Difference between revisions of "How Do I Prepare an Affidavit?"

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Exhibits can be almost anything: a receipt, a printout of your <span class="noglossary">child's</span> school's website, a letter, a doctor's note, a company search result, a report card, a speeding ticket, a photograph, an appraisal, a bank statement, a Valentine's Day card...,pretty much anything. If something can be reduced to paper, it can be an exhibit.
Exhibits can be almost anything: a receipt, a printout of your <span class="noglossary">child's</span> school's website, a letter, a doctor's note, a company search result, a report card, a speeding ticket, a photograph, an appraisal, a bank statement, a Valentine's Day card...,pretty much anything. If something can be reduced to paper, it can be an exhibit.


When you attach an exhibit, you have to introduce it in your affidavit. You can't just attach reams of documents to the back. You have to explain what the document is in your affidavit and say that the document you are attaching is a "true copy" of the original. Each exhibit is identified sequentially by a letter, "A," "B," "C," and so forth. For example:
When you attach an exhibit, you have to introduce it in your affidavit. You can't just attach reams of documents to the back. You have to explain what the document is in your affidavit and say that the document you are attaching is a "true copy" of the original (note that the exhibits to an affidavit are almost always scanned or photocopied reproductions of the original, and original receipts, cards, photos, etc. are reproduced this way to ensure the pages are all the same size). Each exhibit is identified sequentially by a letter, "A," "B," "C," and so forth. For example:
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