Peter at Riverdale Country School, New York, in 1963, aged 18
New York typewriter
forensics expert Peter Van Tytell passed away at his home in Manhattan on August
11, two days before his 75th birthday*. His death came 10 months after Peter
and his now widow Tikya had won in the Supreme Court of New York the right to
move forward with their case over Peter’s malignant mesothelioma, against the Mole-Richardson
Company. Mesothelioma is a rare and fatal type of cancer caused by exposure to
asbestos.
Peter
contracted the disease while working at various locations for the New York City
Parks Department as an electrician-stagehand hanging lighting during the summer
of 1969. He was diagnosed with mesothelioma on February 16, 2017. MRC cables insulated
with asbestos were part of New York City festival lighting projects, such as
street events and block parties. The Times Square Stage Lighting Company was a
third-party defendant in the court case. The Tytells began action on April 21,
2017, to recover for damages resulting from Peter’s exposure to asbestos.
Apart
from setting up stages and lighting for music festivals in New York City, Peter
worked as a trucker and carpenter and in the 1960s lived in San Francisco,
working as a roadie for the Steve Miller Band, the Grateful Dead and Janis
Joplin. Peter was present when the Dead first played with two drummers.
Martin Tytell
Peter
ran his late father Martin’s Tytell Typewriter and Questioned Document Company in
a second-floor store at 116 Fulton Street, NYC, to July 31, 2001, after Martin had
retired at the age of 87 at the end of 2000. Martin, known as “Mr Typewriter”
died on September 11, 2008. His wife Pearl is still alive at the age of 102! The company they founded together in 1938 catalogued two million
typefaces in 145 languages, from Gaelic to Sanscrit. Peter continued the document
investigation service started by his mother.
One
of Peter’s success stories concerned a set of documents submitted by the Qatar Government
to the International Court of Justice in The Hague in a dispute with Bahrain
over possession of islands in a stretch of oil-bearing ocean. He was called in
as an expert and was able to establish that the “Royal Seal” on the “century-old”
papers dated back only to 1956. Peter had been browsing a gift shop at The
Hague when noticed that a collection of floral-motif Latin seals from the 1980s
bore a close resemblance to the seals used on the Qatar documents. Further
examination showed that the newer seals had been placed on reused documents
from the Ottoman Empire to create the forgeries. “These findings have led to the
determination that the suspect documents bearing these seals could not have
been prepared on or about their purported dates,” he wrote in his report. Qatar
withdrew the documents in 1998. And in 2001 the court ruled that the Hawar
Islands, the largest of those in dispute, would stay with Bahrain, and rejected
Qatar’s claim of sovereignty. The court awarded Qatar a smaller island region.
Peter in 2001
Peter
also testified for the prosecution to help gain a conviction in a case that
involved documents said to connect President John F. Kennedy to Marilyn Monroe
and mobster Sam Giancana. A former paralegal at a New York law firm, Lawrence
X. Cusack III, had defrauded $7 million from investors in a scheme to sell the fake
documents. Peter told the court that the typewriter used to create the
documents did not exist at the time they were supposed to have been written.
Cusack was found guilty in 1999 and received a nine-year sentence.
New York Magazine, January 20, 1986
Peter’s
expertise was used in the investigation of the Killian documents controversy,
which involved six documents critical of President George W. Bush's service in
the Texas Air National Guard and the use of four of these documents, presented
as authentic, in a 60 Minutes Wednesday
broadcast aired by CBS on September 8, 2004. The programme, aired during Bush’s
re-election campaign, reported that Bush had received special treatment in the
early 1970s, and used memorandums said to be from the files of Bush’s squadron
commander, Lieutenant Colonel Jerry Killian, to make its case. After the
documents’ authenticity came into question, CBS convened an independent panel
to investigate why the segment had been produced and aired so hastily, and
asked Peter to examine the four documents. Peter told the panel the superscript
“th” in the documents could not have been made by the Olympia manual typewriter
used in the early 70s. The “th” of the Olympia was underlined and did not rise
above the adjacent characters, unlike the “th” in the documents featured in the
60 Minutes segment. That, plus the
proportional spacing and a typeface that closely resembled Times New Roman in
Microsoft Word, led him to conclude that the documents were probably created on
a computer unavailable in the early 1970s. Soon after the panel delivered its
findings in early 2005, CBS fired a producer and three executives for their
role in the segment.
In
2011 Mark Zuckerberg, a founder of Facebook, asked Peter to examine a two-page
work-for-hire contract that Paul Ceglia, a wood-pellets salesman, said entitled
him to a substantial stake in the social media giant, which he sought in a
federal lawsuit. Peter demonstrated that the contract showed unusual
differences between the typefaces and spacing from one page to the other,
suggesting that they had been prepared at different times. He also concluded
that attempts had been made to age the pages artificially. A federal judge
dismissed the lawsuit in 2014 on the grounds that the contract was a forgery.
The inspiration: Michigan-born Albert Sherman Osborn (1858-1946) is considered the father of the science of questioned document examination in North America. His seminal book Questioned Documents was first published in 1910 and later heavily revised as a second edition in 1929.
This
case was cited in 2017 when Peter was awarded the Albert S. Osborn Award of
Excellence, which honours members of the
American Society of Questioned Document Examiners who have “contributed
above what is expected of a society member.” The society said Peter “first darkened
a courtroom door in 1971, and has testified many times ever since, both in US
and international courts. He has testified in notable cases in Hong Kong,
international tribunals, and has been involved in other high-profile cases such
as Ceglia versus Zuckerberg. He has been retained by prosecutors, defence,
plaintiff, and civil defence attorneys in thousands of cases. [Peter] is the
last word in document examination for any cases involving typewriters or
typewritten documents. He has always given his time and expertise to anyone who
asks. He has maintained reference collections that are second to none.”
Peter in 2010
Those
who have asked include me, in the case of a Corona 3 portable I bought on eBay
from a New York deceased estate auction. I remain indebted to Peter for his help in
that memorable matter. A truly wonderful typewriter man has left us. We are so much better for
having known him, if only through emails and the like, and much the poorer for his
passing. Vale Peter, RIP.
*I thank Bill MacLane of Palm
Coast, Florida or alerting me to Peter’s death.
Excellent post Robert.
ReplyDeletePeter was one of the greats, and even so, seemed to always have time to respond to an email.
Peter was also very helpful and polite with me on the occasions when I had a question for him. He was active on online forums and a respected and liked member of our community. He will be missed.
ReplyDeleteLovely "Sunday News" images, the change of characters is a gem! Ciao! Davide
ReplyDelete