PCGS Implores Congress to Act Against Counterfeit Coins

PCGS LogoExecutives of the Professional Coin Grading Service (www.PCGS.com) warn that the problems of Chinese-made counterfeits of rare coins are getting worse and could soon expand to include fakes of rare bank notes imported into the United States.

In personal meetings and messages conveyed to influential members of Congress in Washington, DC, PCGS officials cautioned that imported counterfeit coins have increased in quantity and quality, sometimes making it difficult to distinguish fakes from genuine.

"PCGS has detected over 5,500 counterfeit coins submitted in the last 12 months, a higher number by far than in any previous 12-month period," said, Don Willis, President of PCGS, a division of Collectors Universe, Inc. (NASDAQ: CLCT).

"Chinese counterfeiting is the most serious challenge faced not only by the collectibles markets and brand name products, but also by the United States Treasury. Entire industries have sprung up in China to manufacture virtually anything made in American including U.S. Government issued coins. These factories and industries operate in the open and with the full support of the Chinese government. By its lack of action to stop the activities, the Chinese government endorses the counterfeiting of US coins," Willis stated.

"Even worse, Customs and the US Government do little to stop counterfeits from entering the U.S. Once in the US little effort is made to arrest and prosecute individuals selling counterfeit material. Consequently the U.S. has been flooded with counterfeit products, including coins, resulting in the loss of billions of dollars in revenue each year."

PCGS attorney Armen Vartian is among members of a delegation of professional numismatists scheduled to meet in Washington on June 27 with Congressman Lamar Smith (R, Texas), Chairman of the House Committee on Judiciary who introduced legislation (H.R. 5977) on June 20 to extend provisions of the Hobby Protection Act to make it unlawful to assist or support anyone who violates the Act.

Under the current federal law first enacted in 1973, it is illegal to sell unmarked replicas of coins. The Hobby Protection act requires manufacturers and importers of imitation numismatic items to mark them plainly and permanently with the word, "COPY."

They are also scheduled to meet with Congressman Fred Upton (R, Michigan), Chairman of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, and Congressman Howard Berman (D, California), the ranking Democrat on the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.

Vartian will show the congressmen examples of Chinese-made counterfeit coins that now are part of the PCGS reference collection.

Collectors Universe President and PCGS Co-Founder, David Hall, said counterfeiting rare coins is not a new problem, but the drastic increase in the huge quantity of counterfeits is new and potentially devastating.

"In the 1960s there was a rash of counterfeits of key rare coins, even rolls of them, such as 1909-S V.D.B. cents, 1916-D, 1932-D and 1932-S quarter dollars. Counterfeits from the Far East are not new. Fake 1804 dollars have been available in Hong Kong for decades. What is new is the tremendous volume of counterfeits coming out of China, the counterfeiting of grading service holders, and the quality of the numismatic counterfeits is much higher than in the past," Hall explained.

Since its founding in 1986, PCGS experts have authenticated, graded and certified more than 23 million coins from around the world with a declared value of over $26 billion. For additional information, visit www.PCGS.com or call PCGS Customer Service at (800) 447-8848.

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george glazener

What a joke. Congress can’t even be bothered with counterfeit citizens so why should they care about counterfeit coins?

jim

It’s not Congress but the Treasury Department that cares. PCGS is appealing to the wrong group. Expanding an existing law which isn’t being enforced isn’t going to make any difference either. And if the allegations are true (and all this article is is rhetoric, no proof) then it’s the State Department that should be talking to China, not Congress expanding a law.

It would be more than interesting to see evidence of the open production of fakes in China. Certainly we in the U.K. are also seeing increased quantities of fakes which are generally believed to originate from China. Most are low quality, and very unconvincing. We have created a set of photos on Flickr especially for fakes, mainly to help educate and inform people how they look and how to avoid them: http://www.flickr.com/photos/lawrence_chard/sets/72157628117615427/with/6391140665/ This set also includes an 1804 Silver Dollar, mentioned in the article: http://www.flickr.com/photos/lawrence_chard/7427040196/in/set-72157628117615427 We are continuing to add to this set, and also to add links to genuine… Read more »

RonnieBGood

Dosen’t it seem a bit strange that a company that makes all of it’s money proving that a coin is a certain grade and is not a fake is leading the charge?

jim

Indeed it does. Maybe they’ve lost some key personnel and don’t trust those left to do a credible job anymore. Maybe their own ranks have been infiltrated…

Don

I have been reporting a seller on ebay for a 1 1/2 years for listing counterfeit coins. It seems they will not removed this seller. These coins are shipped from China but the listed location is in the US.