“But... now this is damning....
When he was the circuit court judge that presided over her divorce..... his assistant had the initials “D. A.” (they gave the name) and all of the court documents were stamped: “Roy Moore D.A.”
- then it sounded like they handed out samples of his signatures, etc. to the assembled media... “
Could you please expand on the above? Sorry, but I’m not following your flow of thought.
IOW - is the above paragraph damning to Moore - or the woman?
You see, Roy Moore was never district attorney. D.A. are the initials of his legal assistant, which were on a stamp next to Roy Moore's name, stamped on legal documents (like the accuser's divorce papers, because Roy Moore was the judge in her case). The forger, whoever it was, apparently copied the D.A. onto the yearbook, thinking that's how Moore signed his name and title!
This is HUGE! It makes this an OBVIOUS fraud!
When Roy Moore was the circuit judge, his assistant would use the Roy Moore signature stamp. And then sign their initials to show that the stamp was used.
The assistant’s initials were D. A.
Judge Moore handled her divorce and ruled against her. (She lied and said she never saw him again.)
But the signature on the divorce papers reads Judge Roy Moore D. A.
He was the judge at that point.
Moore's attorney explained today:
1. Moore never signed anything with "D.A." after his name because he never was a District Attorney. (He was an Assistant District Attorney.)
2. However, he had an assistant with the initials "D.A." when he was the circuit court judge (Moore presided over one of her (Nelson's) divorce cases), and they had a rubber stamp that they used on numerous court documents that had the assistant's initials after Moore's name: "Roy Moore D.A." (which of course is common to distinguish from his personal signature).
3. Therefore, it seems like the person that added the written material after the "Ray" (or "Roy") on the yearbook inscription, apparently just blindly copied the "Moore D.A." without understanding what they were copying.
I hope that clears it up.