forgery of documents (Q693988)
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process of creating documents, with the intent to deceive
- document forgery
- forgery
- documentary fraud
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | forgery of documents |
process of creating documents, with the intent to deceive |
|
Statements
§ 267 Urkundenfälschung
0 references
1 reference
A 20th-Century Master Scam (English)
24 July 2024
Seven months later, on April 6, 1996, after recording conversations between the partners, detectives raided Drewe's home in the tony London suburb of Reigate, where they found hundreds of documents from the Victoria and Albert Museum, the Tate Gallery and the Institute of Contemporary Art. Sitting on Drewe's kitchen table were two catalogues missing from the V. and A.'s National Art Library, still in the museum bag that Drewe had used to smuggle them out. There were rubber stamps bearing the authenticating seals of the Tate and of an order of monastic priests; receipts for the sale of paintings across continents going back decades; certificates of authenticity from the estates of Dubuffet and Giacometti; also the more mundane instruments of document forgery: scissors, razors, correction fluid, glue, tape. (English)
Identifiers
0922
0 references
Sitelinks
Wikipedia(8 entries)
- dawiki Dokumentfalsk
- dewiki Urkundenfälschung
- frwiki Faux (droit)
- nlwiki Valsheid in geschrifte
- plwiki Fałsz materialny
- ptwiki Fraude documental
- svwiki Urkundsförfalskning
- tawiki பிறள்பகர்வு