Yup, you read correctly.
I had a bunch of original Journey $5 and $10 notes in an envelope I forgot about. I didn't need them so in my wallet they went.
I went to a pharmacy to buy some seasonal chocolates they had on sale, and once at the cash pulled out a 2001 $10, and thought nothing of it.
The cashier looked at it, baffled. "Uh, you do know this is supposed to have a metallic strip, right?"
Me: "The current ones do. This is the original issue and these didn't. There's nothing wrong with it."
Her: "It doesn't look right to me." She then gets other cashiers to look at it, they too in equal confusion.
I re-iterate that these are older ones pre-security update. The cashier then asks me if I had "real" money. While I did, I said no. She then suspended my transaction and the head cashier/manager called the police.
10-15 minutes passes and I'm just standing there, other customers looking at me as if I was Charles Manson, or something.
Once the THREE cops arrive, I exchange with them that this is perfectly legitimate money. I refused to give any other information about myself.
(NEVER EVER talk to the Police unless you're being formally taken into custody; especially in Montreal. They're a dirty, corrupt-as-sin police force.)
The officer inspects the $10 note, sees nothing wrong with it, and, from what I was able to hear, he commented that it was printed in 2003.
I was told to stand far from the cash.
Once all that was over, 40 minutes later, I strongly suggested to the store manager to educate her cashiers on the proper ways to detect a fake note, irrespective of its age. Straight to her face, I also told her she lost a customer.
It just kills me how uneducated morons think they know everything.