The ABFDE is incorporated as a non-profit organization in the District of Columbia and was formed in 1977 under a grant from the U.S. Department of Justice. The ABFDE is accredited by the Forensic Specialties Accreditation Board, Inc. to carry out certification of FDEs. To date, there is no federal licensing involved in the discipline in North America. However, courts have recognized the ABFDE as reputable in the following cases, in denying a motion that claimed that handwriting comparisons were unreliable:
John J. Harris sat as the inaugural chairman in 1977, and in the following year, the Committee of Certification was created. As of, 125 Diplomates are listed as being certified examiners working in private, federal, state and local government laboratories.
Requirements to apply
An applicant to the ABFDE for certification must meet the following requirements:
must be of good moral character, high integrity and good repute; and possess high ethical and professional standing
must be a permanent residents of the United States of America, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and other such places as the Board of Directors may, from time to time, authorize and direct.
must possess a bachelor's degree from an accredited academic institution, or equivalent
must have successfully completed a full-time training program that meets the following basic requirements as found in the SWGDOC Standard for Minimum Training Requirements for Forensic Document Examiners:
*Full-time training
*Minimum of 24 months under the supervision of a principal trainer
*Covering all topics addressed in the ABFDE Study Guide
*Training from a principal trainer who also meets these requirements with a minimum of five years of full-time experience following his/her training as a forensic document examiner.
must provide three references from FDEs certified or recognized by the Board
must be actively engaged in the full-time practise of forensic document examination and
must demonstrate a record of appropriate professional activity in forensic document examination, in accordance with the following definitions:
*Forensic document examination is the practice of the application of document examination to the purposes of the law
*Forensic document examination relates to the examination of handwriting, typewriting, the authenticity of signatures, alterations in documents, the significance of inks and papers, photocopying processes, printing processes, writing instruments, sequence of writing, and other elements of a document relative to its authenticity or spuriousness, and
*Forensic document examination does not involve the employment of calligraphic or engrossing skills, nor does it involve a study of handwriting in an attempt to create a personality profile or otherwise analyze or judge the writer's personality or character.
In addition to meeting the basic requirements listed above, an applicant must also pass comprehensive written, practical and oral examinations that test the wide range of problems encountered in document examination.
Ongoing requirements for certification
Certificates issued by the ABFDE are valid for five years, and can be renewed. During that five-year renewal period, the Diplomate must be actively engaged in forensic document examination work either as an examiner, as a supervisor of other forensic document examiners or as a trainer of forensic document examiners. Additionally, the Diplomate applying for recertification must earn at least 40 continuing education credits to demonstrate that s/he has maintained currency in the profession. Credits are awarded for a variety of related activities, such as attendance and participation at ABFDE approved forensic meeting and programs, and publication of articles in journals approved by the Board.