LATEST NEWS
October 13.2008
Treasury Hires Investment Adviser Under the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act
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October 13.2008
Plenary Remarks by Assistant Secretary for International Affairs Clay Lowery at the Annual International Monetary Fund and World Bank Meetings
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October 13.2008
The global financial crisis has yet to peak, and individual governments must now take appropriate measures to deal with its effects, Russia's finance minster said.
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October 12.2008
Recent U.S. Actions to Halt Iran�s Procurement Practices for Attempted Acquisition of WMD-Related Items
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October 12.2008
Treasury Designates FARC International Commission Members
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October 12.2008
Statement by Secretary Henry M. Paulson, Jr. at the Development Committee Meeting
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October 12.2008
One-in-Five Speak Spanish In Four States New Census Bureau Data Show How America Lives
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October 12.2008
Una de Cada Cinco Personas Habla Español en Cuatro Estados Nuevos Datos de la Oficina del Censo Muestran Cómo Viven los Estados Unidos
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October 12.2008
Capital Expenditures Rise 14 Percent to Record High in 2006
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October 12.2008
Nation’s Housing Stock Reaches 128 Million
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October 12.2008
Federal Spending Increased 4.4 Percent in 2007
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October 12.2008
Investment Banks Struggle to Adapt
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GUIDE / Apostille (New York, NY)


Apostille (New York, NY)


Since October 15, 1981, the United States has been part of the 1961 Hague Convention abolishing the Requirement of Legalization for Foreign Public Documents. The Convention provides for the simplified certification of public (including notarized) documents to be used in countries that have joined the convention. Under the Hague Convention, signatory countries have agreed to recognize public documents issued by other signatory countries if those public documents are authenticated by the attachment of an internationally recognized form of authentication known as an " apostille ." The apostille ensures that public documents issued in one signatory country will be recognized as valid in another signatory country.


When a document is to be used in a foreign country, it may be necessary to authenticate the notarization or certification. Foreign countries often require documents to be authenticated before the documents will be accepted in the foreign jurisdiction. An "authentication" certifies the signature and the position of the official who has executed, issued or certified a copy of a document.


The sole function of the apostille is to certify the authenticity of the signature on the document; the capacity in which the person signing the document acted; and the identity of any stamp or seal affixed to the document.


An apostille issued by the New York State Secretary of State is a one page document embossed with the Great Seal of the State of New York . The apostille includes the facsimile signature of the individual issuing the certificate.




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