Six weeks after surgery left Denise Harmon’s dominant arm in a cast, she received an unexpected call from her bank. A branch employee explained that her husband, Dale, was attempting to withdraw $60,000 from their joint money market account using a written authorization signed in her name. Denise immediately realized something was wrong. She had been unable to write since her operation, making it impossible for her to have signed any document just days earlier. Instead of reacting emotionally, she calmly informed the bank about her medical condition and asked staff to continue their normal verification process while alerting the bank’s fraud department to the suspected forgery.
Denise had already begun documenting concerns weeks before the call. After discovering unusual financial activity and a page filled with repeated attempts to imitate her signature, she consulted a retired forensic document examiner and an attorney. Together, they gathered medical records showing her inability to write, preserved the practice sheet as evidence, and asked the bank to require verbal confirmation for large withdrawals from the account. Those precautionary steps ensured the bank contacted her before processing the transaction. While bank employees reviewed the authorization, they also examined supporting documentation and security records related to the attempted withdrawal.
The internal investigation uncovered additional irregularities. Financial records suggested that several previous transactions had also been completed using documents Denise said she had never signed. Handwriting specialists reviewed the paperwork, while the bank referred the matter to the appropriate authorities for further examination. As the evidence was evaluated, the disputed funds remained protected, and legal proceedings addressed both the questioned financial transactions and the couple’s broader financial relationship. Denise later worked with her attorney to separate her finances and ensure that funds connected to her medical recovery remained secure.
As her physical rehabilitation progressed, Denise gradually regained the ability to write again. Practicing her signature became part of her therapy, symbolizing more than physical recovery—it represented reclaiming control over her own identity and finances. Looking back, she credited careful documentation, early legal advice, and the bank’s verification procedures with preventing a much larger financial loss. Her experience reinforced an important lesson: when something doesn’t seem right, preserving records, seeking professional guidance, and acting methodically can be just as important as acting quickly.