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I was thinking recently about the amount of fakes that are authenticated by GAI, so I went through my items and located 5 pieces authenticated by them. I looked up the corresponding number on their website (what's left of it anyway) and found that two items aren't even listed. The database shows no item exists. Two of the three items I know are legit as they were from a private Willie Mays signing a few years back and included the Say Hey authentication plus the MLB authentication. The other three I believe are bad. Two are Stan Musial 8x10's and one is Bart Starr 8x10.
What I find interesting is that you would assume that people who have legitimate authentic photo's used the GAI service. There should be a quantity that are real! But, it appears that almost everything I come across is FAKE! Did they authenticate anything real, or did they have a network set up where they had people produce known forgeries and then they authenticated them? It seems to be the latter. I wish I could remember who I bought these three from and contact them. You wouldn't think they would spend their time on Musial and Starr. Any opinions on this?
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It appears that the Mantle, Mays, Williams, DiMaggio, etc. that come with the GAI Mike Baker COAs are almost certainly 100% fake. I have not seen one yet that I judge to be authentic.
Reportedly, the Steve Sipe signed GAI COAs are supposed to be more reliable. I have not seen as many of these as the Baker COAs, yet, I am not comfortable with much of what I see with a Sipe signed COA. As an example, I have been studying Mariano Rivera autographs for the past few months. There are a ton of them with GAI/Sipe COAs and they almost always look consistantly different from the Steiners, PSA and JSA. And they are always priced significantly less than similar items certed by one of the other companies. Take that for what you will.
Hopefully others can chime in with more details.
Agreed. The last name is almost always little more than a straight line.
Also, the M appears to be very heavy with a lot of pressure. The real Mariano has a much lighter touch.
I have several Rivera sigs I obtained in-person at shows. At a show, he signs slowly and methodically.
Here is a Rivera ball I obtained in person at a Yankee Fanfest in January or February of 1996:
I bought this from a reputable in-person collector and I believe it to be authentic. It also has a JSA COA. This was signed 4/11/2010. The M and R are radically different than his rookie signature and the once clear letters are now a series of loops.
Here is an especially rancid Rivera. SLOOOOOOWLY drawn forgery. The seller big.johnreds stole the in-person image from another auction. I can't pinpoint it, but I've seen this image before on an item that was good a few weeks ago.
Stolen in-person pic.
What they had was a hack of an "authenticator" ( the one that has his own company now ) that simply passed out THOUSANDS of coas. The old Global paid dearly for it and thankfully, Sipe is doing his best to clean it up. Just contact him with your concerns.
This same "authenticator" that ruined GAI is still demonstrating the same behavior at his own company.
Here is what I don't understand. In order to hand out thousands of coa's, they would have to receive thousands of bad signatures. It's like a certain group is aware that if they send it to GAI, it will pass, but not if they send it to other companies. Therefore, they must be in some type of arrangement with them, in my opinion.
But, what about legitimate signatures being sent in? You would think that at some point someone, somewhere has sent them legit signatures to be authenticated. How come we never see those being sold anywhere? There has to be some good signatures with GAI stickers on them. How is it that we only see the bad. So it seems like they have their own ring going on.
Keep in mind that GAI is out of business, and has been succeeded by "GA" (Global Authority).
But I think the answer is that most genuine GAIs of any value are de-certed when they come to market, and perhaps sent to another authenticator.
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