Pinellas County Forgery Attorney
Forgery charges carry a weight that surprises most people who face them. What might seem like a minor paperwork issue to the accused often looks very different to a Florida prosecutor. A Pinellas County forgery attorney who understands how these cases are actually built, and where they tend to fall apart, can make a substantial difference in what happens next. Omar Abdelghany of OA Law Firm has handled fraud and document-related charges throughout the Tampa Bay area and knows what it takes to defend them properly.
What Florida Law Actually Says About Forgery
Florida Statute Section 831.01 defines forgery as falsely making, altering, forging, or counterfeiting a public record, certificate, official seal, written instrument, or other document with the intent to injure or defraud any person. That last element, intent, is worth paying close attention to. The law is not just about what the document says. It is about what the person creating or using it meant to do with it.
Florida also criminalizes the related act of uttering a forged document under Section 831.02. Uttering means knowingly using, publishing, or attempting to pass off a document you know to be forged. A person can face charges for forgery, uttering, or both, depending on the circumstances. Each charge is a third-degree felony, which carries a potential sentence of up to five years in state prison and up to five years of probation.
What gets charged as forgery in Pinellas County can range from signing someone else’s name on a check to altering a public record to falsifying a contract. The documents that most commonly appear in forgery prosecutions include checks, deeds, wills, court filings, prescriptions, and identification documents. When government-issued documents are involved, prosecutors sometimes add charges under separate statutes, which can increase the exposure significantly.
How Pinellas County Forgery Cases Get Built and Where They Break Down
The prosecution’s job in a forgery case is to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the document was falsified and that the defendant did it with fraudulent intent. Both elements have to hold up. Defense work in these cases is often more about evidence than courtroom drama. Omar examines the forensic basis of the handwriting or signature analysis, the chain of custody for any physical documents, and whether investigators followed proper procedures when obtaining records.
Handwriting analysis has a complicated history in criminal courts. Forensic document examiners are not infallible, and the methodology used by the state’s expert can often be challenged. If the prosecution is relying on a comparison between known writing samples and the disputed document, the quality and provenance of those comparison samples matters. Omar looks at exactly how those samples were collected and whether the examiner’s conclusions can survive scrutiny.
Intent is the other major pressure point. People sometimes sign documents on behalf of others with permission, or make changes to paperwork that they believed were authorized. If the record reflects any ambiguity about whether consent existed, or whether the defendant genuinely understood what they were doing, that ambiguity belongs in front of the jury or judge. The state does not get to assume intent. It has to prove it.
There are also cases where the forgery charge comes alongside a theft, fraud, or identity theft charge. In those situations, Omar analyzes how the charges interact and whether there are grounds to challenge the sufficiency of the evidence on any one of them. Knocking out a single element of a stacked-charge case can shift the entire outcome.
The Consequences Beyond the Criminal Sentence
For many clients, the prison sentence is not their only concern, or even their primary one. A forgery conviction in Pinellas County carries collateral consequences that can follow a person for years after the case closes. Because forgery is classified as a crime involving dishonesty or fraud, it creates serious problems across a number of areas.
Professional licensing is one of the most immediate concerns. Florida licensing boards for nurses, contractors, real estate agents, teachers, accountants, and many other professions treat convictions for forgery as grounds for denial, suspension, or revocation of a license. Someone who built a career around a professional credential can lose that credential over a single conviction, even if they serve no prison time.
Immigration status is another serious consideration for non-citizens. Forgery is generally classified as a crime involving moral turpitude under federal immigration law, which can trigger removal proceedings, bar reentry, or affect applications for permanent residence or citizenship. Omar is licensed to practice in both the U.S. District for the Middle District of Florida and the U.S. District for the Northern District of Florida, and he is familiar with how state charges can intersect with federal immigration consequences.
Employment background checks increasingly screen for dishonesty-related convictions, and forgery sits squarely in that category. For clients who work in finance, healthcare, law, or government, the reputational impact of a forgery conviction can be severe regardless of the sentence imposed. Getting the charge reduced or dismissed is not just about avoiding prison. It is about preserving the parts of a person’s life that a conviction would otherwise erode.
Questions About Forgery Charges in Pinellas County
Can I be charged with forgery even if no one was actually harmed or defrauded?
Yes. Florida’s forgery statute requires that the act be done with the intent to injure or defraud, but it does not require that the fraud was actually completed or that someone suffered a financial loss. The attempt and the intent are enough for the charge to stand. That said, the absence of actual harm can matter in sentencing and negotiation.
What is the difference between forgery and fraud in Florida?
Forgery specifically involves falsifying a written instrument or document. Fraud is a broader category that covers deceptive schemes used to obtain money, property, or other benefits. The two often get charged together, but they are distinct offenses. A person who creates a fake document and then uses it to obtain something of value can face separate charges for both the forgery and the resulting fraud.
Is check forgery treated differently than other types?
Check forgery is among the most commonly prosecuted forms of document fraud in Pinellas County. It is still charged under the same forgery and uttering statutes, but it often overlaps with theft charges if the check was used to obtain money. When the amounts involved are large enough, prosecutors may also pursue the case as grand theft, which carries its own penalties separate from the forgery charge.
Can a forgery charge be reduced to a lesser offense?
Depending on the facts of the case, it is sometimes possible to negotiate a resolution that avoids a felony conviction. Factors that affect that possibility include the nature of the document involved, the defendant’s prior record, the sophistication of the alleged scheme, and the strength of the evidence. Omar evaluates each case individually and discusses realistic options with every client from the start.
If I had permission to sign someone’s name, can I still be charged?
This is one of the more common fact patterns in forgery cases. If genuine permission existed, that is a complete defense to the intent element of the charge. The challenge is proving it. Documentation of the authorization, witness testimony, or other corroborating evidence becomes critical. If you were acting with what you believed was legitimate authority, that needs to be established clearly and early in the case.
Does Pinellas County handle these cases differently than Hillsborough County?
The substantive law is the same across Florida, but the court procedures, prosecutorial tendencies, and local rules differ from county to county. Pinellas County cases are heard in the Sixth Judicial Circuit. Having an attorney who is familiar with how that court operates and how prosecutors in that circuit approach document fraud cases is a practical advantage.
How soon should I get an attorney involved?
As early as possible. If you know you are under investigation but have not yet been charged, that window before formal charges are filed is often the most important period for building a defense. Investigators may attempt to interview you, and what you say at that stage can shape the direction of the entire case. Having legal representation in place before a formal arrest gives Omar the opportunity to engage with the process proactively rather than reactively.
Talk to a Pinellas County Forgery Defense Lawyer Before Deciding Anything
Forgery is a felony charge that moves quickly once it is filed, and the decisions made in the early stages of a case tend to have lasting effects. Omar Abdelghany personally handles every matter at OA Law Firm. When you retain this firm, you deal directly with your attorney, not a paralegal or associate, and Omar remains in contact with you throughout the entire process. He will explain the charges clearly, walk you through the realistic options, and pursue the strongest defense available given the facts. If you are dealing with a forgery charge anywhere in Pinellas County or the broader Tampa Bay area, contact OA Law Firm to schedule a consultation and discuss your case directly with a Pinellas County forgery defense attorney who will give it the attention it deserves.
