Here's a story about a novelty banknote being passed as real in Japan, forwarded by Dick Hanscom.
-Editor
Fake 1,000,000 yen note
Staff in a grocery shop in the north of Japan have apparently been taken in by a sticky Post-It-style note in the shape of a million yen bill, it's reported.
The fact that the largest Japanese banknote is 10,000 yen (£62) was lost on the cashiers. Nor did they notice that Yukichi Fukuzawa - the influential Japanese writer whose face adorns the country's currency - sports a "wry smile" on the single-sided fake bill, the Mainichi Daily News reports.
Local police say they are investigating a possible forgery case. But this is not the work of a master forger. The note's provenance is rather more straightforward - it's a novelty item produced by a company based near Osaka that stopped making the fake money stickers in October 2012 after several were passed off as real currency.
After the latest incident, the company has decided to stop selling its remaining stocks of the comedy banknotes. It is illegal under the Control of Imitation of Currency and Securities Act to manufacture products that "could be mistaken for genuine bills and coinage", the paper says.
Genuine 10,000 yen notes
The fake looks like Star Trek actor George Takei, if you ask me.
-Editor
To read the complete article, see:
Japan: Shop fooled by spoof million yen banknote
(www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-news-from-elsewhere-25001421)
Wayne Homren, Editor
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