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In 2003, the U.S. Secret Service made 469 seizures of digital
equipment involved in currency counterfeiting, |
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"The new $50 note will be issued in late
September or early October"
U.S. government officials from the
Department of
the Treasury, the Federal Reserve and the United States Secret
Service, today unveiled the new $50 note design with enhanced
security features, and subtle background colors of blue and red,
and images of a waving American flag and a small metallic
silver-blue star.
The new design is part of the government’s
ongoing efforts to stay ahead of counterfeiting and protect the
integrity of U.S. currency. The new $50 note, which will be
issued in late September or early October, is the second
denomination in the Series 2004 currency. The first was the $20
note, which began circulating in October 2003.
“U.S. currency is a worldwide symbol of security
and integrity. These new designs help us keep it that way, by
protecting against counterfeiting and making it easier for
people to confirm the authenticity of their hard-earned money,”
U.S. Treasury Secretary John W. Snow said. “In addition to
keeping our currency safe from counterfeiters, the President's
economic policies are ensuring that more of those dollars stay
in the pockets of American families.”
Snow was joined at the unveiling of the new $50
note’s design by Federal Reserve Board Governor Mark W. Olson,
Tom Ferguson, director of the Treasury’s Bureau of Engraving and
Printing, which produces U.S. currency, and C. Danny Spriggs,
deputy director of the United States Secret Service, the law
enforcement agency responsible for combating counterfeiting.
The new $50 note was unveiled at the Bureau of
Engraving and Printing’s Western Currency Facility (WCF) in Ft.
Worth, TX, and the occasion also marked the grand opening of the
WCF’s new Visitor Center. The Visitor Center, which plans to
welcome 500,000 guests annually, will offer free tours to the
public five days a week beginning on April 27, and provides a
much-anticipated tourism draw to the Dallas-Ft. Worth community.
At the Visitor Center, guests will be able to enjoy tours of the
production facility, learn about the technology and history of
U.S. currency through interactive displays, and purchase
money-themed items and souvenirs in the gift shop.
The WCF, which prints 55 percent of all U.S.
paper currency, is the only location other than the Bureau’s
Washington, DC, facility that prints the nation’s currency, and
it will also be printing the first run of the newly redesigned
$50 note.
The new $50 notes will be safer, smarter and
more secure currency: safer because they will be harder to fake
and easier to check; smarter to stay ahead of tech-savvy
counterfeiters; more secure to protect the integrity of U.S.
currency.
“We want the public to know how to use the
security features to protect their hard-earned money,” said
Spriggs. “The combined efforts of public education, aggressive
law enforcement, and improved currency security features have
increased public awareness and have helped in the fight against
counterfeiting.”
Despite counterfeiters’ increasing use of
technology, advanced counterfeit deterrence efforts on the part
of the authorities has kept counterfeiting at low levels.
Current estimates put the rate of counterfeit $50 notes in
circulation worldwide at less than 1 note for every 25,000
genuine $50 notes in circulation.
“A sound currency, which this new $50 note will
foster, is a pivotal factor in the strength of our economy,”
said Olson. He said preparations for issuing the new $50 note
will include educational outreach to businesses, financial
institutions and consumers that use the denomination most. “Our
objective is a smooth transition for the newly designed currency
into daily cash transactions. For that to happen, it must be
recognized and honored as legal tender, and those who use it and
handle it must know how to verify its authenticity.”
The $50 note will be followed later by a new
$100 note. Decisions on new designs for the $5 and $10 notes are
still under consideration, but a redesign of the $1 and $2 notes
is not planned. Even after the new money is issued, older-design
notes will remain legal tender.
Because counterfeiters are turning increasingly
to digital methods and as advances in technology make digital
counterfeiting easier and cheaper, the government is staying
ahead of counterfeiters by updating the currency every 7-10
years.
“We have to stay ahead of technology, which is
developing and progressing at an ever-increasing rate. Items
like digital printers and higher quality scanners are becoming
more readily available at cheaper prices,” said Ferguson. “So we
have to make our currency notes safer, smarter and more secure
in order to stay ahead of the would-be counterfeiters.”
The New Color of Money
While consumers should not use color to check the authenticity
of their currency (relying instead on user-friendly security
features – see below), color does add complexity to the note,
making counterfeiting more difficult. Different colors will be
used for different denominations, which will help everyone –
particularly those who are visually impaired – to tell
denominations apart.
The new notes feature subtle background colors
and highlight historical symbols of Americana. The $50 note,
which will be issued in late 2004, includes subtle background
colors of blue and red, and images of a waving American flag and
a small metallic silver-blue star.
Security Features
The new $50 design retains three important security features
that were first introduced in the 1990s and are easy for
consumers and merchants alike to check:
Watermark: a faint image, similar to the
portrait, which is part of the paper itself and is visible from
both sides when held up to the light.
Security thread: also visible from both sides
when held up to the light, this vertical strip of plastic is
embedded in the paper and spells out the denomination in tiny
print. Color-shifting ink: the numeral in the lower right corner on the
face of the note, indicating its denomination, changes color
when the note is tilted.
Because these features are difficult for
counterfeiters to reproduce well, they often do not try.
Counterfeiters are hoping that cash-handlers and the public will
not check their money closely.
Counterfeiting: Increasingly Digital
Counterfeiters are increasingly turning to digital methods, as
advances in technology make digital counterfeiting of currency
easier and cheaper. In 1995, less than 1 percent of counterfeit
notes detected in the U.S. were digitally produced. Since then,
digital equipment has become more readily available to the
general public, and as a result, the amount of digitally
produced counterfeit notes has risen. Over the last several
years, the amount of digitally produced counterfeit notes has
remained steady at about 40 percent.
Law enforcement has remained aggressive. In
2003, the U.S. Secret Service made 469 seizures of digital
equipment involved in currency counterfeiting, such as personal
computers, and made more than 3,640 arrests in the U.S. for
currency counterfeiting activities. The conviction rate for
counterfeiting prosecutions is about 99 percent.
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