The Star Malaysia

New fake US ‘supernote’ found

High-quality US$100 bill suggests N. Korea resumed forgeries

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SEOUL: A new high-quality counterfei­t US$100 bill has been found in South Korea, bank officials said, prompting suggestion­s the sanctions-hit North might have resumed forging “supernotes”.

A team of forgery specialist­s at KEB Hana Bank have confirmed that a US$100 note found at a Seoul branch in November was a fake which was almost impossible to distinguis­h from real banknotes, they said.

“It was the first of a new kind of supernote ever found in the world,” Yi Ho-joong, head of the KEB Hana Bank’s anti-counterfei­t centre said.

Previous “supernotes” were dated either 2001 or 2003 but the new forgery is dated 2006.

The same methods including raised and dented printing and no-smudge inks that are normally used for real banknotes have been applied to the newly found supernote, he said.

“You need facilities worth some US$100mil (RM408mil) to produce counterfei­t bills of this quality and no crime rings would invest that much to make fake dollars,” he said.

“Only state-level organisati­ons can afford such facilities.”

South Korean news media suggested the North might have resumed producing fake banknotes to circumvent tightening internatio­nal sanctions against its nuclear and missile developmen­t.

But Yi said there was no evidence to link the newly found supernote to North Korea – although Pyongyang has a track record of its diplomats getting caught with high-quality forgeries.

The bank has alerted judicial and intelligen­ce authoritie­s about the discovery, Yi added. — AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? Devil in the details: Yi inspecting a fake US$100 bill at KEB Hana Bank’s anti-counterfei­t centre in Seoul.
— AFP Devil in the details: Yi inspecting a fake US$100 bill at KEB Hana Bank’s anti-counterfei­t centre in Seoul.

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