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COUNTERFEIT US DOLLARS! Be careful they are around in Cambodia, mostly in the denominations of hundred, fifty and twenty dollar bills. The unwritten law is if you receive a counterfeit bill, you have therefore accepted it and it is pointless taking it back to who you received it from. Furthermore, do not take it to the authorities, especially the police who will more than likely arrest you for being in possession of illegal tender and will take the opportunity to relieve of more money. Basically if you receive a counterfeit bill in Cambodia you are stuck with it and can only pass it on if you are lucky (Be careful where you try and spend it). The best solution is not to receive one in the first place. Hence the following; How to Detect Counterfeit US Money
Steps 1. Feel the
bill. Most people who handle money a lot (i.e. cashiers) can identify a
lower-quality fake bill instantly just by touching it. You may not have
that much experience, but just about everybody has handled enough money
that they can detect many counterfeits simply by feeling them--and
paying attention. Genuine currency has slightly raised ink that's
produced in the intaglio printing process. You should be able to feel
the texture of this ink, especially if you're handling a crisp, new
bill.
The portrait on a genuine $50 bill (left) compared to a counterfeit. Notice the relative flatness and lack of detail on the fake bill. 3. Look carefully at the printing quality. Real U.S. bills are printed using techniques that regular offset printing and digital printing (the most popular tools for all but the most sophisticated counterfeiters) cannot replicate. Look for blurry areas, especially in fine details such as around the borders--real bills have clear, unbroken borders--and on the Federal Reserve and Treasury seals, where the saw tooth points should be sharp and well-defined in genuine bills. Portraits in fake bills may appear dull, blurred, and flat, while in real currency the portraits are sharp and contain very fine detailing. 4. Look for colored strands in the paper. All U.S. bills have tiny red and blue fibers embedded in the paper. Counterfeiters sometimes try to reproduce these by printing these strands onto the paper, but if you look closely, you'll see that they are printed on, rather than being part of the paper itself. 5. Hold it up to the light and look at the watermark. The watermark portrait should match the printed one (this is very important: bleaching & reprinting low value currency is a common scam). The newer five-dollar bill has a "5" watermark instead of Lincoln. One-dollar bills have no watermarks, so that's different. 6. Examine the serial numbers. Make sure the serial numbers on a bill match, and look at them carefully. Fake bills may have serial numbers that are not evenly spaced or that not perfectly aligned in a row. If you received more than one suspicious bill, see if the serial numbers are the same on both bills--that's a dead giveaway you've got a couple counterfeits.
$50 bill with three security features highlighted. A section of the security thread is visible in the circle near the portrait. The large circle to the right shows the watermark, and below that the color-shifting ink is circled. 7. Look for special security features in all denominations except $1 and $2 bills. The easiest way to spot a fake $5, $10, $20, $50 or $100 bill is to look for the following security features, all of which are very difficult to convincingly fake. Look for a
security thread (a plastic strip) running from top to bottom. Beginning
in 1990, an embedded (not printed) security thread was added to all
bills except the $1 and $2 bills. If you hold the bill up to the light
you easily see the strip and printing on it. The printing will say "USA"
followed by the denomination of the bill, which is spelled out for $5,
$10, and $20 bills but presented in numerals on the $50 and $100 bills.
These threads are placed in different places on each denomination to
prevent lower-denomination bills being bleached and reprinted as higher
denominations. Compare a genuine bill of the same denomination to make
sure the position of the thread is correct. Tips Look for differences, not similarities. Counterfeit bills, if they're any good at all, will be similar to real ones in many ways, but if a bill differs in just one way, it's probably fake.
An example of a EURion constellation on a U.S. $20 bill. Beginning
with Series 2004, $10, $20, and $50 bills received a redesign with
several changes to their overall look, notably the addition of more
colors (see the picture of the $50 bill above). Probably the most
important new security feature is the addition of EURion Constellations,
a distinct arrangement of symbols (in this case, numbers) which triggers
many color photocopiers to refuse to copy the bill. |