Thomas Wictor has a compelling analysis of Roy Moore's signature and his alleged signature in the yearbook. You don't have to be a handwriting expert to tell that the yearbook signature is a fake:
There's more details on his Twitter page. People are finding all kinds of inconsistencies. Allegedly, CNN's photo of the yearbook shows Roy Moore's signature started in blue ink and finished in black. Very sloppy fake. Reminds me of Obama's birth certificate. : )
So the signature is totally off!!!! The R is crazily not the same either! Not a trace of resemblance. Either another Roy wrote that message and that bitch tacked on the message about the Old Hickory to tie it to him, or the whole message is fake. I'm thinking it might be an old message that's been amended.
That's what it looks like to me, too. I suspect the original note was probably written by a woman teacher, since men don't usually write saccharine notes like this:
"To a sweeter, more beautiful girl I could not say "Merry Christmas". Christmas, 1977
The yearbook note is old-fashioned script. Reminds me very much of my mother's handwriting. The numerals are small and precise, unlike the date under Roy Moore's alleged signature.
The script of the note is very typical of 1940's-1950's ---flowing, even, graceful capitals, small, well-formed lower case letters. However, the comma after "Love" does not match the size of the script. It's large and awkwardly placed.
The signature is not the same script as the note and is not the same as samples of Roy Moore's signature found elsewhere on the internet. It's crude and ill-formed without the more sophisticated elements of Moore's real signature.
The numbers of the date are fat and ugly, compared to the "1977" in the note above. The 7's in "12-22-77" even have loops on them which the 7's in the "1977" above don't have.
I'm also very troubled by the "D.A." which is also in an ugly print. Notice the "D" which has the same oval configuration as the "O" in Olde. Also notice the hideous lower-case "e" in "Olde". I've seen this primitive, childish font millions of times used by high school girls in the 70's and 80's.
Furthermore, notice that "Olde Hickory House" is in print, a mix of upper and lower case letters, which is a sign of a poorly educated person. The note was in cursive, but this is in print.
This is not the print of a man of Judge Moore's education and culture.
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Gilderoy ago
Thomas Wictor has a compelling analysis of Roy Moore's signature and his alleged signature in the yearbook. You don't have to be a handwriting expert to tell that the yearbook signature is a fake:
https://twitter.com/ThomasWictor/status/930249181993738241
migratorypatterns ago
Page doesn't exist.
But Moore tries to molest her and she gives him her yearbook to sign?
Gilderoy ago
Gateway Pundit has Thomas Wictor's analysis:
http://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2017/11/fake-analyst-says-judge-roy-moore-signature-inside-gloria-allred-accusers-yearbook-forged/
There's more details on his Twitter page. People are finding all kinds of inconsistencies. Allegedly, CNN's photo of the yearbook shows Roy Moore's signature started in blue ink and finished in black. Very sloppy fake. Reminds me of Obama's birth certificate. : )
migratorypatterns ago
Holy crap! The script doesn't even match either! Obviously written by someone else!
Would be nice if the original Roy was another Roy. That would seal it!!!!
NEXT!!!!
Gilderoy ago
If you look at other examples of Roy's signature, he actually signs his first name "Royl" with what looks like an "l" at the end:
Examples from Google:
http://www.all-antique-books.com/uploads/antiquarianbooks/26/320300283444-1.jpg
http://nooganomics.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/Judge-Moore-signature.png
migratorypatterns ago
Thanks for this!!!!
So the signature is totally off!!!! The R is crazily not the same either! Not a trace of resemblance. Either another Roy wrote that message and that bitch tacked on the message about the Old Hickory to tie it to him, or the whole message is fake. I'm thinking it might be an old message that's been amended.
Gilderoy ago
That's what it looks like to me, too. I suspect the original note was probably written by a woman teacher, since men don't usually write saccharine notes like this:
"To a sweeter, more beautiful girl I could not say "Merry Christmas". Christmas, 1977
Love, Roy Moore D.A.
12-22-77
Olde Hickory House
Gilderoy ago
Image here.
The yearbook note is old-fashioned script. Reminds me very much of my mother's handwriting. The numerals are small and precise, unlike the date under Roy Moore's alleged signature.
The script of the note is very typical of 1940's-1950's ---flowing, even, graceful capitals, small, well-formed lower case letters. However, the comma after "Love" does not match the size of the script. It's large and awkwardly placed.
The signature is not the same script as the note and is not the same as samples of Roy Moore's signature found elsewhere on the internet. It's crude and ill-formed without the more sophisticated elements of Moore's real signature.
The numbers of the date are fat and ugly, compared to the "1977" in the note above. The 7's in "12-22-77" even have loops on them which the 7's in the "1977" above don't have.
I'm also very troubled by the "D.A." which is also in an ugly print. Notice the "D" which has the same oval configuration as the "O" in Olde. Also notice the hideous lower-case "e" in "Olde". I've seen this primitive, childish font millions of times used by high school girls in the 70's and 80's.
Furthermore, notice that "Olde Hickory House" is in print, a mix of upper and lower case letters, which is a sign of a poorly educated person. The note was in cursive, but this is in print.
This is not the print of a man of Judge Moore's education and culture.
new4now ago
That was back in the days they taught cursive
Signature should be same style