… and the graphological conscience.
Proving anything essentially consists in demonstrating the connection between the statement to be proven and another statement that needs no proof itself.
Franz Grillparzer, Viennese court clerk and Burgtheater playwright
From the everyday life of a forensic graphologist:
By incorporating personal assessments, which include inaccuracies and potential human errors, as well as considering the statistical nature of investigative findings, concluding expert statements can only be statements of probability.
Every question to be answered by an expert raises alternative assumptions that must exhaustively cover the hypothesis space in a probabilistic sense. Through the collection of findings and a discussion of these findings, an evaluation is made, which ultimately results in a probabilistic statement regarding the considered hypotheses.

In case someone wants to verify whether my signature on the general power of attorney is authentic or not.
or:
One simply relies on common sense. Is there anyone in this world who would give their soon-to-be ex-spouse an unconditional general power of attorney over their assets when:
- the divorce has already been filed,
- there is a notarized separation of property,
- there is a strong suspicion of investment fraud,
- and the accounts are already being managed separately (without any power of attorney)?
If there is someone who can answer all four questions with ‘YES!’, please contact me immediately.
