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Counterfeit United States currency

Counterfeiting of the currency of the United States is widely attempted. According to the United States Department of Treasury, an estimated $70 million in counterfeit bills are in circulation, or approximately 1 note in counterfeits for every 10,000 in genuine currency, with an upper bound of $200 million counterfeit, or 1 counterfeit per 4,000 genuine notes.[1][2] However, these numbers are based on annual seizure rates on counterfeiting, and the actual stock of counterfeit money is uncertain because some counterfeit notes successfully circulate for a few transactions.

Counterfeit warning printed on the reverse of a 4 shilling Colonial currency in 1776 from Delaware Colony
American 18th–19th century iron counterfeit coin mold for making fake Spanish milled dollars and U.S. half dollars
Anti-counterfeiting features on a series 1993 U.S. $20 bill
The security strip of a U.S. $20 bill glows under black light as a safeguard against counterfeiting
Counterfeit 100 dollar bill, series of 1974 but probably made later. Over-stamped with "Contrefaçon" on both sides. On display at the British Museum, London

History edit

Article I, Section 8 of the U.S. Constitution gives Congress the power to "provide for the Punishment of counterfeiting the Securities and current Coin of the United States". This has been considered by federal courts to be an exception to freedom of speech.

Counterfeiting was so prevalent in the early nineteenth century that contemporary accounts like those from author John Neal claimed that as much as half of the US currency in circulation was counterfeit.[3] By the 1830s, American newspapers began listing instructions for identifying counterfeits.[4] Because currency was issued by individual banks, there were approximately 5,400 types of counterfeit bills in the US by the 1860s.[5] Shortly after the Civil War, it was estimated that one third to one half of the nation's currency was counterfeit.[6] Counterfeit money thus posed a major threat to the economy and financial system.

When the Secret Service was founded in 1865, its primary task was to minimize counterfeiting. In 2001, the U.S. Treasury estimated the prevalence of counterfeit U.S. currency in circulation at less than 0.01%.[7]

Operation Bernhard edit

During World War II, Nazi Germany successfully produced high-quality counterfeits of American dollar and Bank of England pound notes, although few ever were circulated thoroughly.

Superdollar edit

Superdollars, very high quality counterfeit one hundred-dollar bills, were some of the most widely distributed counterfeit American dollar bills and were still being produced after 2007. The Congressional Research Service has conducted a study and concluded with an accusation that North Korea was responsible for their production, but Pyongyang denied any involvement with Superdollar.[8]

Peru 2001 CB-B2 series $100 bill incident edit

In 2005, Peruvian Banks ceased to accept $100 bills from the 2001 series CB-B2, due to a detection in a series of counterfeit bills in Peruvian circulation. The differences between them and genuine bills were reportedly minuscule and difficult to detect.[9] According to Peruvian news reports, a printing plate from the Bureau of Engraving and Printing was stolen by a criminal, with possible links to al-Qaeda, and the plate was likely used to produce the counterfeit bills.[10]

Operation Gait $100 bills edit

Bills forged by Anatasios Arnaouti in the UK (2005).[citation needed]

"Federal Reserve Bonds" edit

In recent years, metal boxes of fraudulent Federal Reserve Notes in astronomically high denominations (often in $100 million, $500 million, or $1 billion) and often with coupons attached have turned up in various Eastern countries such as the Philippines or Malaysia.[citation needed] In many cases, the notes are claimed to be part of a lost trove of secretly issued Federal Reserve Notes, and are special or not known to the public due to secrecy. Also, the bonds are sometimes treated to make them look old by getting them wet and moldy. However, the Federal Reserve has never issued notes in such denominations, and has issued warnings against them on its website.[11] Additionally, there are several errors in the bonds as well as the metal boxes, many of them anachronistic.[12] The Federal Reserve Bank of New York writes that

The Federal Reserve is aware of several scams involving high denomination Federal Reserve notes and bonds, often in denominations of 100 million or 500 million dollars, dating back to the 1930s, usually 1934. In each of these schemes, fraudulent instruments are claimed to be part of a long-lost supply of recently discovered Federal Reserve notes or bonds.

Fraudsters often falsely claim that the purported Federal Reserve notes or bonds that they hold are somehow very special and are not known to the public because they are so secret. Fraudsters have attempted to sell these worthless instruments, or to redeem or exchange them at banks and other financial institutions, or to secure loans or obtain lines of credit using the fictitious instruments as collateral.

[11]

There have been several instances where people have used the fraudulent notes as legitimate currency, often resulting in arrest. In March 2006, agents from ICE and the Secret Service seized 250 notes, each bearing a denomination of $1,000,000,000 (one billion dollars) from a West Hollywood apartment.[13] The suspect had previously been arrested on federal charges for attempting to smuggle more than $37,000 in currency into the U.S. following a trip to South Korea in 2002. Much of the artwork on the notes was duplicated from the real $1000 bill, including the portrait of Grover Cleveland.[14] Another incident involving similar notes bearing a denomination each of $500,000,000, occurred in Chiasso, Switzerland, in June 2009.

Materials and prevention edit

In the United States, counterfeiters in small operations develop the fake currency using tools which often include printers, an iron, and green colored water.[15] Upon collecting bills, the Federal Reserve checks all notes, destroying any whose appearance fails to fit that of a federal bill.

Notable American counterfeiters edit

  • Peter Alston, the late 18th-century and early 19th-century counterfeiter and river pirate, who is believed to be Little Harpe's associate and partner in the murder of notorious outlaw leader Samuel Mason in 1803
  • Philip Alston, was an 18th-century counterfeiter both before and after the American Revolution in Virginia and the Carolinas before the war, and later in Kentucky and Illinois afterwards.
  • Edward Bonney, an alleged counterfeiter in northern Indiana, who escaped to Nauvoo, Illinois, was a bounty hunter and amateur detective, posed as a counterfeiter, to apprehend the murderers of Colonel George Davenport and infiltrate the Midwestern Banditti of the Prairie.
  • Abel Buell, American colonialist and republican who went from altering five-pound note engraving plates to publishing the first map of the new United States created by an American.
  • Mary Butterworth, a counterfeiter in colonial America.
  • Mike DeBardeleben, was sent to prison for counterfeiting the $20 bill
  • John Duff, was a counterfeiter, hunter, and soldier, who served in George Rogers Clark's campaign, to capture the Illinois country, for the Patriot American side, during the Revolutionary War.
  • David Farnsworth, was a British Loyalist American counterfeiter and spy, in the American Revolutionary War. He was hanged for his crimes, after George Washington had taken a personalised interest in his case.
  • Emerich Juettner aka Edward Mueller, documented in Mister 880, was possibly the longest uncaught counterfeiter in history.[16] For ten or more years he eluded government authorities while he printed and spent fake $1 bills in his New York neighborhood.[17]
  • John A. Murrell, a bandit operating in the United States along the Mississippi River in the mid-nineteenth century. He was convicted for his crimes in the Circuit Court of Madison County, Tennessee, and incarcerated in the Tennessee State Penitentiary, modeled after the Auburn penal system, from 1834 to 1844.
  • Sturdivant Gang, a multi-generational group of American counterfeiters whose criminal activities took place over a 50-year period from Colonial Connecticut to the Illinois frontier.
  • Albert Talton, who was sent to prison for counterfeiting the United States one hundred-dollar bill and the United States twenty-dollar bill. He produced over 7 million dollars in counterfeit US currency using a standard inkjet printer, and was convicted and sent to prison in May 2009.
  • Samuel C. Upham, the first known counterfeiter of Confederate money during the American Civil War. His activities began or became known in early July 1862.
  • Arthur Williams, imprisoned in 2007 for counterfeiting the United States one hundred-dollar bill.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Press Release on Joint Report on Use and Counterfeiting of U.S. Currency Abroad". 2006-10-25.
  2. ^ "7. Estimates of Counterfeiting" (PDF), The Use and Counterfeiting of United States Currency Abroad, Part 3, US Department of Treasury, Sep 2006, p. 70
  3. ^ Mihm, Stephen (2007). A Nation of Counterfeiters: Capitalists, Con Men, and the Making of the United States. Cambridge, Massachusetts: University Press. p. 6. ISBN 9780674026575.
  4. ^ Murphy, Sharon Ann (2017). Other People's Money: How Banking Worked in the Early American Republic. Baltimore, Maryland: Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 59–60. ISBN 9781421421759.
  5. ^ Murphy, Sharon Ann (2017). Other People's Money: How Banking Worked in the Early American Republic. Baltimore, Maryland: Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 157–158. ISBN 9781421421759.
  6. ^ Straus, Jacob R; Reese, Shawn (February 13, 2023). "Design of United States Paper Currency". Congressional Research Reports. Retrieved 27 February 2023.
  7. ^ "Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco: How much money in circulation is counterfeit?". October 13, 2013.
  8. ^ "Congressional Research Service: North Korean Counterfeiting of U.S. Currency" (PDF). 12 October 2013.
  9. ^ "U.S. Secret Service Trains Peruvians on Fake Bills (Update1)". Bloomberg. 12 April 2005.
  10. ^ . El Comercio (in Spanish). April 15, 2005. Archived from the original on May 28, 2007.[text–source integrity?]
  11. ^ a b "New York Fed Archived Fraud Alerts – FEDERAL RESERVE BANK of NEW YORK". www.newyorkfed.org.
  12. ^ "USA 1934 Series Bonds". 1 January 2013.
  13. ^ . Communitydispatch.com. Archived from the original on 2013-01-18. Retrieved 2014-05-09.
  14. ^ http://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/0315062billion1.html Fake Billion Dollar Bills
  15. ^ . Archived from the original on 2018-07-10. Retrieved 2018-07-15.
  16. ^ . Dinepride.com. Archived from the original on 2012-02-22. Retrieved 2012-10-18.
  17. ^ [1] May 12, 2008, at the Wayback Machine

External links edit

  • The Economics of Counterfeiting By Elena Quercioli and Lones Smith, Econometrica, May 2015
  • Counterfeit Money. By Elena Quercioli and Lones Smith, Encyclopedia of Law and Economics, Edited by Juergen Backaus, Springer New York, 2014
  • Article by the Christian Science Monitor: "Made in South America: new breed of fake US dollars" Thu Apr 14, 4:00 AM ET
  • "The Use and Counterfeiting of United States Currency Abroad" United States Department of Treasury
  • Estimating the Volume of Counterfeit U.S. Currency in Circulation Worldwide: Data and Extrapolation. By Ruth Judson and Richard Porter, 1 March 2010.

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For fantasy United States currency that is clearly used for jokes see Promotional United States fake currency This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Counterfeit United States currency news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2007 Learn how and when to remove this template message Counterfeiting of the currency of the United States is widely attempted According to the United States Department of Treasury an estimated 70 million in counterfeit bills are in circulation or approximately 1 note in counterfeits for every 10 000 in genuine currency with an upper bound of 200 million counterfeit or 1 counterfeit per 4 000 genuine notes 1 2 However these numbers are based on annual seizure rates on counterfeiting and the actual stock of counterfeit money is uncertain because some counterfeit notes successfully circulate for a few transactions Counterfeit warning printed on the reverse of a 4 shilling Colonial currency in 1776 from Delaware ColonyAmerican 18th 19th century iron counterfeit coin mold for making fake Spanish milled dollars and U S half dollarsAnti counterfeiting features on a series 1993 U S 20 billThe security strip of a U S 20 bill glows under black light as a safeguard against counterfeitingCounterfeit 100 dollar bill series of 1974 but probably made later Over stamped with Contrefacon on both sides On display at the British Museum London Contents 1 History 1 1 Operation Bernhard 1 2 Superdollar 1 3 Peru 2001 CB B2 series 100 bill incident 1 4 Operation Gait 100 bills 2 Federal Reserve Bonds 3 Materials and prevention 4 Notable American counterfeiters 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory editArticle I Section 8 of the U S Constitution gives Congress the power to provide for the Punishment of counterfeiting the Securities and current Coin of the United States This has been considered by federal courts to be an exception to freedom of speech Counterfeiting was so prevalent in the early nineteenth century that contemporary accounts like those from author John Neal claimed that as much as half of the US currency in circulation was counterfeit 3 By the 1830s American newspapers began listing instructions for identifying counterfeits 4 Because currency was issued by individual banks there were approximately 5 400 types of counterfeit bills in the US by the 1860s 5 Shortly after the Civil War it was estimated that one third to one half of the nation s currency was counterfeit 6 Counterfeit money thus posed a major threat to the economy and financial system When the Secret Service was founded in 1865 its primary task was to minimize counterfeiting In 2001 the U S Treasury estimated the prevalence of counterfeit U S currency in circulation at less than 0 01 7 Operation Bernhard edit Main article Operation Bernhard During World War II Nazi Germany successfully produced high quality counterfeits of American dollar and Bank of England pound notes although few ever were circulated thoroughly Superdollar edit Main article Superdollar Superdollars very high quality counterfeit one hundred dollar bills were some of the most widely distributed counterfeit American dollar bills and were still being produced after 2007 The Congressional Research Service has conducted a study and concluded with an accusation that North Korea was responsible for their production but Pyongyang denied any involvement with Superdollar 8 Peru 2001 CB B2 series 100 bill incident edit In 2005 Peruvian Banks ceased to accept 100 bills from the 2001 series CB B2 due to a detection in a series of counterfeit bills in Peruvian circulation The differences between them and genuine bills were reportedly minuscule and difficult to detect 9 According to Peruvian news reports a printing plate from the Bureau of Engraving and Printing was stolen by a criminal with possible links to al Qaeda and the plate was likely used to produce the counterfeit bills 10 Operation Gait 100 bills edit Bills forged by Anatasios Arnaouti in the UK 2005 citation needed Federal Reserve Bonds editIn recent years metal boxes of fraudulent Federal Reserve Notes in astronomically high denominations often in 100 million 500 million or 1 billion and often with coupons attached have turned up in various Eastern countries such as the Philippines or Malaysia citation needed In many cases the notes are claimed to be part of a lost trove of secretly issued Federal Reserve Notes and are special or not known to the public due to secrecy Also the bonds are sometimes treated to make them look old by getting them wet and moldy However the Federal Reserve has never issued notes in such denominations and has issued warnings against them on its website 11 Additionally there are several errors in the bonds as well as the metal boxes many of them anachronistic 12 The Federal Reserve Bank of New York writes that The Federal Reserve is aware of several scams involving high denomination Federal Reserve notes and bonds often in denominations of 100 million or 500 million dollars dating back to the 1930s usually 1934 In each of these schemes fraudulent instruments are claimed to be part of a long lost supply of recently discovered Federal Reserve notes or bonds Fraudsters often falsely claim that the purported Federal Reserve notes or bonds that they hold are somehow very special and are not known to the public because they are so secret Fraudsters have attempted to sell these worthless instruments or to redeem or exchange them at banks and other financial institutions or to secure loans or obtain lines of credit using the fictitious instruments as collateral 11 There have been several instances where people have used the fraudulent notes as legitimate currency often resulting in arrest In March 2006 agents from ICE and the Secret Service seized 250 notes each bearing a denomination of 1 000 000 000 one billion dollars from a West Hollywood apartment 13 The suspect had previously been arrested on federal charges for attempting to smuggle more than 37 000 in currency into the U S following a trip to South Korea in 2002 Much of the artwork on the notes was duplicated from the real 1000 bill including the portrait of Grover Cleveland 14 Another incident involving similar notes bearing a denomination each of 500 000 000 occurred in Chiasso Switzerland in June 2009 Materials and prevention editIn the United States counterfeiters in small operations develop the fake currency using tools which often include printers an iron and green colored water 15 Upon collecting bills the Federal Reserve checks all notes destroying any whose appearance fails to fit that of a federal bill Notable American counterfeiters editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Peter Alston the late 18th century and early 19th century counterfeiter and river pirate who is believed to be Little Harpe s associate and partner in the murder of notorious outlaw leader Samuel Mason in 1803 Philip Alston was an 18th century counterfeiter both before and after the American Revolution in Virginia and the Carolinas before the war and later in Kentucky and Illinois afterwards Edward Bonney an alleged counterfeiter in northern Indiana who escaped to Nauvoo Illinois was a bounty hunter and amateur detective posed as a counterfeiter to apprehend the murderers of Colonel George Davenport and infiltrate the Midwestern Banditti of the Prairie Abel Buell American colonialist and republican who went from altering five pound note engraving plates to publishing the first map of the new United States created by an American Mary Butterworth a counterfeiter in colonial America Mike DeBardeleben was sent to prison for counterfeiting the 20 bill John Duff was a counterfeiter hunter and soldier who served in George Rogers Clark s campaign to capture the Illinois country for the Patriot American side during the Revolutionary War David Farnsworth was a British Loyalist American counterfeiter and spy in the American Revolutionary War He was hanged for his crimes after George Washington had taken a personalised interest in his case Emerich Juettner aka Edward Mueller documented in Mister 880 was possibly the longest uncaught counterfeiter in history 16 For ten or more years he eluded government authorities while he printed and spent fake 1 bills in his New York neighborhood 17 John A Murrell a bandit operating in the United States along the Mississippi River in the mid nineteenth century He was convicted for his crimes in the Circuit Court of Madison County Tennessee and incarcerated in the Tennessee State Penitentiary modeled after the Auburn penal system from 1834 to 1844 Sturdivant Gang a multi generational group of American counterfeiters whose criminal activities took place over a 50 year period from Colonial Connecticut to the Illinois frontier Albert Talton who was sent to prison for counterfeiting the United States one hundred dollar bill and the United States twenty dollar bill He produced over 7 million dollars in counterfeit US currency using a standard inkjet printer and was convicted and sent to prison in May 2009 Samuel C Upham the first known counterfeiter of Confederate money during the American Civil War His activities began or became known in early July 1862 Arthur Williams imprisoned in 2007 for counterfeiting the United States one hundred dollar bill See also editPromotional United States fake currencyPortals nbsp United States nbsp NumismaticsReferences edit Press Release on Joint Report on Use and Counterfeiting of U S Currency Abroad 2006 10 25 7 Estimates of Counterfeiting PDF The Use and Counterfeiting of United States Currency Abroad Part 3 US Department of Treasury Sep 2006 p 70 Mihm Stephen 2007 A Nation of Counterfeiters Capitalists Con Men and the Making of the United States Cambridge Massachusetts University Press p 6 ISBN 9780674026575 Murphy Sharon Ann 2017 Other People s Money How Banking Worked in the Early American Republic Baltimore Maryland Johns Hopkins University Press pp 59 60 ISBN 9781421421759 Murphy Sharon Ann 2017 Other People s Money How Banking Worked in the Early American Republic Baltimore Maryland Johns Hopkins University Press pp 157 158 ISBN 9781421421759 Straus Jacob R Reese Shawn February 13 2023 Design of United States Paper Currency Congressional Research Reports Retrieved 27 February 2023 Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco How much money in circulation is counterfeit October 13 2013 Congressional Research Service North Korean Counterfeiting of U S Currency PDF 12 October 2013 U S Secret Service Trains Peruvians on Fake Bills Update1 Bloomberg 12 April 2005 Es imposible controlar la legitimidad del dolar El Comercio in Spanish April 15 2005 Archived from the original on May 28 2007 text source integrity a b New York Fed Archived Fraud Alerts FEDERAL RESERVE BANK of NEW YORK www newyorkfed org USA 1934 Series Bonds 1 January 2013 Homeland Security Agents Seize Billion Dollar Bogus Federal Reserve Notes Communitydispatch com Archived from the original on 2013 01 18 Retrieved 2014 05 09 http www thesmokinggun com archive 0315062billion1 html Fake Billion Dollar Bills Police find more than 1 000 in counterfeit cash narcotics at NE side home Archived from the original on 2018 07 10 Retrieved 2018 07 15 Dine Pride View topic Bismarck Counterfeit Case Dinepride com Archived from the original on 2012 02 22 Retrieved 2012 10 18 1 Archived May 12 2008 at the Wayback MachineExternal links editThe Economics of Counterfeiting By Elena Quercioli and Lones Smith Econometrica May 2015 Counterfeit Money By Elena Quercioli and Lones Smith Encyclopedia of Law and Economics Edited by Juergen Backaus Springer New York 2014 Article by the Christian Science Monitor Made in South America new breed of fake US dollars Thu Apr 14 4 00 AM ET The Use and Counterfeiting of United States Currency Abroad United States Department of Treasury Estimating the Volume of Counterfeit U S Currency in Circulation Worldwide Data and Extrapolation By Ruth Judson and Richard Porter 1 March 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Counterfeit United States currency amp oldid 1185320801, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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