Thanks for the info, I use Outlook 2003 as so does the other person. I do
keep my return receipts turn off on all my email products. Two years I was
doing high risk training for the Special Forces in Iraq and Afghanistan for
this company and when I came home to get paid, he claims we changed our
original contract and agreed to give me his stock (worthless) for my pay and
no money, my real contract that is signed by both parties stated 150.00 per
hour. No one has seen the emails other than a printed copy he sent to the
arbitrator on the copy both the send and from was his own email address, when
we questioned this, he claimed he sent it to himself first for his record
then sent it to me. We are trying to subpoena his computer and need to know
what is possible if anything to find. Comcast is both our ISP and they don't
keep anything after it is downloaded off their servers. He is a crook and I
don't know how well he can dummy up an email of if there is a way to show a
fraudulent email or receipt.
"JP" wrote:
I guess the OP would have to come back and state what mail program HE
is using. And if he is using Outlook, whether return receipts are
turned on.
--JP
On Sep 20, 11:50 pm, "Dmitry Streblechenko"
wrote:
And Comcast cannot send read receipts.
Delivery receipts are sent by the server (but that does not mean the
receipient read the message).
Read receipts are sent by the client app (Outlook) *if* the client is set to
send them (I always have read receips turned off)
Unless both you and the other side are using mail servers to store messages
that neither of you can control, nothing can be proved either way:
PST is a local file, and it is easy to have anything you please there, dated
any date you want.
--
Dmitry Streblechenko (MVP)http://www.dimastr.com/
OutlookSpy - Outlook, CDO
and MAPI Developer Tool
-"JP" wrote in message