WASHINGTON (AP) — It's the open secret that nobody in government wants to  talk about: That cherished presidential signature that's tucked away in a  scrapbook or framed for all to see might never have passed under the president's  hand.
For decades, presidents of both parties have let an autopen do some of the  heavy lifting when it comes to scrawling their signatures. The machine was  recently put to use signing a bill into law, apparently a first.
Overseas and out of reach when lawmakers passed an extension of certain  provisions of the Patriot Act, President Barack Obama employed the autopen to  sign it, a step the White House has  been mum about ever since.
"I always heard the autopen was the second most guarded thing in the White  House after the president," says Jack Shock, who had permission to wield former  President Bill Clinton's autopen as his director of presidential letters and  messages.
Jim Cicconi, who oversaw the use of autopens for President George H.W. Bush,  recalls that the plastic signature templates for the machines — yes, there was  more than one autopen — would wear out from repeated use.
Ronald Reagan had 22 different signature templates, including "Ron," ''Dutch"  and other iterations, to boost the aura of authenticity surrounding his fake  signatures, says Stephen Koschal, an autograph authenticator who two years ago  published a guide to presidential autopen signatures.
It's not just ordinary Americans who get the autopen treatment.
Koschal says he once visited Vice President Dan Quayle's office in the  Capitol and spotted a signed photograph from the first President Bush that he  said had clearly been autopenned.
Obama took the presidential autopen out of the closet and into a new  realm.
While traveling in Europe last month, Obama directed his staff in Washington  to use an autopen to sign into law an extension of certain Patriot Act powers to  fight terrorism. The legislation had been approved by Congress at the last  minute, and there was no time to fly it to France for Obama's signature before  the anti-terrorism powers expired.
It was believed to be the first time a president has used an autopen to sign  legislation, and that didn't sit well with a number of Republicans. Twenty-one  GOP House members sent Obama a letter on June 17 asking him to re-sign the  legislation with his actual signature because use of the autopen "appears  contrary to the Constitution."
Obama's team relied on a 29-page legal analysis crafted during the  administration of President George W. Bush to argue that the faux signature  passed constitutional muster.
Ari Fleischer, White House press  secretary under the younger Bush, says the Bush White House had considered using  the autopen to sign a minor piece of legislation as a test case, "but in the end  Bush just kept signing the parchment himself." Bush used the autopen for routine  correspondence and photos but not on matters of importance, Fleischer said.
While a number of White House aides from administrations past were willing to  discuss the presidential autopen, that kind of talk is frowned upon while a  president is in office.
"You want to preserve the president's semblance of reaching out and being  connected," says Shock. "But the cold hard facts are that when you get 10,000  letters a day he can't possibly handle all that kind of correspondence  himself."
It turns out there are varying levels of fakeness in presidential  signatures.
There are preapproved form letters with digital signatures. There are  preprinted cards for birthdays and other special events. Autopen signatures  generally are reserved for more personalized correspondence that doesn't score a  real signature, say officials from administrations past.
Obama's staff is loath to talk about his use of the autopen.
The president prefers to keep the focus on the sampling of 10 letters a day  that he reads from among the tens of thousands that ordinary people send to the  White House. In many cases, he writes back to these people, with his own  signature.
But the president couldn't get around explaining how the Patriot Act got  signed into law without briefly shining a spotlight on the autopen. Once that  news was out, though, the White House clammed up. It declined to provide any  further details about how many autopens the administration uses, what they look  like, where they're kept, or who makes the machine.
And don't ask Bob Olding, whose company is the leading manufacturer of  autopens, to discuss his clientele.
"I'm not going to help you," he said. "Our customers do not want anyone else  knowing they have these machines."
Olding did reveal, though, that "when there's a major change in government,  we get an uptick in business."
Olding is president of Rockville, Md.-based Damilic Corp., whose signature  machines run from $2,000 up to $10,000. Hulking older versions look like a  drafting table and are too big to fit through a doorway. Newer models, with  microprocessors and digital controls, sit on a tabletop. But they still feature  two mechanical arms that move a pen back and forth, up and down.
The machines sign letters at about the same pace as does the human hand. An  autopen machine that automatically signs a stack of documents can spit out  roughly 500 signatures an hour; those with manual document feeders, about 200 an  hour.
As recently as the second Bush administration, the autopen in use was a large  piece of furniture that looked like a drafting table, says Heidi Smith, who  served as Bush's correspondence director for two years. She says those with  clearance to use the autopen would head over to the executive clerk's office in  the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, next to the White House, where the  autopen wielded Bush's pen of choice — a Sharpie.
Autopens have been used by presidents since Dwight Eisenhower, says Koschal,  and President John F. Kennedy put them to heavy use. Many presidents have had  secretaries sign their names to correspondence and documents, he says.
More than 200 years ago, Thomas Jefferson acquired a mechanical copying  device called a polygraph that attached to his pen and made a second copy of  what he was writing. Jefferson liked it so much he wrote that "I could not, now  therefore, live without the Polygraph."
It's not just busy presidents who rely on autopens. They're used by thousands  of organizations, companies and government officials.
Donald H. Rumsfeld got in hot water for using one as defense secretary to  sign letters of condolence to the families of U.S. troops killed in action. When  word leaked out in 2004, Rumsfeld said he'd done it to "ensure expeditious  contact with grieving family members."
"I have directed that in the future I sign each letter," he said.
Other officials and candidates have fingered the autopen as an excuse to  avoid taking responsibility for documents that appeared to bear their names. One  was Enron executive Kenneth Lay, who was convicted of fraud, conspiracy and  lying to banks despite his lawyers' arguments that he shouldn't be held  accountable for documents signed by autopen. His conviction was later vacated on  other grounds.
So how to tell the difference between a real signature and an autopen  version?
Koschal says the best way to detect a fake is to lay the signature in  question over a known autopen version and hold the two documents up to a light.  If they're exactly the same, chances are that the top one was created with an  autopen. But presidents often create multiple autopen signatures to make it less  obvious when they're letting a machine do the work.
As for Obama's autopen signature on the extension of Patriot Act powers, it  may pass the constitutional test, but not Koschal's.
"I'd pay peanuts for it," the autograph authenticator said. "It's not a real  signature."
Source: Yahoo
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