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Counterfeiting Counterfeiting Cases Point to North Korea
Pyongyang is accused of being behind a growing effort to print and move
rafts of U.S. $100 bills.
By Josh Meyer and Barbara Demick, Times Staff Writers
WASHINGTON — The counterfeiting operation began a quarter of a century
ago, he recalled, at a government mint built into a mountain in the
North Korean capital.
Using equipment from Japan, paper from Hong Kong and ink from France, a
team of experts was ordered to make fake U.S. $100 bills, said a former
North Korean chemist who said his job was to draw the design.
"The main motive was to make money, but the secondary motive was
inspired by anti-Americanism," said the chemist, now 56 and living in
South Korea.
Before long, sheets with 30 bills each were rolling off the printing
presses. By 1989, millions of dollars' worth of high-quality fakes were
showing up around the world. U.S. investigators dubbed them "supernotes"
because they were virtually indistinguishable from American currency.
The flow of forged bills has continued ever since, U.S. officials say,
despite a redesign intended to make the cash harder to replicate.
For 15 years, U.S. officials suspected that the North Korean leadership
was behind the counterfeiting, but they revealed almost nothing about
their investigations into the bogus bills or their efforts to stop them.
Now, however, federal authorities are pursuing at least four criminal
cases and one civil enforcement action involving supernotes.
U.S. authorities have unsealed hundreds of pages of documents in support
of the cases in recent months, including an indictment that directly
accuses North Korea of making the counterfeit bills, the first time the
U.S. has made such an allegation in a criminal case.
The documents paint a portrait of an extensive criminal network
involving North Korean diplomats and officials, Chinese gangsters and
other organized crime syndicates, prominent Asian banks, Irish
guerrillas and an alleged ex-KGB agent.
The criminal cases and U.S. Treasury enforcement action are part of a
concerted campaign to deprive North Korea of as much as $500 million a
year from counterfeiting currency and other criminal activities, senior
U.S. law enforcement and intelligence officials say.
The officials say criminal syndicates in South America, Eastern Europe
and elsewhere have also churned out large sums of fake U.S. cash. But
North Korea's is the only government believed to do so, despite
international pressure and laws that characterize such activity as an
economic casus belli, or act of war, they say.
"It is simply unacceptable for a member of the international community
to engage in this type of irresponsible conduct as a matter of state
policy, and [North Korea] needs to cease its criminal financial
activities," Daniel Glaser, deputy assistant Treasury secretary for
terrorist financing and financial crimes, said in an interview. "Until
then, the United States will take the necessary actions to protect the
U.S. and international financial systems from this type of misconduct."
In the fall, the U.S. unsealed an indictment against the head of an
Irish Republican Army splinter group alleging that "quantities of the
supernote were manufactured in, and under auspices of the government of,
the Democratic People's Republic of Korea," as North Korea is formally
known. North Korea's government in Pyongyang strenuously denied
wrongdoing.
A report by North Korea's official news service called the charges "a
clumsy and base political farce" by a Bush administration intent on
toppling the communist government.
David L. Asher, an administration point man on North Korean issues until
this summer, said there was overwhelming evidence that Pyongyang had
become a brazen "criminal state" reliant on illicit activity, in part to
finance its nuclear weapons program.
"This is state-sponsored counterfeiting. I don't know of any other case
like this except the Nazis, and they were doing it in a state of war,"
said Asher, who headed the administration's North Korea Working Group
and was the State Department's senior advisor for East Asian and Pacific
affairs.
The administration, he said, has made a strategic decision to press the
issue, even if doing so affects delicate six-nation talks aimed at
getting North Korea to give up its nuclear arms.
"The administration made a determination early on that irrespective of
what happened in diplomacy, this should not be tolerated," Asher said.
U.S. authorities say the increasingly high-profile campaign against the
counterfeiting is proceeding amid information that North Korea is
minting more American currency than ever before and smuggling it and
other contraband, such as weapons and knockoff pharmaceuticals, directly
into the United States. A number of U.S. officials who are knowledgeable
about the campaign spoke on condition of anonymity because of the
issue's political sensitivity.
U.S. authorities fear that the communist state has been able to step up
its illicit activities by forging more alliances with transnational
organized crime syndicates.
Those alliances have made Pyongyang's suspected nuclear arsenal and
other weapons more vulnerable to theft by rogue elements of the North
Korean government and sale to nuclear traffickers or terrorists, the
U.S. officials said. They worry that the same pipelines used to smuggle
fake currency into the United States could be used to traffic in weapons
of mass destruction.
An unclassified version of a March report to U.S. lawmakers by the
independent research arm of Congress warned that North Korea's
increasing reliance on criminal networks meant it may not be able to
curtail its illegal activities even if it wanted to.
"Korean crime-for-profit activity," analyst Raphael Perl of the
Congressional Research Service wrote, "may become a 'runaway train,'
gaining momentum, but out of control."
Extending the Network
One of the first places authorities picked up the supernotes' trail was
Ireland, more than 5,000 miles away from North Korea. By the early
1990s, so many supernotes were circulating there that Irish banks
stopped exchanging American $100 bills.
The Secret Service soon homed in on Sean Garland, whose exploits with
the Irish Republican Army years earlier had made him a local hero.
Garland was chief of staff of the Official Irish Republican Army, or Old
IRA, after it split with other IRA factions in 1969 and became the most
left-leaning. He also heads its political wing, the Irish Workers'
Party, in Northern Ireland. In that capacity, Garland traveled
extensively to see Socialist and Communist party leaders in the Soviet
bloc and, authorities contend, North Korea.
According to Garland's indictment in federal court in Washington this
year, which was unsealed this fall, his discussions with North Korean
operatives eventually turned from a shared rejection of capitalism to a
scheme for him to buy bogus $100 bills, perhaps to destabilize the U.S.
dollar by flooding the market with fakes.
The former North Korean chemist, who spoke anonymously for fear of
reprisal, said that over the years, people from China, Hong Kong, Japan
and other countries helped distribute the bills. "There was a lot of
cooperation with Ireland," he said.
In the indictment and in interviews, U.S. authorities said Garland
ultimately teamed up with Old IRA members, street crooks and an alleged
former member of the KGB, the Soviet intelligence service. They said the
men traveled widely to circulate the bills and sell them to customers
who would buy suitcases full at wholesale prices.
The indictment accuses Garland and six other men of buying, selling and
circulating fake U.S. $100 bills during the 1990s. Authorities say they
passed up to $28 million worth of bogus currency.
From 1997 to 2000, the group bought, sold and circulated the counterfeit
notes in Russia, Belarus, Poland, Denmark, the Czech Republic and
Germany, the indictment says. It alleges, in detail, that couriers made
frequent ferry trips to Ireland loaded down with real cash to pay
Garland for the counterfeits.
Authorities said Garland did much of his business with North Korean
suppliers at Pyongyang's embassies in Moscow and, later, Minsk, Belarus,
using his status as a Workers' Party official as cover.
Things began to unravel in 1999, when Garland's group allegedly went
ahead with a deal to sell $1 million in supernotes to a pair of
undercover agents posing as wholesalers.
Authorities in Britain described the counterfeit ring as the largest of
its kind in their country's history. But Garland wasn't arrested or
charged until British authorities, acting on a U.S. warrant, took the
71-year-old into custody Oct. 7 in a hotel in Belfast, Northern Ireland.
U.S. Takes Action
The U.S. quickly moved to extradite Garland. But when he was released
for medical treatment, he fled to Ireland, which has no extradition
treaty with the U.S.
In a recent statement, Garland insisted that the U.S. charges were
baseless and politically motivated. He vowed in an Internet posting to
surrender for trial if it were by a jury in Ireland.
No North Korean citizens or front organizations are charged or even
identified in the Garland indictment. U.S. authorities would not say
whether any of the 10 unnamed and unindicted co-conspirators listed in
the document were from North Korea.
Channing Phillips, a spokesman for the U.S. attorney's office in
Washington, would not comment on why authorities waited until this year
to obtain a grand jury indictment, which alleges criminal acts only
through mid-2000. He also would not say whether other suspects from
North Korea or elsewhere had been identified or charged under seal.
"I can only say that the case is continuing," Phillips said.
The chemist, though, said the counterfeit bills were routinely used by
North Korean officials.
"Any North Korean official who goes abroad has to change a big note and
bring back small, real currency," he said. "If you come back with real
money, you get medals."
When he decided to flee North Korea in 2000, he crossed into China with
thousands of dollars in counterfeit notes, he said. When Chinese police
caught him without official papers, they kept $4,000 of the fake cash
and let him go.
"Thanks to that money," he said, "my translator and I were released."
Besides the Garland case, U.S. officials say three criminal cases the
Justice Department is pursuing offer evidence that North Korea is
intensifying its efforts to churn out fake U.S. money and conspire with
organized crime to smuggle the bills and counterfeit drugs and other
products into the United States.
None of those cases explicitly mentions North Korea, but they refer to a
foreign country that several U.S. sources say is North Korea.
One case involves supernotes, drug trafficking and three suspected
members of a Chinese crime syndicate who were arrested in the Mariana
Islands last year.
According to federal court documents and interviews, the Justice
Department's central money-laundering section continues to present
evidence in the case to a federal grand jury.
In the two other cases, dubbed Operation Smoking Dragon and Operation
Royal Charm, at least 87 people have been arrested or indicted in New
Jersey and California on charges of smuggling or conspiring to smuggle
at least $6 million in counterfeit cash, knockoff Viagra, brand-name
cigarettes and weapons into the United States from "Country A" and
"Country B."
Several U.S. officials said those countries were North Korea and China
and that the money was printed by the North Korean government.
One of the alleged ringleaders, Co Khanh Tang, told undercover agents in
April that he was expecting an especially lucrative product from
suppliers in China: "new and better samples" of counterfeit U.S.
currency, the indictment against him says.
Stuart Levey, a top Treasury Department official, said North Korea
recently began churning out improved copies of U.S. bills.
In October, Levey headed a Treasury delegation to Beijing, Macao and
Hong Kong, where he pressed government officials and banking executives
for more help in cracking down on North Korean counterfeiters and banks
that helped them.
Just before the trip, the Treasury Department designated an Asian
financial institution, Macao-based Banco Delta Asia SARL, as a "primary
money-laundering concern" under the Patriot Act.
U.S. authorities allege that the bank was a longtime pawn of North
Korean front companies, which used it to conduct "illegal activities,
including distributing counterfeit currency and smuggling counterfeit
tobacco products" and aid North Korean drug-trafficking efforts.
The bank denied any intentional wrongdoing and later cut off several
dozen clients — including 40 North Korean people and businesses —
replaced several managers and allowed a panel named by Macao's
government to administer its operations.
The U.S. sanctions on the bank, as well as those against several North
Korean companies accused of helping proliferate weapons of mass
destruction, have infuriated North Korea.
The nation is threatening to boycott disarmament talks unless the United
States reverses course.
The Smoking Dragon case has raised concerns beyond counterfeiting.
In court documents, prosecutors allege that Tang and another suspect
offered undercover FBI agents a catalog of weapons available for
purchase from the arsenals of at least two foreign countries, believed
to be North Korea and China.
The agents ordered dozens of AK-47 assault rifles and in July 2004 began
negotiating a deal for surface-to-air missiles "manufactured by
communist countries," an indictment said.
The indictment added that the agents were told the weapons' high prices
were "necessitated by the need to bribe officials" of at least one of
the foreign governments.
Asher, the former State Department official, asserted in a November
speech at the Woodrow Wilson Center in Washington that absent a
worldwide crackdown on North Korean counterfeiting and the government's
other illicit activities, the country would continue to rely on criminal
profits to maintain its political isolation and its nuclear program and
to withstand pressure to reform.
"Given that periodic exposure of illegal dealings by North Korean
officials overseas in the past has not resulted in serious or lasting
consequences," Asher said, "Pyongyang may believe that an open door for
global criminality exists."
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Meyer reported from Washington and Demick from Seoul.
December 12, 2005
What Are Supernotes?
The best fake money that money can buy.
By Daniel Engber
Posted Tuesday, Aug. 23, 2005, at 7:12 PM ET
Undercover agents lured members of a smuggling ring to a bogus wedding
in New Jersey last weekend; many of the alleged conspirators were
arrested en route. The FBI claims the international ring has trafficked
weapons, drugs, fake cigarettes, and more than $5 million in "Supernotes"
to North America. What are Supernotes?
Counterfeit $100 bills of very high quality. Government agents say that
most funny money falls into three categories. The first two are
relatively easy to spot. Traditional fakes come from a process called
offset lithography that produces phony dollars without the "raised ink"
feel of genuine bills. Digital forgeries, made with high-tech scanners
and printers, also lack the texture of the real thing. Supernotes are
more deceptive. They're printed on cotton-fiber paper using the same
expensive "intaglio" printing presses used by the U.S. government. An
intaglio press creates tiny ridges on a piece of paper by forcing it
into the ink-filled grooves of an engraved plate at very high pressure.
That's what gives dollars—and Supernotes—their characteristic feel.
Government agents first discovered Supernotes in 1990. A very
experienced overseas cash handler identified one as a forgery by the
feel of the paper, even thought it was printed on an intaglio press. The
fake was as good as any the Secret Service had ever seen—it even
contained the right proportion of embedded red and blue fibers that the
Treasury Department uses as a security feature. The first Supernote
became known as Parent Note (PN) 14342. The term "Supernote"—also
occasionally seen as "Superdollar" or "Superbill"—originated outside of
the Secret Service. It refers to all high-quality counterfeits that can
be linked back to PN-14342 with forensic evidence. (The Secret Service
won't reveal how they link modern-day counterfeits to PN-14342.)
Supernote production requires uncommon equipment and skilled engineers.
At first, investigators thought they originated in Lebanon. Another
theory from the 1990s held that Iran produced them on equipment
purchased by the Shah two decades earlier and then shipped the bills to
Lebanon via Syria. The real source of the bills has not been found, but
a member of the Congressional Research Service reported that the
government of North Korea produces millions of dollars a year with
intaglio presses. In the meantime, the government ordered an extensive
redesign of U.S. currency in 1996. (Supernote versions of the new $100
bills have been discovered.)
The Treasury Department estimates that 60 percent of U.S. currency is
held overseas, where Supernotes seem to be in wider circulation. In
1998, Russia's central bank estimated that $4 billion in Supernotes were
floating around the country. And this past March, Supernotes turned up
in Peru. Still, government statistics suggest that Supernotes make up
only a small percentage of the counterfeit bills they find.
The Secret Service says the high-quality notes have detectable flaws and
that information about those flaws has been shared with international
banks. (They won't discuss the details in public.) If you want to check
your money supply, you can find companies that sell devices to suss out
the high-tech fakes. Counterfeiting |