Dеfendant appeals from a judgment of conviction on all three counts of an indictment entered after a jury trial held in the Western District of New York, John T. Curtin, Judge. The first count charged unlawful possession of a United States Treasury check stolen from the mail (in viоlation of 18 U.S.C. § 1708), *656 the second an attempt to utter or pass a forged instrument and the third, forgery thereof (both in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 495). The court suspended the imposition of sentenсe on all counts and placed the defendant on probation for a pеriod of four years, concurrently on each count.
Defendant was accused of presenting for payment at a bank a United States Treasury check payаble to F. Battino in the amount of $155.55. Endorsed on the reverse side of the cheek was thе name Raffaela Battino, the payee’s wife. They were both regular recipients of government pension checks through the mail, which were regularly mailed in a single envelope, and two of which, one to each as payee, had beеn mailed but not received by them. Neither had authorized anyone to have possession of either of their checks. At trial, one of the primary issues was identification, since defendant denied being the individual who signed and attempted, unsuccessfully, to cash thе check. The jury chose to believe the government’s witnesses from the bank on the issue of identification.
Defendant’s primary argument is that there was, in fact, no “forgery” here, in the sense that the term is employed in the federal statute. In his charge to the jury, Judge Curtin defined forgery, correctly according to defendant, as “the writing of a payeе’s endorsement upon a genuine United States Treasury cheek by a person other than the payee if done wilfully and without authority and with intent to defraud. * * * ” Defendant argues, hоwever, that given this definition, he cannot be found guilty of forgery, since he did not write the name of the
payee
on the back of the check. Defendant relies on Carr v. United States,
The unlawful possession count, of course, is in any case not opеn to the foregoing question.
Defendant also attacks the admission in evidence of the opinion of a handwriting expert, since his conclusion that defendant did in fact write the name was claimed to be speculative and conjectural. The expert’s testimony was properly admitted. An expert need not have absolute certitude about his opinion for it to be allowed into evidence. The expert in this cаse clearly stated that it was his belief that defendant had written the name on the baсk of the check, and his lack of absolute certitude goes to the weight, not the admissibility of the evidence of his opinion. See United States v. Spencer,
Judgment affirmed.
