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China-Japan-Koreas
U.S. accuses North Korea of $100 bill counterfeiting
2005-10-12
The Bush administration formally has accused North Korea of manufacturing high-quality counterfeit $100 "supernotes" for the first time, according to an indictment made public yesterday as part of a 16-year probe. "Quantities of the supernote were manufactured in, and under auspices of the government of, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (North Korea)," said the indictment of Irish national Sean Garland and six others. "Individuals, including North Korean nationals acting as ostensible government officials, engaged in the worldwide transportation, delivery, and sale of quantities of supernotes."

It was the first time the federal government provided details of North Korea's suspected counterfeiting of U.S. currency. The May 19 indictment was unsealed Saturday after Mr. Garland was arrested in Belfast. A Justice Department spokesman said the State Department will file a formal extradition request for Mr. Garland in the next several days. Mr. Garland, leader of the Marxist-Leninist Worker's Party, an arm of the Official Irish Republican Army, used his party contacts in North Korea and other nations to coordinate the purchase of fake $100 bills forged in North Korean, the indictment stated.

"This arrest is one of the most significant related to the 16-year-long investigation into the distribution of this family of highly deceptive counterfeit U.S. currency notes," said U.S. Secret Service Special Agent James B. Burch, head of the Washington field office. The indictment accuses Mr. Garland of meeting with North Korean government officials in Warsaw in 1997 to buy a quantity of supernotes.

The indictment is the second major U.S. case involving North Korean supernotes. In September, authorities in California arrested several Chinese nationals in connection with suspected North Korean supernote trafficking. That indictment, however, only identified North Korea as "country 2."
And we all know what happens to "number two's"
U.S. officials said identification of North Korea as the source of the counterfeit notes was delayed in order not to upset the six-party talks in Beijing on North Korea's nuclear arms program. A tentative agreement on Pyongyang's dismantling of its arms program was reached last month.

Mr. Garland and the six other men are charged with conspiring from 1997 to 2000 to buy more than $1 million in supernotes from the North Koreans during travels in Ireland, Britain, Russia, Belarus, Poland, Denmark, Czech Republic, Germany and elsewhere. Mr. Garland, through his lawyer, has denied the charges. He was released on bail Saturday.
The indictment also said that North Korea successfully modified its forged notes to include the new "big head" $100 bill -- so named for its larger likeness of Benjamin Franklin -- after the U.S. Treasury Department redesigned the bill in 1996 in an effort to thwart counterfeiters.

Prosecutors also accuse Mr. Garland of attempting to mask North Korea as the source of the counterfeit notes by limiting those with knowledge to a close circle of associates and telling others that Russia was the location where they were produced. Using his position as Worker's Party leader and his Dublin business known as GKG Communications International Ltd., Mr. Garland would make official party visits around the world to make arrangements for the supernote purchases, the indictment said.

The indictment indicates that North Korea was using its diplomatic outposts in Russia, Belarus and Poland to provide the supernotes to Mr. Garland and his accomplices. The six co-defendants charged in the indictment are outside the United States and are being sought by U.S. and British authorities.
Posted by:Steve

#15  Angugum Unumble6535 = Definitely
it
class.
Posted by: Red Dog!!   2005-10-12 20:16  

#14  Mr. Garland, through his lawyer, has denied the charges. He was released on bail Saturday.

Which he paid with a stack of sequentially numbered $100 bills.
Posted by: Scott R   2005-10-12 20:00  

#13  Angugum's about as smart as he/she/it sounds. Fuckwit.
Posted by: .com   2005-10-12 18:29  

#12  hehe

What is the only thing an American truly cares about... yes greenbacks

ribbit
Posted by: Angugum Unumble6535   2005-10-12 17:53  

#11  Overheard at the US Mint:
"Hey Joe! Crank up ol' Betsy. We're supposed to produce three billion Korean Won by next tuesday..."
Posted by: mojo   2005-10-12 17:49  

#10  Not suprising this is just one of many illicit things the Norks have been doing. Another major thing is Meth production enmass and shipped to S. Korea and Japan. Counterfit money is something I think all sides cladestant forces use in some amount. I dont know about tantemount to war but this should definatley qualify as a end to all Aid in any form from the US, and further Isolation. I personally think we should just tell the Norks to suck it and starve and in the mean time put up a blockade and tell the Norks all thier ships have to either go to S. Korean ports for inspection or ship goods to the S. then on out. Their is not much they could do to stop this and who cares if they build Nukes. Kim Il is bent but he is also a aithiest that values life and he knows full well even if he did hit a west coast US city his and all his bretheren would be glass filler. In the mean time he could just sit and pray his people dont wake up and kill him before they all starve to death. Either way isolated and cut off. His only trade route beside sea is thru China that a simple warning that if the Norks got caught sending weapons to X nation the Chinease would be treated as Co-Defendant. China dont like US but they arent stupid.
Posted by: C-Low   2005-10-12 17:41  

#9  Brer: I read your comment as "They should be referred to the USMC." That would a great idea.
Posted by: Classical_Liberal   2005-10-12 17:37  

#8  They should be referred to the UNSC. That'll teach not to share.
Posted by: BrerRabbit   2005-10-12 17:08  

#7  Garland took the fake notes to Birmingham for further distribution throughout the UK. They also were distributed using diplomatic pouches by NK envoys to Moscow. Doesn't this tie official state sponsorship of terrorism to the UN?
Posted by: Danielle   2005-10-12 16:58  

#6  It's like prosecuting the mob: you can know they're guilty, but finding the smoking gun that let's you nail the biggies is hard.

Doubly so when you go after another government.
Posted by: lotp   2005-10-12 16:58  

#5  "A 16-year probe?"

To paraphrase F Scott Fitzgerald:
"Civil service employees are not like you and me, they have job security."
Posted by: .com   2005-10-12 16:46  

#4  Iran is doing it too.
One of the stories is that Clinton was going to shoot some cruise missiles at the factory but after considering the cost of the missiles compared to the actual number of bills counterfied figured it wasn't worth it. One has to wonder if any of those bills helped finance 911.
Posted by: 3dc   2005-10-12 16:18  

#3  A 16-year probe?
Posted by: Seafarious   2005-10-12 16:17  

#2  You know that not even a nuke with Kim's fingerprints being found in Central Park would be casus belli anymore, don't you?
Posted by: Robert Crawford   2005-10-12 15:41  

#1  State-sponsored counterfeiting is, no matter how you look at it, equivalent to a declaration of war.

Solutions, anyone?
Posted by: .com   2005-10-12 15:23  

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