A study conducted in Australia by Bryan Found and Doug Rogers reported that forensic document examiners were correct 91.5% of the.time in declaring a signature a forgery. Bryan Found & Doug Rogers, Revision and Corrective Package: Signature Trial, (2001) (unpublished CD-ROM). When the examiners identified a signature as genuine, they were correct 98.2% of the time. 6 ,

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229 F. Supp. 2d 961, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21633, 2002 WL 31496192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-hidalgo-azd-2002.