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Counterfeiting of American Currency

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Title: Counterfeiting of American Currency


1
Counterfeiting of American Currency
  • Christine Pederson
  • and
  • Nicole Farlee

2
Definition
  • A counterfeit is an imitation that is made with
    the intent to deceptively represent its content
    or origins. The word counterfeit most frequently
    describes forged money or documents, but can also
    describe clothing, software, pharmaceuticals, or
    any other manufactured item

3
Definition
  • Legal Tender Section 102 of the Coinage Act of
    1965 (Title 31 United States Code, Section 392)
    provides in part " All coins and currencies of
    the United States, regardless of when coined or
    issued, shall be legal tender for all debts,
    public and private, public charges, taxes, duties
    and dues."

4
History
  • Counterfeiting is one of the oldest crimes in
    history
  • Native Americans used wampum, beaded string, as
    their currency to use as a form of exchange
  • The Europeans counterfeited wampum using their
    iron tools, this led to inflation and the
    devaluing of this type of currency
  • During the American Revolution, the British
    counterfeited US currency in such large amounts
    that it became worthless
  • During the Civil War, one-third to one-half of
    currency was counterfeit
  • It was a serious problem when each bank was
    issuing its own currency
  • There were over 1500 banks printing their own
    notes
  • It was very difficult to determine which bills
    were counterfeit because there were 7000
    varieties of genuine notes and 4000 counterfeit
    varieties

5
History
  • A national currency was adopted in 1863 to help
    solve the counterfeiting problem
  • This was soon counterfeited in such large amounts
    that the government established the Secret
    Service to detect and track these notes
  • One of the first anti-counterfeiting measures
    applied to money was making coins uniformly round
    and with milled edges
  • In 1929, portraits were standardized and red and
    blue fibers were embedded in currency
  • The green color was chosen because it was found
    to be high in its resistance to chemical and
    physical changes and was psychologically
    identified with the strong and stable credit of
    the government

6
Goodwin- author of Greenback
  • Paper money was the social contract in motion, a
    signal of value that presumed upon the trust of a
    community. Paper money cost nothing to produce
    it was just a promise, like America.

7
Average counterfeiter
  • Almost always male
  • Younger (20s, early 30s)
  • Comfortable with technology
  • Above-average intelligence
  • Often have a degree in law or business
  • The main ethnic groups involved in counterfeiting
    include Nigerian, Asian, Russian, Armenian, and
    Mexican groups
  • Make relatively small amounts of counterfeit
    money, good enough to be passed at retail outlets

8
Jail time
  • Manufacturing counterfeit currency or altering
    genuine currency to increase its value is
    punishable by a fine of up to 5,000, or 15 years
    imprisonment, or both (Title 18, Section 471)
  • Possession of counterfeit US currency with
    fraudulent intent is punishable by a fine of up
    to 15,000, or 15 years imprisonment, or both
    (Title 18, Section 472)
  • Anyone who manufactures a counterfeit US coin in
    any denomination above 5 cents is subject to the
    same penalties as all other counterfeiters
  • Anyone who alters a genuine coin to increase its
    value is punishable by a fine of up to 2,000, or
    5 years imprisonment, or both (Title 18, Section
    331)

9
Jail Time
  • Forging, altering, or trafficking in US
    Government checks or bonds is punishable by up to
    10,000 fine, or 10 years imprisonment, or both
    (Title 18, Section 510)
  • Printed reproductions, including photographs of
    paper currency, checks, bonds and postage stamps
    are punishable by a fine of up to 5,000, 15
    years imprisonment, or both (Title 18, Section
    474)

10
Counterfeit Laws
  • Rules for the printing or publication of color
    illustrations of US currency (Chapter 25, Title
    18) Counterfeit Detection Act of 1992
  • The illustration must be of a size less than
    three-fourths or more than one-half
  • The illustration must be one-sided
  • All negatives, plates, graphic files, and any
    other thing used in the making of an illustration
    must be destroyed after final use

11
Damaged Money
  • Worn notes are destroyed during processing and
    replaced with new bills
  • The life expectancy of a 1 bill is 18 months and
    larger bills last longer
  • The Treasury Department will replace a bill if
    more than half of the original remains
  • Damaged or mutilated notes should be taken to a
    bank for redemption

12
Coin counterfeiting
  • Most coin counterfeiting is done to simulate rare
    coins
  • This often involves adding, removing, or altering
    a feature of a genuine coin
  • The most effective way to detect a counterfeit
    coin is by weight

13
Effect on Society
  • Undermines the confidence the public puts in
    real money
  • Causes more money to be circulated in the economy
    leading to a general rise in prices, inflation
  • The value of money is determined by its
    acceptability, acceptance as legal tender, and
    relative scarcity counterfeiting undermines
    these values
  • Companies are forced to increase prices due to
    counterfeits because they are not reimbursed

14
What one man can do, another can copy
  • Counterfeit bills have increased with new
    technology
  • Instruments of production are more readily
    available
  • Capabilities of the machines continue to improve
  • Techniques are more readily understood by an
    increasingly larger segment of the population

15
Evaluation of Currency
  • Appearance
  • Look and feel of the paper
  • Red and blue fibers
  • Color shifting ink
  • Watermark

16
Detection defenses
  • People are first, if people took the time to
    really look at their money 90 of counterfeiting
    could be detected
  • Next is the bank, bank tellers have programs to
    determine counterfeits
  • Next, bills go through machines at the Federal
    Reserve where machinery and human eyes detect
    counterfeits

17
What to do if you think you have a counterfeit
  • Write your initials and date on back of the bill
    and on the white border areas
  • On a separate sheet of paper record how you
    received the bill, who gave it to you, where you
    got it, and when you got it
  • Handle it as little as possible to preserve any
    fingerprints
  • Contact nearest secret service office or local
    police
  • You are not reimbursed for turning in counterfeit
    bills

18
Foreign counterfeiting
  • Approximately 2/3 of American currency in
    circulation exists outside of the U.S.
  • 64 of all counterfeit currency is produced
    abroad
  • Some of the best counterfeits come from Colombia
  • The Secret Service estimates that up to one-third
    of all counterfeit money in circulation
    domestically is Columbian in origin
  • The 100 dollar bill is the most commonly
    counterfeited bill outside the US (domestically
    it is the 20 bill)

19
Random Facts
  • Counterfeit circulating in the U.S. is only 3/100
    of 1 of the total currency
  • In 1999, counterfeiters produced an estimated
    180 million dollars in fake money
  • About 90 of all known counterfeit currency is
    seized before it reaches the public
  • In 1995 less than 1 of counterfeit notes
    detected in the U.S. were digitally produced. By
    2002 that number had grown to nearly 40
  • Counterfeits account for about 1 to 2 notes in
    every 10,000 genuine notes

20
More random facts..
  • Bureau of Engraving and Printing produces 7 to 9
    billion banknotes per year worth over 80 billion
    for the Federal Reserve system
  • At the Federal Reserve of Boston approximately
    20-40 counterfeit notes are detected each day

21
Treasury Secretary John W. Snow
  • "We continue to improve our currency and resist
    efforts by counterfeiters the world over to
    produce and pass counterfeit U.S. notes," said
    Treasury Secretary John W. Snow. "Only by such
    efforts can we guarantee that our currency will
    continue to remain a symbol of American strength
    and stability."

22
The End
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