The American Journal of Political Science Law and Criminology
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TYPE
Original Research
PAGE NO.
23-28
10.37547/tajpslc/Volume07Issue04-05
OPEN ACCESS
SUBMITED
12 February 2025
ACCEPTED
13 March 2025
PUBLISHED
11 April 2025
VOLUME
Vol.07 Issue04 2025
CITATION
Sadullaev Jaxongir Djamshedovich. (2025). Analysis of objective and
subjective elements of the crime of document forgery, selling, or using forged
documents. The American Journal of Political Science Law and Criminology,
7(04), 23
–
28. https://doi.org/10.37547/tajpslc/Volume07Issue04-05
COPYRIGHT
© 2025 Original content from this work may be used under the terms
of the creative commons attributes 4.0 License.
Analysis of objective and
subjective elements of the
crime of document
forgery, selling, or using
forged documents
Sadullaev Jaxongir Djamshedovich
Independent researcher at Tashkent State University of Law, Uzbekistan
Abstract:
Document forgery represents one of the most
pervasive and multifaceted crimes across jurisdictions,
affecting areas such as contract law, property rights,
financial transactions, and public trust in government-
issued records. This study analyzes the objective (actus
reus) and subjective (mens rea) elements of document
forgery, selling of forged documents, and using forged
documents, drawing on an extensive div of
international legal scholarship, case law, and statutory
frameworks. We discuss the conceptual foundations of
forgery, the delineation between material and
intellectual falsification, the significance of intent to
deceive, and the punishments enforced. The article also
explores emerging forms of forgery in electronic
domains (e.g., digital signatures, manipulated images,
and cyber-facilitated document falsification) and
explains the forensic methodologies used to detect and
prosecute these offenses. Ultimately, we highlight that
while the objective elements require a demonstrable
alteration or creation of a false document with legal
significance, the subjective elements demand specific
intent or knowledge of falsity aimed at deceiving a
targeted party. The implications for legislative policy,
prosecutorial practice, and emerging technologies in
crime detection are discussed at length, drawing upon
dozens of referenced scholarly works and statutory
provisions.
Keywords:
Document forgery, criminal law, actus reus,
mens rea, fraud, forgery detection, white-collar crime,
digital forgery.
Introduction:
Document forgery is a crime that
transcends borders, legal traditions, and societal
contexts. It occupies a central role in legal, financial, and
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The American Journal of Political Science Law and Criminology
administrative systems, as documents are core
instruments upon which trust and certainty are built.
The act of forging a document
—
or using, distributing,
or selling such forged documents
—
undermines public
and private trust in the integrity of documentation,
threatens property rights, and destabilizes economic
transactions. Document forgery, in its broadest sense,
involves an alteration, fabrication, or counterfeiting
process intended to deceive a recipient about the
genuineness or authenticity of the record.
Criminalization exist in many jurisdictions worldwide,
whether under the label “forgery,” “utt
erance of
forged documents,” or “falsification of documents.”
Despite differences in specific statutory wording, the
crime generally requires two essential elements: (1) an
objective or material element (actus reus) consisting of
making, altering, or using a counterfeit document, and
(2) a subjective element (mens rea) that reveals the
perpetrator’s intention to deceive.
Given the centrality of trust and authenticity in both
analog and digital worlds, the phenomenon of
document forgery has evolved rapidly alongside
technological
advancement.
Cyber-forgery
or
electronic document manipulation
—
including forging
digital signatures, falsifying financial records, or
fabricating
e-tickets
—
further
complicates
legal
analysis and enforcement. Additionally, the advent of
advanced imaging and AI-based manipulation
techniques (“deepfakes”) introduces new layers of
complexity in proving or disproving the genuineness of
electronically produced or stored documents.
Despite the ubiquity of document forgery statutes
across jurisdictions, the precise delineation of
objective and subjective elements remains the subject
of substantial legal debate. This problem is magnified
by the emergence of electronic and cyber-facilitated
forgeries that test the limits of traditional legal
definitions. The questions that arise include:
•
How do different jurisdictions define and
interpret the physical (objective) act of document
forgery, including the creation, alteration, selling, and
usage of forged documents?
•
What constitutes sufficient mens rea for
criminal liability in forgery cases, especially when
considering negligence, recklessness, or knowledge of
falsity?
•
How do emerging forms of technology
challenge or expand traditional notions of forgery and
the evidentiary requirements to prove it?
Addressing these issues requires an expansive review
of domestic and international sources, case law, and
statutory interpretation, along with a robust
theoretical framework to encompass both the classical
and modern forms of forgery.
METHODS AND RESULTS
This research adopts a qualitative legal-study design,
grounded in doctrinal analysis, comparative legal
studies, and interdisciplinary approaches that integrate
forensic science perspectives. The study systematically
reviews legislative texts, international treaties, court
decisions, and legal scholarship to ascertain how
different jurisdictions conceptualize and operationalize
both actus reus and mens rea in forgery. In line with
well-established legal-research methodologies, we
employ textual interpretation, case-law synthesis, and
cross-jurisdictional comparisons.
A key finding from the literature and statutory
documents is the broad conceptualization of forgery as
an act of altering or creating a document with the
purpose of misleading others into believing it is genuine.
Despite variances in wording, the majority of criminal
codes delineate two core categories:
1.
Material (Physical) Forgery
: Involves physically
altering an existing document or creating a document
that never existed (e.g., forging signatures, modifying
textual content, or adding false seals or stamps).
2.
Intellectual
Forgery
(False
Statements)
:
Involves inserting false information into a legitimate
document, typically without altering its physical form,
such as a notary attesting to untrue statements in an
otherwise valid deed [1].
Objective Elements (Actus Reus)
The predominant
theme in the statutes is that the accused must engage
in either making or adapting a writing or document in a
manner that leads to the misrepresentation of facts. For
instance, forging a signature, changing dates, or
tampering with official seals qualifies as the actus
reus[11, 13].
•
Creating a Completely New, Fake Document
:
The perpetrator produces a document de novo, claiming
it to be from a legitimate source or authorized
individual.
•
Material Alteration of an Existing Document
:
The offender modifies an extant, originally valid
document
—
e.g., adding text, changing amounts in a
financial record, substituting pages
—
to create a false
impression.
A common statutory requirement is that the forged
document be capable of producing legal consequences,
such as conferring rights, establishing obligations, or
serving as valid evidence. Courts in multiple jurisdictions
treat the capacity to affect legal relations or produce
binding legal outcomes as a necessary element of the
actus reus[3]. If a document is so obviously false that it
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cannot mislead, some legal systems do not consider it
a forgery, or they treat it as a lesser offense [1].
Many legislations punish not only the creation of a
false document but also its distribution, sale, or usage.
For instance, in Indonesian law, using a forged letter as
if it were genuine is specifically penalized under Article
263(2)[5]. Under U.S. federal law, employing or
transmitting forged documents through the mail can
trigger mail fraud charges [6]. The notion of
“utterance” of a forged document, inherited from
common law, underscores that passing a forgery into
commerce or legal proceedings is as criminal as
crafting it.
•
Intellectual vs. Material Forgery
: Some
statutes or doctrinal interpretations differentiate
forging the physical aspects (material forgery) from
providing false statements (intellectual forgery).
•
Complete vs. Partial Forgery
: A partial forgery
is any alteration to an otherwise valid document.
Complete forgery involves creating or substituting the
entirety.
•
Private Documents vs. Official Documents
:
Penalty enhancements typically exist for official or
“authentic” documents (e.g., government
-issued IDs,
notarial deeds).
Subjective Elements (Mens Rea) The corpus of
reviewed materials consistently emphasizes intent to
deceive as a bedrock requirement. The perpetrator’s
subjective aim must be to lead another to believe in
the document’s authenticity. Courts generally require
proof that the accused was aware the document was
false and intended to use it to achieve some form of
advantage or to cause harm.
For conviction, the prosecution must establish that the
accused had knowledge that the document was
falsified. If the individual acted under a genuine
mistake or unwittingly used a forged document,
criminal liability does not attach. However, certain
presumptions may arise if the accused possessed the
document under highly suspicious circumstances.
Most jurisdictions categorize forgery as a specific-
intent crime requiring a deliberate aim to deceive or
defraud. However, some systems allow a lesser
standard if the legal text or case law equates reckless
disregard of the truth with sufficient mens rea [7]. Yet,
the majority stance remains that the offender must
willfully produce or use the forged document with the
knowledge of its falsity.
While motive is distinct from intent, financial or
personal gain is the most common impetus behind
forging documents, whether to obtain loans, commit
identity theft, or facilitate real-estate fraud [8].
Notaries who authenticate forged deeds may do so for
financial incentive or to facilitate a client’s illegal
objective.
Contemporary analyses show a marked increase in
electronic document forgery. The forging of digital
signatures, manipulations of PDF files, tampering with
metadata, and creation of entirely fictitious documents
using digital tools are recognized offenses. In corporate
settings, forging financial statements or altering
accounting entries can fall under the broad category of
document forgery, especially if these statements create
legal consequences or are used to mislead regulators,
shareholders, or creditors. Enron and WorldCom
scandals exemplify how false financial records
constitute forgery and lead to fraud convictions for
executives [9].
Digital manipulation of images
—
e.g., forging passports
by substituting faces, or deepfake technology that
replaces video evidence
—
poses novel challenges for
legal classification. Although the objective act remains
altering a “document” or “record,” proving the forgery,
especially at a high resolution, demands advanced
forensic techniques. These new forms expand the
definition of “document” to include electronic or digital
media [3].
Notaries and legal professionals sometimes face
criminal liability for negligent or willful involvement in
verifying forged documents, especially in transactions
like property sales. Courts may impose criminal
sanctions if a notary attests to unverified or blatantly
false signatures. However, accidental or negligent
oversight often leads to disciplinary action rather than
imprisonment, unless clear intent to participate in the
forgery is established [11].
Across legal systems, punishments typically range from
six months to multiple years of imprisonment for basic
forgery offenses. Enhanced penalties apply if the
forgery involves official documents, or results in
substantial financial harm [12]. In the United States,
forging documents to perpetrate mail fraud can lead to
up to 20 years of imprisonment, and if financial
institutions are victimized, the sentence may be more
severe [6]. Fines and restitution orders are common,
particularly for financially motivated forgeries in
corporate environments.
From the collected data, it is clear that the objective act
of forgery involves creating or altering a document in a
manner capable of misleading, whereas the subjective
element demands an intent to deceive or defraud.
Variations include the distinction between material and
intellectual forgery, the requirement that the forged
document is capable of legal consequences, and the
difference between direct and indirect intent. The
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selling or using of forged documents carries the same
level of culpability once knowledge of falsity is
established. The rise of digital technology has
expanded the scope of forgery, prompting legislative
responses worldwide.
DISCUSSION
The definition of “document” has expanded beyond
physical papers to include electronic records, digital
images, and intangible forms of data. This broader
conceptualization aligns with the modern digital
environment where intangible forms have legal
significance. For instance, certain courts treat emails,
PDF contracts, or intangible digital signatures as
“documents” under forgery statutes when they can
serve as legal evidence or create binding obligations.
A consistent principle across legal systems is that the
forged document must be one that could realistically
deceive and produce legal effects. If a spurious
document is so obviously false that no reasonable
person would accept it, or if it pertains to trivial
matters with no legal ramifications, some jurisdictions
do not classify it as forgery. The rationale is rooted in
the harm principle; the law aims to penalize conduct
that significantly threatens legal certainty and public
trust.
In many civil-
law jurisdictions, “authentic documents”
enjoy a presumption of authenticity and carry
significant legal weight [10]. Forgery of these
documents is punished more severely because they
are deeply tied to governmental or official authority
—
such as deeds, birth certificates, or state-issued
identity cards. Such intensification of penalties reflects
the potential for severe harm when official documents
are falsified.
The overarching consensus in criminal jurisprudence is
that forgery is not a strict liability offense. It demands
the presence of fraudulent intent
—
dolus
—
to mislead
another party. This principle ensures that innocent
mistakes in documentation, unintentional alterations,
or typographical errors do not result in criminal
sanctions [7].
In practice, the challenge often lies in discerning
whether the accused possessed the requisite
knowledge. For instance, a clerk who processes
documents might not realize they are forged, but a
deliberate effort to ignore obvious signs of falsification
could constitute willful blindness. Courts in many
jurisdictions have crafted “red flag” doctrines, where
patterns of suspicious or inconsistent documentation
can shift the burden of explanation to the user or
possessor of the alleged forgery [13].
Debates persist about whether criminal liability for
forgery should extend to grossly negligent behavior.
Some argue that corporate contexts require broader
accountability to deter executives from “turning a blind
eye” to questionable documents
[4]. However, the
traditional approach is that mere negligence is
insufficient for criminal forgery charges. Most statues
require proof of knowledge or “reckless disregard” for
the truth.
Legal scholars highlight that criminal liability extends
not only to the “fabricator” but a
lso to anyone who
knowingly sells or uses the forged document. This chain
of liability can involve multiple participants in a forgery
ring
—
designers, distributors, middlemen, and ultimate
end-users. For example, an individual who sells forged
passports commits forgery by facilitating the circulation
of such documents, even if they did not physically create
them.
As with creation, distributing or using a forged
document necessitates knowledge and intent. A buyer
who is duped into purchasing a forged document
without knowledge of its falsity typically lacks the mens
rea required for forgery. Prosecutors thus concentrate
on evidence that the user knew or had strong reasons
to suspect the document was not genuine.
The digital realm compounds these issues, where forged
e-tickets, digital receipts, or fraudulent software
licenses can be disseminated globally with minimal risk
of detection. Tracking the chain of custody for intangible
or electronic documents requires sophisticated forensic
and cybersecurity measures. The extraterritorial reach
of the internet heightens the complexity, leading to calls
for international cooperation in penalizing cyber-
forgery [2].
Traditional handwriting analysis remains foundational
for proving signature forgeries. Techniques such as
hyperspectral imaging, scanning electron microscopes,
and ink chemical analysis can reveal tampering. The
adoption of advanced technologies can bolster
prosecutorial evidence, especially in high-stakes white-
collar crimes.
For electronic documents, metadata logs, revision
histories, and server access records serve as crucial
evidence. Investigators rely on digital forensic experts to
reconstruct the chain of modifications and identify
anomalies like abrupt changes in timestamps or
overwriting of logs. The reliability of such data is
contingent on system integrity; if hackers or insiders
manipulate logs, the forensic process becomes more
complex.
Proving intent beyond a reasonable doubt is often
challenging. Circumstantial evidence
—
such as the
defendant’s
fi
nancial
predicament,
suspicious
communications, or repeated usage of forged
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documents
—
plays a major role. Meanwhile, civil-law
jurisdictions sometimes apply a combination of
documentary evidence, witness testimony, and expert
reports to form an “intime conviction” of the judge.
Given that document forgery is increasingly
transnational (e.g., forging passports, forging shipping
documents
for
international
trade),
global
harmonization of legal standards becomes essential.
Regional bodies like the European Union and
international law enforcement agencies, including
Interpol, are working on uniform guidelines to improve
mutual legal assistance in forgery cases.
Preventive strategies focus on improved document
security, such as embedding sophisticated security
features in official documents or employing
blockchain-based
verification
for
high-value
transactions. Financial institutions are adopting AI-
driven detection systems to flag unusual patterns that
may suggest manipulated financial records.
The liability of professionals (e.g., notaries, lawyers,
corporate officers) who facilitate or fail to detect
forgery is a recurring theme. Strengthening ethical
codes, conducting continuous training, and applying
stricter sanctions for willful blindness can deter
complicity. Regulatory bodies may impose additional
compliance requirements, particularly in sectors like
real estate, finance, and corporate governance where
fraudulent documentation is common.
The law must adapt to advanced forgery techniques.
Cyber-forgery tests the boundaries of conventional
legislative definitions, prompting amendments or new
enactments focused on digital authenticity, data
integrity, and heightened cybersecurity. Innovative
technologies like AI-based forgery detection can assist
enforcement but also raise concerns about privacy,
data governance, and the reliability of algorithmic
evidence.
CONCLUSION
This article demonstrates that the crime of document
forgery fundamentally revolves around two essential
components: (1) an objective element (actus reus),
which involves creating or altering a document
—
either
physically or digitally
—
capable of producing legal
consequences, and (2) a subjective element (mens rea)
that underscores intentionality and knowledge of
falsity. Jurisdictions across the world, including
Indonesia, the United States, and various European
countries, exhibit remarkable consensus on these core
elements, although nuances exist in how they classify
and punish forgery.
Several dimensions of forgery emerged as particularly
salient in contemporary contexts:
1.
Material vs. Intellectual Forgery
: While
material forgery involves physical or digital alterations,
intellectual forgery revolves around false attestation
without changing the document’s outward form.
2.
Cyber-Forgery and Electronic Manipulation
:
Modern technology has broadened the scope of forgery
to include forging digital signatures, tampering with
electronic data, and employing AI-based deepfakes,
necessitating advanced forensic measures.
3.
Chain of Liability
: Selling, distributing, or using
a forged document, when accompanied by the requisite
knowledge, is often penalized as severely as the act of
creation.
4.
Enhanced Penalties for Official Documents
:
Official, authentic, or government-issued documents
carry more severe penalties due to their high level of
trust and potential for public harm when falsified.
5.
Evidentiary
Challenges
:
Proving
intent
(knowledge of falsity) is often the most challenging
aspect, requiring a combination of forensic analysis,
circumstantial evidence, and expert testimony.
Practical Recommendations
1.
Legislative Reforms
: Continuous updates to
penal codes or electronic transaction laws are vital to
address digital forms of forgery effectively. Legislatures
should clarify definitions of electronic documents and
specify forensic standards for cyber-forgery.
2.
Enhanced Forensic Collaboration
: Cross-border
cooperation among forensic experts, law enforcement,
and legal practitioners is essential to combat
international forgery rings. Standardization of digital
evidence protocols can strengthen prosecutions.
3.
Professional Accountability
: Intensify training,
oversight, and disciplinary measures for notaries,
lawyers, and corporate officers to mitigate risks of
complicity in forgery. Ethical guidelines should stress
due diligence and verification.
4.
Public
Awareness
:
Governments
and
institutions could conduct public awareness campaigns
on recognizing forged documents. Encouraging vigilance
among consumers, bank officers, and real-estate agents
can lower the success rate of forgery scams.
5.
Technological
Innovations
:
Adoption
of
blockchain-based ledgers for high-value documents
(e.g., land registries, property deeds) and robust
cryptographic signatures can deter forging attempts by
providing traceable authenticity.
Directions for Future Research
Further research could explore the interface between
AI-driven document generation (e.g., advanced textual
deepfakes), judicial admissibility of algorithmic forensic
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methods, and the implications for due process rights.
Comparative empirical analyses of prosecutorial
outcomes in forgery cases across multiple jurisdictions
may shed light on best practices for deterrence,
evidence gathering, and sentencing rationales.
Additionally, the psychological and criminological
underpinnings of forgers
—
particularly in corporate
settings
—
remain
ripe
for
interdisciplinary
investigation.
In conclusion, the legal constructs of actus reus and
mens rea continue to define the boundaries of
document forgery crimes. Emerging technologies call
for a refined approach that remains faithful to
foundational legal principles while adapting to new
modalities of deceit. As forgery has become more
sophisticated and transnational, effective legal
frameworks, investigative techniques, and cross-
institutional collaboration are indispensable in
preserving the integrity of written evidence and public
trust.
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