Counterfeiting stories are a dime a dozen and I don't bother with most of them. But this one is interesting. I initially looked
at it because of the connection to my hometown of Pittsburgh, but the international flavor (and some really creepy gloves) stood out. -Editor
Federal authorities have charged a man with leading an international counterfeit money operation based
in the African nation of Uganda, and shipping bogus bills to the Pittsburgh area and other locations in the United States.
Ryan Andrew Gustafson, 27, has been charged with conspiracy to commit offenses against the United States and counterfeiting acts committed outside
the U.S. “In short, these bills were being bought and sold in cyberspace,” U.S. Attorney David Hickton said Thursday, calling it “an extensive
international scheme.”
Gustafson was arrested Dec. 11 in Uganda and investigators seized sophisticated printers and other equipment allegedly used to make the
high-quality fake $20, $50 and $100 bills. Authorities claim he made more than $2 million in U.S. currency, most of it passed in Uganda, but about
$270,000 of which was shipped to the United States.
The alleged scheme unraveled when someone passed a fake $100 bill at a Pittsburgh coffee shop last December. It was determined to be fake by bank
employees after it was deposited.
Hickton and Eric Zahren, the special agent-in-charge of Pittsburgh’s U.S. Secret Service office, said investigators traced that bill to a
Pittsburgh man receiving overseas shipments of bills, and further investigation determined Gustafson was shipping the bills to others in Florida,
Minnesota, Texas and Washington. About $30,000 in counterfeit bills were passed in Pittsburgh and its suburbs, they said.
The
money was glued inside charitable “Save the Children” pamphlets and, investigators contend, Gustafson used a pair of rubber gloves modeled after his
own hands to prepare the packages so he would not leave fingerprints. Despite that, Zahren said, Gustafson was eventually tied to one of the packages
by a fingerprint.
The money shipments were also sent through a series of “re-shippers” – unidentified people who relayed the packages through the mail. When the
packages were received, a person was instructed to place the pamphlets in hot water to dissolve glue and free the money.
Graziano, a former trust administrator with Bank of New York Mellon, is charged with stealing more than $2.4 million from customer accounts. He’s
also charged with offering computers and other devices for sale on the online auction site eBay and then mailing customers empty packages after
receiving payment for the items. When customers complained, Graziano lied and said the items were lost when U.S. Postal employees “inspected” the
packages, court records show.
Those gloves are really creepy! -Editor
To read the complete article, see:
International Counterfeit Money
Operation Has Ties To Pittsburgh
(http://pittsburgh.cbslocal.com/2014/12/18/international-counterfeit-money-operation-has-ties-to-pittsburgh/)
Wayne Homren, Editor
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