Not the best answer, but whatever authorizing body, city/county/state, that controls notaries in your state is the one to contact. The local BAR association should know who you need to find and they probably have a free hotline. Fraud is a serious crime and fraud by a notary is worse. The signature of the real notary versus the counterfeit one should be easy enough to show in court, BUT some states allow an improperly or illegally notarized document to stand anyway.
Not sure where you might be, but in California it would be with the Secretary of State.....they have a Notary division.
The offense of falsifying somone else's signature is FORGERY, and you can report the offense to the police and they may be prosecuted. If you suffered any 'loss' because of the forgery you could then sue them in civil court for damages.
Visit the local district attorney's office and ask to speak with an assistant. If possible bring a copy of the forged document with you.
Where do I report a suspicion of Notary Fraud in AZ
You should contact the police immediately and file a report.
Nothing happens unless you make it an issue or there is fraud involved. If so, then report the notary to the secretary of state in your jurisdiction and file a police report.
Report the forgery to your local policy department and the insurance company and you will probably be made whole.
You call the police and report it.
you can go to google and type in wolfquest report and report someone
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Can I get a copy of someone else's police report
If your signature was forged to a document, report it to law enforcement. That is a crime regardless of her family status to you.
Absolutely not. The title is Notary Public, not Notary Private. If the notary usually signs public documents as part of their workday, meaning the employer is aware and allows the notary to notarize for the public while at work (bank notaries typically have this authority), the notary must notarize for everyone with no conditions. If the notary usually does this service for free, the notary must do it for free for everyone with no conditions. Some notaries are employed to only notarize for their company, so this type of notary could refuse to notarize a document during their workday, but those notaries are in the back offices. Few things anger me as much as a bank notary public pulling the old "I can only notarize if you have an account" lie. This common situation is usually discussed in detail in the notary test materials themselves. The title is Notary Public. If you're motivated or angry enough, figure out which local agency oversees notaries, send for the notary rulebook and figure out how to properly report the bank-notary for being guilty of notary offenses.