1995-09-06 - Re: Forgery, bills, and the Four Horsemen (Articles and Comment)

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From: stevenw@iglou.com (Steven Weller)
To: Mats Bergstrom <asgaard@sos.sll.se>
Message Hash: f8dd17df84f9e31fc685bf3d857ae3b0c9e29df97265bdc12e2a73ad9a8dc684
Message ID: <v01530503ac72b3cf500f@[199.171.88.78]>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1995-09-06 01:16:49 UTC
Raw Date: Tue, 5 Sep 95 18:16:49 PDT

Raw message

From: stevenw@iglou.com (Steven Weller)
Date: Tue, 5 Sep 95 18:16:49 PDT
To: Mats Bergstrom <asgaard@sos.sll.se>
Subject: Re: Forgery, bills, and the Four Horsemen (Articles and Comment)
Message-ID: <v01530503ac72b3cf500f@[199.171.88.78]>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


>   Black Unicorn posted a very interesting info summary on the
>   subject of foreign state US$$ forgery.
>
>This is a story I heard, long ago, from a Brit, Mr Waterlow,
>about something that happened to his grandfather, chairman
>of the Waterlow bank:
>
>Early in this century Portugal didn't print it's own money but
>contracted this job to the Waterlow Bank in England. Some
>skilled conmen succeeded in making the bank beleive they were
>representatives of the Portugeese National Bank. Then they
>ordered a huge amount of new bills and got away (at least
>for some time) with it.

Tis all in a book: "The Man Who Stole Portugal". I picked it up for about
$2 in a bookstore a few months ago. Very much worth a read. An incredibly
audacious escapade.


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