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Home/Legal Glossary/Authentication

Authentication

/ɔːˌθɛntɪˈkeɪʃən/
EvidenceLegal Rule: Federal Rules of Evidence, Rules 901-902

Definition

Authentication is the process of proving that an item of evidence is what it purports to be. The proponent must produce sufficient evidence for a reasonable juror to find the item genuine. Authentication applies to documents, electronic communications, photographs, recordings, and physical objects. The standard requires only a prima facie showing — the jury ultimately decides questions of authenticity.

In the Courtroom

In court, authentication typically occurs through witness testimony identifying a document, recognizing a voice on a recording, or establishing a chain of custody for physical evidence. For electronic evidence such as emails or text messages, authentication may require testimony about the sender, distinctive characteristics of the communication, or evidence of the electronic system that produced it. Certain documents are self-authenticating under Rule 902, including certified public records, official publications, newspapers, and business records accompanied by a certification.

Examples

1

Attorney: "I'm handing the witness what has been marked as Plaintiff's Exhibit 3. Mr. Davis, do you recognize this email?" Witness: "Yes, I sent this email to the defendant on June 5th. I recognize my email address and signature block."

2

Opposing Counsel: "Objection, authentication. There is no testimony establishing that this text message actually came from my client's phone." Judge: "Sustained. Counsel, you need to authenticate the source of this message."

3

Attorney: "Officer Martinez, when you collected this evidence at the scene, what did you do with it?" Witness: "I placed it in an evidence bag, sealed it, initialed the seal, and logged it into the evidence room." Attorney: "And is the seal still intact?" Witness: "Yes, it is."

Common Mistakes

Students sometimes believe that authentication requires absolute proof of genuineness. In reality, Rule 901(a) only requires evidence "sufficient to support a finding" that the item is what the proponent claims. The ultimate question of authenticity is for the jury.

Landmark Cases

United States v. Vayner(2014)

United States v. Vayner, 769 F.3d 125 (2d Cir. 2014)

Held that a printout of a social media profile page was not properly authenticated merely by showing it existed online, requiring additional evidence linking it to the defendant.

Lorraine v. Markel American Insurance Co.(2007)

Lorraine v. Markel American Insurance Co., 241 F.R.D. 534 (D. Md. 2007)

Provided a comprehensive framework for authenticating electronically stored information, addressing emails, websites, digital photographs, and computer-generated records.

United States v. Browne(2016)

United States v. Browne, 834 F.3d 403 (3d Cir. 2016)

Established that circumstantial evidence, including contextual clues within online communications, can satisfy the authentication requirement for social media evidence.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do you authenticate electronic evidence like emails and text messages?

Electronic evidence can be authenticated through testimony identifying the sender, distinctive characteristics of the communication (such as content, context, or email addresses), evidence about the system that produced it, or circumstantial evidence linking it to the purported author. Courts increasingly accept metadata and hash values as authentication tools.

What documents are self-authenticating under the Federal Rules?

Rule 902 provides that certain documents are self-authenticating, meaning they do not require extrinsic evidence of authenticity. These include certified public records, official publications, newspapers, trade inscriptions, acknowledged documents, commercial paper, and certified business records accompanied by a declaration.

What is the standard of proof for authentication?

Authentication requires only a prima facie showing — evidence sufficient to support a finding that the item is what the proponent claims. This is a relatively low bar under Rule 901(a). The jury ultimately decides questions of genuineness; the judge merely screens whether enough evidence exists for the question to go to the jury.

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