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China-Japan-Koreas
N. Korean Money Scam Technique
2007-06-16
Now, it is believed that Delta Asia was a central conduit for circulating the so-called North Korean Super C Notes. The "Super C's" were bogus U.S. $100 notes that the Treasury Department claims were of "exceptional" quality. According to South Korean sources, the North Koreans had perfected a "washing" tecnnique to elude detection.Simply put, Pyongyang would wash the ink from real U.S. $1 notes and reprint then in higher denominations. It made detection of the counterfeiting very difficult, say the South Koreans.

While a firm figure on the amount of "funny" money passing through the Macao bank has not been offered, it is believed to be well in excess of the $25 million officially on deposit.
With the main conduit for circulating the counterfeit currency no longer available, Pyongyang searched for a new way to get its "cash" into circulation.

The answer: Leak the cash at home. Leak it to foreigners who would be the least suspicious and the most vulnerable -- aid workers and diplomats. In both cases, if anyone got caught, they likely would not be arrested nor any charges filed. In the diplomats' case, not only would they enjoy diplomatic immunity, but the embarrassment of being scammed by the North Koreans would be such, that it likely would be kept out of the press, especially when it could involve the Chinese and Russians.

The Swiss have a long tradition of being "discreet" when it involves the issue of international banking. All three countries' diplomats are believed to have been targeted by North Korea to unknowingly circulate the counterfeit currency.
Posted by:Super Hose

#2  From Slate:
Government agents first discovered Supernotes in 1990. A very experienced overseas cash handler identified one as a forgery by the feel of the paper, even thought it was printed on an intaglio press. The fake was as good as any the Secret Service had ever seen—it even contained the right proportion of embedded red and blue fibers that the Treasury Department uses as a security feature. The first Supernote became known as Parent Note (PN) 14342. The term "Supernote"—also occasionally seen as "Superdollar" or "Superbill"—originated outside of the Secret Service. It refers to all high-quality counterfeits that can be linked back to PN-14342 with forensic evidence. (The Secret Service won't reveal how they link modern-day counterfeits to PN-14342.)

Supernote production requires uncommon equipment and skilled engineers. At first, investigators thought they originated in Lebanon. Another theory from the 1990s held that Iran produced them on equipment purchased by the Shah two decades earlier and then shipped the bills to Lebanon via Syria. The real source of the bills has not been found, but a member of the Congressional Research Service reported that the government of North Korea produces millions of dollars a year with intaglio presses. In the meantime, the government ordered an extensive redesign of U.S. currency in 1996. (Supernote versions of the new $100 bills have been discovered.)
From another article:
Details of the actual manufacture of counterfeit notes also began filtering into the State Department, much of the information derived from defector accounts. According to similar accounts compiled by Sheena Chestnut and the North Korean specialist in Seoul whom I spoke with, the regime obtained Swiss-made intaglio printing presses and installed them in a building called Printing House 62, part of the national-mint complex in Pyongsong, a city outside Pyongyang, where a separate team of workers manufactures the supernotes.

So, our friends the Swiss really didn't seem to have many compunctions about selling the most advanced type of paper currency printing presses in the world to one of the globe's most corrupt criminal regimes. A lousy $10 million dollar equipment sale that led to BILLIONS of counterfeit America dollars. Thank Fuck you very much, Switzerland. You can bet that the Swiss didn't accept any counterfeit bills in payment for the presses.

While working for one of the first companies to develop plasma etching for the semiconductor industry, we were paid a visit by some FBI agents who were interested in using the etching process to selectively rough up the paper surface to distinct and specific degrees.

Much to everyone's amazement, they pulled out some blank currency paper and submitted the specimens to various duration etch cycles. They also mentioned how Mafia types were merely bleaching out the paper of dollar bills and reprinting them as $100 notes.

The North Koreans took this another step further by using the intaglio presses. I'm obliged to wonder if the Swiss had any doubts as to what use their equipment would be put to by Kim's gangster regime. Yet one more reason why I am less than content with Switzerland's track record in modern times.
Posted by: Zenster   2007-06-16 23:21  

#1  The Swiss are also extremely anal retentive when it comes to money, and are known to send their bankers on financial institution jihad when someone tries to scam them. Gnome rampage.

The Soviets tried setting up a bank in Switzerland to try and whip up some fast foreign currency in the late 1980s. They quickly pissed off the Swiss with their antics, then were amazed at how their bank accounts just seemed to evaporate, leaving them penniless.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2007-06-16 21:56  

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