Counterfeit cons made in the US

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by mrbrklyn, Jun 27, 2012.

  1. mrbrklyn

    mrbrklyn New Member

    http://www.dailyecho.co.uk/news/9783841.Man_accused_of_making_fake_coins/

     
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  3. Cazkaboom

    Cazkaboom One for all, all for me.

    Thanks for the link, Ruben. It is interesting to hear that the stereotypes that coins are always made in China is totally wrong. This proves a lot.
    This is a scary place to go with coins.
     
  4. mrbrklyn

    mrbrklyn New Member

    Did you see that guys picture? You can't discount what comes from China, but this case just proves how diligent one needs to be. That was circulating coinage. Nobody looks too close at those.
     
  5. areich

    areich America*s Darling

    He looks like an actor from the Sopranos
     
  6. Cazkaboom

    Cazkaboom One for all, all for me.

    That reminds me of somebody from the Sopranos or an old mafia movie.
    True. Much like the Euro or the Canadian "Paper" Money.
     
  7. mrbrklyn

    mrbrklyn New Member

    The Euro -- who knows what that looks like moment to moment. I feel the same way about $20 bills now. If you handed me a counterfiet, I'd think it was a design update by the Treasurey
     
  8. Cazkaboom

    Cazkaboom One for all, all for me.

    I would probably do so too. But I would first look at the series year.
     
  9. mrbrklyn

    mrbrklyn New Member

    I'd just spin it for the portrait and look for the little blue and red lines.

    After that, the bills have changed so much, I'd have no idea.
     
  10. areich

    areich America*s Darling

    what blue and red lines?
     
  11. mrbrklyn

    mrbrklyn New Member

    In the linen of the paper
     
  12. Cazkaboom

    Cazkaboom One for all, all for me.

    But if we switch to plastic like many other countries, I would be at a loss.
     
  13. areich

    areich America*s Darling

    I heard at lunch that someone in greece was making 10 Euro coins. That is one way to fix the deficiet
     
  14. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    Where does the "made in the US" have to do with this story? I don't see anything about fakes made here. Sent here, but not made here.
     
  15. camlov2

    camlov2 Member

    Hampshire not New Hampshire, Europe not US
     
  16. chip

    chip Novice collector

    This was one of the reasons that designs were made to last, and were not often changed. People who know counterfeits study the real thing, it is the reason why so many collectors who have been collecting a long time get a gut feeling about some coins not being the real thing.
     
  17. chrisild

    chrisild Coin Collector

    Ruben mentioned that in an earlier post here. Except those were €2 counterfeits; €10 pieces would be collector coins only, and not even legal tender outside the issuing country. :)

    Christian
     
  18. chrisild

    chrisild Coin Collector

    What may have confused some is this paragraph: "Mr Moores said Freeman had emailed suppliers of replica coins in China and the United States and he had been warned by one contact that any replica had to have the words “copy” or “replica” stamped on it otherwise he would be committing a criminal offence under US law. Freeman had replied he did not think that applied in the UK or Greece."

    Duh. Of course such a US regulation does not apply outside the US. :) It becomes relevant only if somebody brings replicas into the US ...

    Christian
     
  19. mrbrklyn

    mrbrklyn New Member

    Eh, my mistake. The slob just looked American to me and the paper wasn't clear of its locality.
     
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