THE SUPERNOTE
New Yorker, October 23, 1995
PASSING THE BUCK DEPT. A near-perfect counterfeit hundred-dollar bill is coming out of the Middle East. Is it an act of economic terrorism? And can the Treasury stop it?
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BY FREDRIC DANNEN AND IRA SILVERMAN
IN THE SPRING OF 1992, two Lebanese-born drug traffickers found themselves in jail in Massachusetts, and their prospects looked grim. Gebran Hanna, of Ottawa, and Peter Kattar, of Andover, Massachusetts, had shipped more than three tons of hashish, concealed in plastic barrels of olives, from the Bekaa Valley, in Lebanon, to Boston Harbor, and they were caught. If they were convicted, they would likely face mandatory sentences of thirty years or more. Their only hope for clemency was to cooperate with the government of the United States, and provide useful information. As it happened, they knew about something big.
Hanna was escorted to the office of Paul Kelly, the Boston federal prosecutor who had brought the hashish case. After Kelly, a slim blond man in his thirties, and an agent of the United States Customs Service interrogated him about the drug business, Hanna suddenly changed the subject. Was the government interested in learning about a counterfeit United States hundred-dollar bill of remarkable quality being printed in Lebanon? Hanna said he had inside knowledge of the operation, and offered to direct his brother, who lived in Ottawa, to travel to Beirut and obtain samples. Kelly was skeptical but interested. “We said, ‘Fine. Do that,’” he recalls. As had been arranged, the brother stopped at Logan Airport on his way back from Lebanon, and there he met the customs agent and turned over five bills.
Kelly was stunned when the bills were presented to him. Two of them did not appear to be fraudulent. “I’ve done counterfeiting cases, and I know what a counterfeit bill looks like,” he says. “These bills looked genuine. They felt genuine. I said, ‘If these are counterfeit, this is a serious problem for the United States.’” Kelly immediately called the Boston office of the United States Secret Service, a branch of the Treasury. “I said, ‘We have some outstanding-looking bills, and they came from Lebanon,’” he recalls. “Secret Service was at our door in three and a half minutes. They knew exactly what I was talking about.”
Kelly, it turned out, had obtained samples of a counterfeit hundred-dollar bill that had been dubbed the Supernote. It had surfaced around 1990 and originated in the Middle East, and, the agents told Kelly, as far as they could determine between two and three billion dollars’ worth had been printed in two years. It was indeed no ordinary counterfeit. Most fake currency is printed on an offset press—the type used for books and magazines—and it tends to look and feel flat. The Supernote, however, was being manufactured by the same industrial process used to make authentic United States currency, known as intaglio printing, in which an etched plate meets paper with tremendous force, giving the note a distinctive, embossed feel. The paper used for the Supernote was an uncanny replica of the currency stock produced exclusively for the United States government since 1879 by Crane & Company, of Dalton, Massachusetts—seventy-five per cent cotton, twenty-five per cent linen, with embedded red and blue fibres.
The workmanship of the Supernote was extraordinary. It had sequential serial numbers, and the printing plates continued to be refined. A Secret Service agent identified Kelly’s two samples as Supernotes by three minuscule imperfections. Even when the flaws were pointed out, Kelly says, “I frankly couldn’t see the damn imperfections.” (A former employee of the Secret Service’s forensic division says that when a sample of the Supernote first arrived at the agency’s laboratory, in Washington, a top technical analyst “examined it the way he has every other counterfeit note in the world, and called it genuine.”)
Most alarming of all, the Supernote was so well engineered that it could fool currency scanners at the nation’s twelve Federal Reserve banks. The black ink on the front of American currency contains ferrous oxide, which is magnetic, and the Fed’s scanners read the magnetic field down the center line of the portrait with such precision that a thousand genuine hundred-dollar bills are rejected for every one that is later found to be counterfeit. Yet, Kelly recalls, “Secret Service told me the bills went through those machines.”
The Supernote, Kelly learned, had been circulating in Europe, the Far East, the Middle East, and the former Soviet Union, but only a limited supply had reached the United States. This was not reassuring. Of the almost three hundred and ninety billion dollars in American paper money now in existence, some two-thirds, or more than two hundred and fifty billion, is in foreign hands. The worldwide popularity of the dollar is a tremendous boon to the United States. As the Federal Reserve is fond of pointing out, every bill in circulation is in effect an interest-free loan; an equivalent amount in government securities would cost the United States more than twenty-five billion dollars in annual interest payments. The beauty of bills stuffed in a mattress in Kazakhstan, for instance, is the good chance that the notes will never be called in. The Supernote was by no means the first foreign-made or foreign-distributed counterfeit of American currency, but because of its frightening and unprecedented quality it seemed singularly poised to damage world confidence in the dollar.
IN GENERAL, foreign counterfeiting of American paper money is an enforcement quandary for the Secret Service, which is essentially a domestic police force. At home, its anti-counterfeiting record is exemplary; by tracking suspicious purchases of paper and ink, the Service is able to seize more than ninety per cent of the counterfeit money that is printed in the United States before it can be distributed. Only a fraction of the Service’s two thousand agents are stationed abroad, however, and to make cases outside the United States the agency depends heavily on foreign law enforcement. In Thailand in 1985, for example, with the aid of the Royal Thai Police, the Service tracked down Lee Ah-sin, nicknamed King Kong, an eccentric, obsessively meticulous Malaysian-born engraver who manufactured an outstanding hundred-dollar bill using a converted squid-processor as a press.
The Supernote was clearly not the work of an eccentric. It appeared instead to be the Secret Service’s worst nightmare: an industrial-level counterfeit printed in a hostile region of the world. What’s more, there was evidence that the printing operation was protected by the military of Syria, an essentially hostile government. The Secret Service agents, Kelly recalls, envisioned the Supernote facility as “a barn or a big warehouse” with multiple presses, either in the Syrian-controlled Bekaa Valley of Lebanon—the notorious badlands of the Middle East, where drugs are harvested and terrorist groups conduct field exercises—or in Syria itself, but in either case guarded by Syrian soldiers. That scenario raised another ugly possibility—that the Supernote was a form of state-protected terrorism, a charge that would not be new to Syria. “The Secret Service did believe that this was an effort not just to acquire amazing wealth but also to destabilize the economy of the United States,” Kelly says.
The Secret Service had done its best to investigate the Supernote, and earlier in 1992 it had set up a task force in Cyprus. If the agency could locate the printing facility, Kelly was now told, that information would be turned over to the United States military or intelligence services. The Secret Service was eager to speak to Gebran Hanna and Peter Kattar, the hashish smugglers, and a meeting was arranged at the U.S. Attorney’s Office.
Hanna and Kattar said that, as they understood it, the counterfeit operation had begun in Lebanon in the mid-seventies, during the civil war between Christian Phalangists and Muslims. The Phalangists, who were short of money, conscripted skilled Armenian engravers to make the plates of a counterfeit United States hundred, and this was printed on the bleached paper of genuine one-dollar bills. The counterfeits, though imperfect, were successfully passed in Czechoslovakia to buy rifles. Years later, according to Hanna and Kattar, high-ranking officials of the Syrian military in Lebanon took control of the counterfeiting operation, and the Supernote was developed, although counterfeit hundreds of lesser quality also continued to be produced. Hanna and Kattar said that they knew of three printing facilities in Lebanon, and that the counterfeit hundreds were transported via drug routes—in trucks passing through Turkey to Europe and in ships from the Lebanese port of Juniyah to Cyprus.
The debriefing sessions with Hanna and Kattar lasted several months. In February, 1993, the two men pleaded guilty to the hashish conspiracy and were sentenced, Hanna to eight years in prison and Kattar to ten. Both men were given lighter sentences in return for their information about counterfeiting and about other items of interest to the government. With that, Kelly’s involvement in the Supernote investigation came to an end, but what he had learned from the Secret Service continued to trouble him. “I’m here in Boston prosecuting drug traffickers and murderers, but this was several notches above anything I’d seen before,” he says. “It seemed to me a tremendous problem for the country.”
KELLY has been proved right. Today, the Supernote remains one of the longest unsolved counterfeiting cases in the modern history of the Secret Service, and it has begun to undermine international confidence in United States currency. Its rate of manufacture appears prodigious; in the Russian Federation alone, where the dollar has supplanted the unstable ruble as the primary currency, the Russian Central Bank estimates that the volume of Supernotes is as high as four billion dollars. And because of the possibility of economic terrorism as a motive for the Supernote, the full dimensions of the problem are not yet known.
It is a problem that has not been widely or accurately reported. To date, the few press accounts of the Supernote have mostly been based on a July, 1992, report of the House Republican Research Committee Task Force on Terrorism and Unconventional Warfare. The report blamed Syria and Iran for distributing the Supernote, and stated that it was actually being printed by the government of Iran at the mint in Teheran—charges that Iran called “wild hallucinations of the extreme right.”
Indeed, the theory expressed to Paul Kelly by the Secret Service agents in 1992—that the Supernote facility is in either Lebanon or Syria, and is protected by the Syrian military—is now considered fact by many at the State Department, according to insiders. A counterfeit hundred of lesser quality is also being printed in the same region. State Department sources say that a diplomatic solution to the Supernote problem has been sought in several discussions with the Syrian government, including a May, 1994, meeting between Warren Christopher and the Syrian President, Hafiz al-Assad. The State Department is hindered in those discussions, however, by the slow progress of the Supernote investigation on the part of the Secret Service; without knowing the precise location of the printing operation, one source says, “it’s difficult to pound the table.”
The Secret Service, meanwhile, may not be altogether to blame for its lack of progress on the Supernote. It has apparently been held back by a curious policy decision of the United States Treasury, which has often been accused of being a schizophrenic institution—part banker, part cop. In dealing with the Supernote, the banker constituency evidently has set the agenda. The Treasury, taking its cue from the Federal Reserve, has a difficult time regarding counterfeiting, even on a very large scale, as a macroeconomic problem, because cash is a relatively small percentage of the total money supply. Wire transfers, checks, and credit-card transactions, after all, run into the trillions. Counterfeiting becomes significant to the Fed only if it undermines confidence in the dollar.
Dozens of interviews with high-level insiders left the impression that the Federal Reserve and the Treasury don’t fear the Supernote itself as much as they fear a confidence problem that might result if they publicly acknowledge it and countenance a large-scale investigation. (As one expert on international terrorism who has looked into the Supernote puts it, “If the note is that nearly perfect, it doesn’t exist.”) Last March, the Secret Service briefed the Senate Appropriations Committee on its foreign enforcement problems, and the committee, deeply concerned, urged a significant increase of Secret Service agents overseas. In late August, the Service finally won approval to open its first permanent office in the Middle East, in Cyprus.
The Treasury’s efforts to keep the existence of the Supernote quiet have failed. After five years of Supernote production, merchants and bank tellers in many foreign cities, notably in Europe and the Far East, are increasingly reluctant to accept hundred-dollar bills. In August of 1994, for example, the columnist Liz Smith noted that “top banks” in London would not exchange pound notes for hundreds because of concern about a counterfeit, which, they suspected, came from the Middle East. Last February, the Hong Kong Standard reported that a rash of counterfeit hundreds had hit that city. Senator Patrick Leahy, who serves on the Banking Committee, complained recently that while he was on vacation in Ireland this summer establishments would sooner accept his traveller’s checks than his hundreds. Similar problems have been reported in Greece.
Finally, last month, the Treasury did take action on the Supernote—though without ever once publicly mentioning it. At a press conference notable for its levity (introductory remarks were delivered by an actor dressed as Ben Franklin), Robert E. Rubin, the Secretary of the Treasury, announced the first significant redesign of American currency since 1929, to commence next year with a new hundred-dollar bill. Among the modifications are a larger, off-center portrait, a watermark, and a patch of ink that shifts from green to black when viewed from different angles. Rubin insisted that the redesign had been prompted not by any existing problem but, rather, by the “future and potential threat” of counterfeiting posed by color photocopiers, digital scanners, and color laser printers. He described the amount of counterfeit currency now in existence as “de minimis” and “not an economic problem,” and asserted that the redesign was an example of “anticipating a problem” and “staying ahead of the curve.”
It remains to be seen just how effective a solution the currency redesign will be. Even if the Middle Eastern counterfeiters cannot duplicate the new hundred, they can continue to cause damage for some time with the old. The Treasury has a policy of never recalling existing currency, for fear that the world’s hoarders of dollars might switch to Deutsche marks or yen. Eventually, a market preference for the new hundred, and the replacement of old bills as they pass through the Federal Reserve system, is expected to drive the old one out of existence, but that could take years. In the meantime, Mary Ellen Withrow, the Treasurer of the United States, emphasizes that “we will have two kinds of money circulating at the same time, the old and the new—and they both will be good.”
While the threat of widespread amateur counterfeiting on color reprographic equipment is indeed serious, it is farfetched to think that that threat alone prompted the currency redesign. Since 1990, hundreds and fifties have had two anti-reprographic features: a translucent polymer thread embedded in the paper, and microprinting around the portrait. By 1993, the thread and the microprinting had been added to twenties, tens, and fives. Even those features, which did virtually nothing to alter the look of the currency, took years to implement. Redesign like the one announced last month is a radical step for the Treasury, which believes that the consistent look of green-and-black American currency conveys its stability. Many politicians, meanwhile, have long held that a dramatic redesign of the currency would be highly offensive to the American public—like changing the flag. While other nations regularly alter their currency—Great Britain, for example, has remade the pound note six times since 1914—the printing plates of American paper money have changed so little since 1929 that on the back of a new ten-dollar bill the car driving by the Treasury Building is of Model T vintage.
Needless to say, the consistency of those printing plates is a benefit to counterfeiters. Back in 1981, the Secret Service began agitating for a full-scale redesign of the currency, out of concern that United States paper money might be vulnerable not merely to amateur reprography but to an industrial-level counterfeiting problem like the Supernote. Officials of the Secret Service pressed for more than a dozen anti-counterfeiting features, including holograms, chemical markers, and the use of multiple colors, a standard feature in major currencies throughout the world.
In 1984, after three years of study and experimentation, the Secret Service and the Bureau of Engraving and Printing had developed three prototype twenty-dollar bills, all with multicolored printing. Robert Leuver, the director of the B.E.P. at the time, says he brought the prototypes to Donald Regan, the Treasury Secretary, who then took them to the White House. “They didn’t float,” Leuver recalls Regan telling him. Early the next year, James Baker replaced Regan as Treasury Secretary, and representatives of both the B.E.P. and the Secret Service showed the prototypes to Baker’s deputy, Richard Darman, who, one of those representatives says, flatly rejected them. In 1986, Baker finally approved only two new features—the polymer thread and the microprinting. The Secret Service made it clear that it considered the changes insufficient protection against various types of counterfeiting, and received assurances from the Treasury that other changes would come soon.
As it turned out, even the new features approved by Baker did not begin to take effect until 1990. Crane & Company, the exclusive supplier of American currency paper, was initially unable to master the technical difficulties of embedding a polymer thread, and in 1986 the B.E.P. was forced to seek other bidders. The most promising new supplier, Portals Ltd., a British paper manufacturer, was knocked out of the running the following year, however, when Massachusetts Representative Silvio Conte, a close friend of Crane’s late chairman, put through an amendment to an appropriations bill requiring that American currency paper be supplied by an American-owned concern. Crane got another chance to produce paper with an embedded thread, and finally succeeded in 1989.
The Treasury’s reluctance to alter the traditional look of the currency is apparent even in the redesign that is to take effect next year. Secretary Rubin stresses that the new currency “retains the basic American feel and look”—it will be printed on the same Crane paper, of the same size, and in the same two colors. Mary Ellen Withrow, the Treasurer, says that the use of additional colors was never seriously considered. “Green is the color of prosperity, and black is a good thing, too—it shows we’re sound and solid and in the black,” she says.
THE TREASURY remains obsessively secretive about the Supernote, to the point of denial. At a hearing before the House Banking Committee last year, Guy Caputo, then the deputy director of the Secret Service, would not confirm the existence of a high-quality Middle Eastern counterfeit; nor would Ronald K. Noble, the Treasury’s under-secretary for enforcement, in an interview for this account. In late August, Theodore E. Allison, assistant to the board of governors of the Federal Reserve, insisted, unblinkingly, “We’ve talked to thirty Russian banks in the past month, and they don’t have any problems with counterfeits.… There’s no sign of it.”
Allison’s statement was an astounding one, considering that on September 13th Viktor Melnikov, the director of foreign-currency regulation and control for the Russian Central Bank, met with representatives of the State Department and described a Supernote epidemic in his country. Melnikov, whose observations were reported in a cable to the State Department from the American Embassy in Moscow, said the Central Bank had calculated that the people of Russia were holding between fifteen and twenty billion dollars—more dollars than rubles—and that the American hundred was an especially popular denomination. Unfortunately, he said, between fifteen and twenty per cent of those dollars were believed to be “counterfeit, ‘Supernotes,’” and he added that “the situation was so bad that German banks would no longer accept 100 dollar bills from Russian citizens.”
The severity of the Supernote problem in Russia is even more remarkable in light of the volume of genuine hundred-dollar bills that are being sent there. In the last year, a handful of American banks—led by Republic National—have shipped more than twenty billion dollars in crisp, new hundred-dollar bills to about fifty Moscow banks, in return for other currencies or gold bullion. Viktor Melnikov does not think this is a good thing; he told the State Department representatives that at least half the banks in Russia were believed to be controlled by organized crime, and expressed concern that much of the money coming from the United States “was being used for illegal purposes, including narcotics trafficking.” Republic National and the other banks may be profiting handsomely on their transaction fees, but they are breaking no laws in sending all that cash to Russia; indeed, they buy it directly from the Federal Reserve, and the stacks of hundreds arrive by plane in Moscow still in their government shrink-wrap. Allison, of the Fed, acknowledged that some “undesirable stuff” might be going on in Russia—it’s a big country, he pointed out—but he spoke with obvious satisfaction of the Russian demand for dollars. “Issuing currency is about the best racket there is for a government,” he said, smiling.
The closest that any Treasury employees interviewed for this account came to admitting the existence of the Supernote was an acknowledgment by two Secret Service officials—Paul Hackenberry, the assistant director of investigations, and Richard Rohde, the head of the counterfeit division—that a “family” of counterfeit hundreds was being printed in the Middle East. But they insisted that the term Supernote was a “misnomer” and was not employed by the Secret Service. “They are good-quality notes, but not that good,” Rohde said. When he was asked to present some samples of the Middle Eastern counterfeit for inspection, he produced two notes—one a Series 1988 and the other a Series 1993. Although he took considerable pains to point out various imperfections, the 1993 note nevertheless looked flawless to an untrained eye. Moreover, the note contained an embedded polymer security thread, a feat that had taken Crane & Company years to accomplish.
But Hackenberry and Rohde were willing, even eager, to talk about the alarming rise of foreign counterfeiting of American currency, and the need for the Secret Service to enhance its overseas presence—an obvious source of frustration. Rohde said that of the counterfeit American money seized within the United States last year, seventy-two per cent was manufactured abroad, and that the volume of seizures outside the United States was increasing every year. In August, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, with the help of the Secret Service, confiscated a hundred and twelve million dollars in fake hundreds in Saint-Constant, Quebec; in Bogota, Colombia, counterfeiters copiously produce hundreds and twenties on the bleached paper of authentic dollar bills.
The establishment of a new office in Cyprus may at last help the Secret Service answer some key questions about the Supernote. (Until now, the task force in Cyprus has consisted mostly of agents on temporary loan from offices in Rome and the United States, with occasional assistance from the Paris office, the State Department, the C.I.A., Israeli intelligence, and the German federal police.) A person familiar with the efforts of the Supernote task force says that one of those key questions is whether the motive for the counterfeit extends beyond simple greed to the funding of Islamic terrorist groups, or an ideological attack on a symbol of the United States. An even darker, though highly speculative, scenario, advanced by, among other people, a senior staff member for a Senate subcommittee that investigates money laundering, is that the Supernote may be used to underwrite the development of a deployable nuclear device; in the former Soviet Union, weapons-grade plutonium is reputedly for sale. Robert Leuver is convinced that the Supernote is designed to cause economic harm. “This is an act of terrorism—monetary warfare,” he says. “The Treasury won’t admit it.”
Since 1979, Syria has appeared on the State Department’s list of terrorist nations—a small club of countries that includes Cuba, Iran, Iraq, Libya, North Korea, and Sudan. While no Syrian officials are known to have been directly involved in planning or executing terrorist attacks since 1986, Syria permits Iran to supply arms to Hezbollah, the Islamic terrorist group, through Damascus, and allows other groups, including Hamas and the P.K.K., to train or take refuge in the Bekaa Valley. Nevertheless, Syria has tried to initiate discussions with the State Department to have its name removed from the list; Damascus is publicly committed to the Middle East peace process, and during the past three years President Clinton has met twice with President Assad. Before one of those meetings, Clinton was briefed by then Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen, who, in turn, had been briefed on the Supernote by two Secret Service agents from the Cyprus task force. A State Department official says that stopping production of the Supernote would likely be a condition of Syria’s removal from the terrorist list.
There is little reason to believe that a diplomatic solution will work. Syria, some people have observed, is as much a racketeering enterprise as it is a nation, and for years it has allegedly been involved in the international drug trade—a business often complemented by counterfeiting. According to a 1992 congressional report, large quantities of heroin—at the time of the report, nearly twenty per cent of United States consumption—along with hashish and cocaine, are produced in the Bekaa Valley. The report named several high-ranking members of the Syrian government and military as conspirators in the drug trafficking, including President Assad’s brother Rifaat. The motive behind the Supernote remains the subject of greatest speculation, and may determine whether military force is used to destroy the printing facility, if it is ever located. It will also determine whether the Treasury has blundered in failing to treat the Middle Eastern counterfeit as an urgent law-enforcement issue, let alone one of national security. ♦