A friend asked me if I was interested in reviewing this 1893-O Morgan. He stated he had purchased it and sent it to PCGS for grading, but it came back body-bagged as counterfeit! Owner’s images Images weren’t great but it appeared it might be the wrong reverse for the date and mint. He offered to send it to me for an in-hand review, and I was happy to accept. When received I spent part of my day off morning reviewing it. Weight came in at 27.0 g and it tested silver on a Sigma. But it appears to have the wrong reverse for the date and mint; '93-O's are C3's with the wing gap and berry shown in the following image. This one is a C4; I understand the transition to C4 didn't happen until 1901 for the New Orleans mint. There are 2 reverses for the genuine VAMs, the "O" on this one doesn't match either; both position, shape and tilt are wrong. And there are a number of odd-looking issues including the “D” and the "3" in the date. Interestingly the reverse of the coin in hand does NOT appear to match the selling forum images from the owner... Best, Jack.
Definitely a counterfeit. Looks like the images from the original seller were for a different (fake) received...
I'll take credit for contributing this to your Hall of Shame Morgan dollars. I'm honored to have such an esteemed member of the numismatic integrity community taking the time to examine and put out a caveat emptor public service message. Thank you Jack!
Glad you showed that even some counterfeits have real silver as their base metal, sneaky counterfeiters for sure! Thx Jack!
Would you ever take the job at Ebay, and get their algorithm, AI in check. I do think it would cost them a good half a mil a year, and personally, I think you would be more than worth the money.
I recall several years ago some Morgans being sold on the Chinese site for around $80, claiming to be silver. Because they were so much more expensive than the usual $2 fakes, I thought it was possible that they really were silver, but who knows. The first 1893-O that came up there just now also has the 1901 reverse.
So the seller has 12 negative reviews mostly talking about getting a different and counterfeit coin from the listing images. This 1895-O received looks like it is the same reverse as this 1893-O with the damaged "D":
I never noticed the mint mark is tilting differently on the 93O from their photo and the actual coin sold until you put them side by side. Just to clarify, you are saying the image in the listing ad is different than the actual product sold? If that is true, the seller is knowingly passing counterfeit coins.