CPM Forum
Canadian Notes => Counterfeit Currency => Topic started by: Fenian on April 26, 2006, 10:46:58 pm
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Got a fairly good looking counterfeit $10 bill in my till today. Weak paper, but had the gold security leaves. The real tipoff was spotting from water damage :o , wrong font for the serial number and the prefix- AAX! The logo for the motto underneath the poppies was also jumbled together.
As well, the font is wrong for the legend Sir John... and Bank of Canada/Banque Du Canada. It looks like it was actually a decent copy- until it got wet. I will post photos once I get home and have access to a scanner and camera.
Regards,
Fenian
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AAX... Nice!
From the sounds of it, it seems to be a typical original $10 counterfeit. Likely part of a VERY large operation for these $10s.
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I see that the counter fitters havn't moved to using the new method of inserts but are still using the old method of replacements using 'x's ;D
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Here are the scans as promised...
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Here is the other side... If you want the original scans (~2 MB each side) , feel free to PM me..
Fenian
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It looks like it has double front plate numbers and is alot wider than a regular note.
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That's exactly what it has... doubled-up FPN. Typical Journey $10 fake. The vast majority of the Journey $10 fakes I have seen are of this style.
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I'm of the belief that the reason the counterfeiters use an 'X' in the prefix is so that they can spot their own work and not accept it.
But what I'm wondering about is the double FP number? Why? He'd have to duplicate it manually.
Any comments?
John