Introducing “The Diple Microscope” :
https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/diple-the-powerful-microscope-for-any-smartphone?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=crowdfunding_remarketing#/
We live in a renaissance age of technology with advancements moving at light-speed. Here is some affordable Smartphone technology due to hit the market this summer. It appears that this technology can be applied to the analysis of paper documents as well, and has the backing of the scientific community.
Thus far in the foreclosure world, the servicers have been gaming the system against homeowners by declaring notes as “original” with the full knowledge that most do not have the resources to scientifically challenge this claim. And, there simply are not enough scientific experts to handle tens of thousands of foreclosures.
In my experience in cases where the notes have been inspected, the document is examined using very expensive microscopes, and the end result has shown in nearly all cases that the “wet-ink” signatures were applied using an ink-jet or laser printer rather than a pen. The printers used to create the counterfeit notes leave tiny “satellite droplets” that are sprayed from the printer nozzle heads, and these tiny droplets cannot be seen with the naked eye. Here is an example of what these look like:
I’ve actually attended a trial where the bank’s rebuttal witness to this type of evidence actually concurred with the analysis; that no pen is capable of producing these type of droplets. With this new technology, it may soon be possible to perform a simple demonstration in court to prove once and for all that the note sitting on Plaintiff counsel’s table is not “original.” Simply have the defendant or judge place their signature on a sheet of paper using a standard ballpoint pen. Use the smartphone microscope to show no satellite droplets. Then, using a portable color-scanner, scan and print the samples and place under the microscope again. The droplets that will now appear will be similar to the droplets appearing on bank counsel’s desk. Point being, maybe technology is going to be the answer, and that could be coming soon.
Bill Paatalo
Private Investigator – OR PSID#49411
bill.bpia@gmail.com
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