Casinos
Defend Against 'Supernotes'
North Korean-produced 'supernotes'
-- authentic looking but counterfeit $100 bills
-- have infiltrated cashier cages of Strip casinos
but are not causing widespread problems, federal
and state authorities said.
"They
have been passed around, but it's infrequent
and there are only a small percentage of the
notes that have been passed here," said
Paul Masto, assistant special agent in charge
of the U.S. Secret Service office in Las Vegas.
"We're a city with a considerable amount
of cash transactions. We probably take in $50,000,
$60,000, $70,000 in counterfeit money in town
per week."
Currency
validation equipment on slot machines and the
education of dealers, casino cage personnel
and gaming employees who handle money is the
first line of defense against counterfeiting.
"Counterfeiting
is a considerable problem, but we do a lot of
training with the casinos so they can recognize
counterfeit money, credit fraud and identity
theft," Masto said.
The
spread of supernotes was the centerpiece of
an FBI investigation this year that led to arrests
in several U.S. cities. One of the individuals
charged, according to the indictment, was a
Taiwanese national who had agreed to move the
counterfeit currency through Las Vegas.
Jerry
Markling, chief of the State Gaming Control
Board's enforcement division, said the agency
isn't aware of recent concerns about supernotes.
Markling
said gaming agents will routinely work with
federal and international authorities on counterfeiting
issues.
"We've
had some counterfeiting cases involving chips
and tokens," Markling said. "When
there's an indication of some new type of counterfeit
currency, the Secret Service has been really
good about flooding the area with training information."
Masto
said most counterfeit currency is of poor quality
and can be readily spotted. Most fake bills
are picked up by currency validation systems.
JCM
American Corp., a Japan-based manufacturer of
currency acceptors -- also known as bill validators
-- has its devices embedded into 85 percent
of all North American slot machines and about
75 percent of the world market, company Vice
President Tom Neiman said.
While
not commenting on specifics concerning the supernotes,
Neiman said the company interacts with representative
of the U.S. Department of the Treasury and other
federal authorities to ensure counterfeit currency
doesn't make it through its validation devices.
"The
counterfeiters today are not some semi-idiots.
They do a good job," Neiman said. "That's
why we work closely with Treasury to make sure
we're updated and our products can detect counterfeit
notes at all levels."
JCM,
which has its American headquarters in Las Vegas,
unveiled a currency validation product for table
games during the September Global Gaming Expo.
The company is also working on a device for
soda, snack and other vending machines that
will return change in currency rather than coin.
Neiman
said when new counterfeit markings are discovered,
the company quickly updates its devices.
"Every
now and then, we get a really good $10 or a
really good $100," Masto said. "We'll
allow JCM to come in and capture the signatures
so they can do what they need to with their
equipment."
Casino
employees, however, can be the primary arbitrators
of what is and isn't counterfeit.
MGM
Mirage spokesman Alan Feldman said the Secret
Service routinely conducts training for all
cash handling workers at the company's 12 Strip
resorts.
"Ultimately,
everyone gets training to try and spot this
stuff," Feldman said. "They'll send
in experts in what amounts to large training
seminars for our staff."
|