Golden Arm
No, the Certification Committee did not really address the intelligence of the inspector in the re-design of the stamp. It was a comment I had at the time that everyone else on the committee was complaining about getting "redfinger". (I still get it once in a while.)
I did not like the new carrier either. Staff said they could not get the old button type metal stamp carriers anymore. I had a source for the button cases, but that was not listened to. The new carrier was the most compact pocket stamp we had to choose from during the evaluation and decision making process. By the way, the ink is not indellible.
The real "amusement" I had, was a case when I was excoriated for rejecting all the welds on a high school gymnasium expansion by the contractor. He called down the school officials to get me removed. I had color macro photos of the best and most egregious welds. When the contractor finally furnished the welder qualification records, I pointed out that the signature and stamp on the welders certificates were mine! I also showed the contractor and the school officials that the welding position qualification block said "2-F" (good for flat and horizontal fillet welds only, and not in the 3-G, 4-F and 4-G positions on the welds in question.). I also had a record of every qualification paper I ever issued, and showed that the papers presented were forgeries. I also showed this to the School Officials, who came down on my side.
True satisfaction came when that contractor hired some welders with NYC Welder's Licenses. They removed the bad welds, and deposited nice, code compliant, new welds. The contractor and the School Officials (Non-Welding civilians) could readily see the difference. The contractor later apologized to me, explaining that he had been mislead, and didn't know how bad the welds were until he saw the new ones.
Then I went to do a post weld inspection on a completed and sheetrocked vaulted roof rehabilitation, in another school, in the same school district. One of the school officials had been up in the vaulted roof area during that welding, and remembered that those welds did not look like the welds produced by the NYC Licensed Welders. The official ordered that contractor to cut open spaces for me to conduct an inspection. When I took more pictures and rejected most of those welds, the contractor rebelled and threatened to sue, etc.
The school officials would have none of it. They showed me more welder qualification paperwork that was obviously poorly and incorrectly filled out and not signed off by anyone. I suggested (In front of the Contractor) that it was time to consider filing charges for "Offering a false instrument for filing".
All the sheetrock was removed,and repair welds took a week and a half.
I am amused, because shoddy contractors who didn't give a damn about the weld quality in a school, got caught and had to take money out of their pockets to complete their contracts. The testing lab I worked for at the time still gets business from that and other school districts because of those incidents. The lab also gets their concrete, masonry and soils work because of it.
The first contractor has also had me comment on other welder qualification paperwork for other contracts since then. He became a real believer. So, I think his apology was sincere.
Now, this does not address a counterfeited stamp. That is something different altogether.
Joe Kane