This article describes the growing numbers of counterfeit 5-Franc coins in Switzerland. -Editor
Banknotes aren’t Switzerland’s only form of cash to pique the interest of criminals.
While Swiss National Bank officials field accusations that their 1,000-franc bills facilitate illegal activity, their coinage colleagues
at Swissmint have a headache of a different sort. Forgeries of the highest-denomination 5-franc ($5) coin have surged in the past two
years, with criminals seeking to profit from one of the world’s most valuable pieces of metal money circulated for daily use.
In 2014, 14,000 forged 5-franc pieces were removed from circulation. Last year the toll was 7,600, official statistics show. That
compares with less than 1,000 annually in previous years.
“Of course the crooks look where they can make the most money,” said Swissmint Managing Director Marius Haldimann, speaking from his
office in a belle epoque building in Bern. “Most fakes come from Italy. Given the material costs, you really need organized crime to
produce them.”
In one instance, a group of Italians was stopped at the border, their small Smart car weighed down with 5,000 fake 5-franc pieces.
While some fakes are of high quality, others are easily detected. “Even the man on the street can tell something is amiss,” Haldimann
said, dropping a forged piece onto a table. It made an odd, tinny clunk.
Despite the appeal of faking Swiss coins, the incidence of forgeries is relatively low.
Just 1 in a thousand 5-franc coins turn out not to be legitimate, Swissmint says. That compares to 2.6 percent of 1-pound pieces,
according to Britain's Royal Mint. The low Swiss ratio is due in part to the alloy used, the high-quality workmanship, and the design,
which includes security features.
To read the complete article, see:
Swiss Franc
Coin That Buys a Bratwurst Becomes Target of Crooks
(www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-03-04/swiss-franc-coin-that-buys-a-bratwurst-becomes-target-of-crooks)
Wayne Homren, Editor
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