@rangerrebew@Cyber Liberty@roamer_1I looked at the three signatures. The signature on the two subpoenas are close enough to be the same person. The other signature back in September is not like those two.
However, he was on his death bed and likely his sight was poor, he had little control of his hand/fingers, and he signed however he could to get it done. No doubt there were witnesses there to attest to he signed them.
Here is a case just like that:
I was the Judge of the Early Voting Ballot Board. We examined every mail in ballot to determine it was completed by that voter. There are laws how to do that and we had to follow them. There are two signatures to compare on the ballot materials. One on the envelope that contained the ballot envelope and the signature on the request for a ballot.
In this case, they did not match. Because they did not match, we obtained the original document the voter signed when the voter was added to the voter list. That signature did not match either of the two other signatures. The committee voted to reject that ballot.
When a ballot was rejected, as the Judge, I had to send a rejection letter to the voter explaining why the ballot was rejected. My phone number was there if the voter wanted further information. The husband of the woman called me and said she was dying and those two signatures on the ballot material were hers but she couldn't control her hand/fingers. I explained the process to him so he would understand why we could not accept the ballot. I felt bad about that and told him so but we had no other option than to reject the ballot.
Likely the same thing happened to Cummings and that is why his signature in September looks nothing like the two on the subpoenas and those two he signed right then on his death bed also did not look the same.