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Documents signed by the following officials require an apostille issued by the U.S. Department of State:U.S. federal official.U.S. consular officer.A military notary, judge advocate (10 USC 1044a), or a foreign consul diplomatic official registered with the U.S. Department of State's Office of Protocol.
In order to apostille the special power of attorney, it must first be signed and notarized. Please meet with a local notary public near you Once your document has been signed and notarized, go ahead and mail it to our office for processing.
An apostille stamp is generally added to a power of attorney after it has been notarised. Different countries need different levels of legalisation for documents some may just need a notary signature on the power of attorney for it to be legal, while others will need an apostille stamp from the FCO.
In order to apostille your power of attorney, you must mail in the original notarized copy to our office for processing. A power of attorney can only be authenticated from the State the documents were notarized in. The notary must be commissioned and use proper notarial wording for their State.
Here are the general guidelines...Your document must have an original signature.Your document must have a date.There must be no corrections or blanks.The signature(s) must be properly notarized by a New York notary public.The document may be in a foreign language, no translation is required.