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Elements of Criminal Possession of a Forged Instrument

Across all the countries in the globe, cases on possession of forged instruments are always handled as a serious crime. The cases are always categorized into three forms of intentions including defrauding, injuring another person and deceiving. In either of the intentions, the case is always handled as a misdemeanor. Many people do confuse forgery and possession of a forged instrument to be one, but the two are always treated as separate crimes. In this article, we are going to major more on some of the Elements of criminal Possession of a Forged Instrument.

Understanding Forgery vs. Possession of Forged Instrument

Many people do confuse forgery and possession of a forged instrument to be one, but the two are always treated as separate crimes. In this article, we are going to major more on some of the Elements of criminal Possession of a Forged Instrument.

Key Differences

Crime What It Means
Forgery Creating or altering a document with intent to defraud
Possession of Forged Instrument Having a forged document with intent to defraud, injure, or deceive

Various forms of criminal possession of forged Instruments

Possession of a forged instrument is usually categorized into 3 forms of degrees. In reference to possession of forged instrument the three common categories include:

First degree. Most cases under the possession of forged documents usually fall under this category and involve possession of forged money, government issued securities, bonds, corporate stocks, and stamps.

Second degree. This second degree of possession of forged documents involves possession of forged title deeds, contracts, wills, credit cards, commercial instruments, public records or any material that is required to be filed with a federal agency or an official government documents.

Third degree. This level involves having the possession of any forged written instrument.

Three Degrees of Criminal Possession of Forged Instruments

Degree What It Involves Classification Punishment
First Degree Forged money, government issued securities, bonds, corporate stocks, stamps Class C Felony 5-10 years imprisonment
Second Degree Title deeds, contracts, wills, credit cards, commercial instruments, public records, federal agency documents, official government documents Class D Felony 1-5 years imprisonment
Third Degree Any forged written instrument Class A Misdemeanor 3 months to 1 year imprisonment

Forms of possession of forged instruments

With Knowledge. According to the law on possession of forged instruments there must always be a prove of possessing the forged instrument with knowledge that it was forged. In this case, anyone who possesses a forged instrument unwittingly can never be regarded to have violated the law.

The Knowledge Requirement

Situation Violates Law?
Possessing forged instrument WITH knowledge it was forged YES – Criminal violation
Possessing forged instrument unwittingly (no knowledge) NO – Not a violation

CRITICAL: Anyone who possesses a forged instrument unwittingly can never be regarded to have violated the law. This is a key defense strategy.

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How charges on possession of the forged instrument are punished

Punishment on the possession of a forged instrument is always different depending on the degree of the crime charged against the offender. If found guilty and get convicted over the charges, the punishment in most of the countries is usually as explained below.

Punishment in the first degree. Charges on this degree are usually categorized as Class C. The possible charges if found guilty is usually imprisonment of at least five years but should never exceed ten years.

Punishment in the second degree. Individuals found guilty on this category are usually regarded as Class D felony, and the punishment on this level is usually imprisonment of at least one year but not more than five years.

Punishment in the third degree. Charges on this level are regarded as Class A misdemeanor, and the convicted individuals usually face possible imprisonment of at least three months but should never exceed a year.

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Punishment by Degree

Degree Classification Minimum Imprisonment Maximum Imprisonment
First Degree Class C Felony 5 years 10 years
Second Degree Class D Felony 1 year 5 years
Third Degree Class A Misdemeanor 3 months 1 year

Defense Strategies against criminal Possession of a Forged Instrument

If you will at any time find yourself in the arms of the law for claims of possession of forged instruments, there are key things you need to know. To initiate with, the charges are always broken down into three forms to allow the convicted individual to build a defense strategy against their offense. In this case, to be proven guilty or face charges against these convictions, there are three things that the prosecutors must provide proof of. Among them include knowledge that the instrument was forged, prove that you hold the instrument with intent to defraud, injure another or deceive and thirdly a prove that you uttered the possession of a forged instrument.

If the prosecutor fails to give a proof of the three things behind bars, then they can never get any right to put you behind bars. This measure has been kept in place since forged instruments can easily go through the hands of many people before someone realizes that it was fake. In other cases, the person may have been charged for being in the wrong place at the wrong time. On the same note, the most appropriate defense strategy for your case will usually depend on the specific facts you provide for your case.

Three Elements Prosecutors Must Prove

Element What Prosecutor Must Prove
1. Knowledge You had knowledge that the instrument was forged
2. Intent You held the instrument with intent to defraud, injure another, or deceive
3. Utterance You uttered the possession of a forged instrument

CRITICAL: If the prosecutor fails to give a proof of the three things behind bars, then they can never get any right to put you behind bars.

Why These Protections Exist

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Todd Spodek

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With decades of experience in high-stakes federal criminal defense, Todd Spodek has built a reputation for aggressive, strategic representation. Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," he has successfully defended clients facing federal charges, white-collar allegations, and complex criminal cases in federal courts nationwide.

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