- It all hinged on a document that the Sharif family had produced in an attempt to distance the prime minister from questions about who owned four properties in an upscale part of London.
- The document was purported to be written in February 2006 but court-appointed investigators concluded that it was forged, noting that it used the Calibri font, a Microsoft licensed typeface that was not commercially available at the time.
I do too, and I have, although it's been awhile. When I was in private practice (as a lawyer), I got hooked on Bembo for all of my non-court stuff. Sadly court submissions were pretty limited; Times New Roman was pretty much what everyone used, while the appellate courts in my state required it, Courier, Arial, or Verdana. It made me sad every time.
I'd never come across Bembo, and just looked it up and it is very pleasing. Extremely comforting, somehow, like a museum. I then investigated and the National Gallery in London (where I spent hours as a kid) uses it for its publications, so perhaps that's why I find it soothing. I like Gill Sans for similar reasons (London tube map). Most of the writing I do is film scripts, which is even more restrictive than appellate courts: only courier allowed! I kind of love courier though, in a gross way. There's something honest about it.