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MNeagle
14th July 2010, 11:43 AM
Most people post bail to stay out of jail.

Not to risk a lot more time there.

According to Cinnaminson Police, a Camden man included counterfeit $20 bills while paying his $400 bail on July 7.

Lousy counterfeit $20s.

Run off on a color copier, apparently.

"They're pretty poor. I didn't have to touch them and I knew they were bad," said Detective Sgt. William K. Covert.

They were almost as obvious as the copies of $1 bills he's seen created by students trying to fool soda machines.

The paper didn't feel right. It lacked the colored threads. And Andrew Jackson's face was kind of fuzzy.

Ronald White, 35, was arrested for several counts of shoplifting from a Burlington Coat Factory and Shop-Rite on Route 130.

He had $900 in cash on him, not all of it counterfeit.

Cash is accepted at both stores.

Police also discovered he had outstanding warrants from Camden that required $400 for bail.

So, while the shoplifting charges were being processed, White paid the bail.

The next day, Covert discovered that five of the $20 bills were funny money.

Very phony funny money.

No way these bills would ever pass the pen test, where a special marker is dragged across.

Some forgers bleach $5 bills, then reprint them with images from $100 bills, hoping to fool the pen test, Covert said.

Holding such bills up to a light quickly reveals they're fake.

A complaint was signed against White for forgery.

But before police found him, he found police.

On Monday, White turned up at the Cinnaminson Police station, saying he overpaid for the bail and wanted his money back.

In his possession were two more bogus $20 bills, police said.

Today, he was still in Burlington County Jail, in lieu of paying $5,000 cash bail.

"One of my favorite sayings is, you can't teach stupid, because every day something else comes up and you just shake your head," Covert said.



http://www.philly.com/inquirer/breaking/news_breaking/20100714_Man_posts_bail_with_counterfeit_bills.htm l#ixzz0tgCkts3H

MNeagle
14th July 2010, 11:46 AM
The next day, Covert discovered that five of the $20 bills were funny money.





The next day??? Who's the ding-a-ling that accepted them in the first place???? Hmmmm?

undgrd
14th July 2010, 11:54 AM
"One of my favorite sayings is, you can't teach stupid, because every day something else comes up and you just shake your head," Covert said



Stupid criminal pays stupid police with fake $20 notes. Police take fake notes and release him. He comes back to collect fake notes because he over paid and is arrested again.

Seems to be a lot of stupid in that town

StackerKen
14th July 2010, 12:07 PM
:D :D :D

the riot act
14th July 2010, 12:23 PM
;D But it is all fake money now isn't it.

I see we have a fruit club starting here. ;D ;D ;D

TheNocturnalEgyptian
14th July 2010, 12:57 PM
Why rob a coat store and use fake money to post bail?

Why not forgo the robbery and try to use the fake money at the store?

Even better, ITS SUMMERTIME DAMNIT YOU DONT NEED A COAT

gunDriller
14th July 2010, 01:12 PM
theoretically speaking, the manufacturing of spec-compliant $20 bills involves the manufacturing of custom paper, in addition to the customary fluency in die engraving & printing.