Two men from Mississippi are facing federal charges for using counterfeit U.S. currency to purchase high-end watches and jewelry from a retail store in Pineville.
A duo from Mississippi who travelled to Pineville, North Carolina, to defraud a jewelry store has just been charged for buying luxury watches and jewelry using counterfeit US dollars.
There’s a warning for business owners in Gloucester Township. Scammers are using counterfeit cash from movie props at several stores around town. It looks just like real cash but the phony bills say ...
Police noted that the fake money is nearly identical to real bills from a visual standpoint, with the texture and size being the same. The only visible difference is a change in wording on the bill.
Authorities say the fake bills, often purchased online as props for music videos or films, have recently been used in attempts to make real purchases.
In January 2024, police in South Brunswick announced that a man had been arrested for using fake movie money at a Wawa in town several times. Police said the man went into the Wawa at busy times so ...
Prosecutors say the men used sleight-of-hand to swap real cash with fake bills at a mall jewelry store in Pineville, NC.
Business owners in a New Jersey county are being warned to watch out for what police are calling phony movie money.
Now you see it, now you don't! Federal officials say a magic trick was used to pull off a $300,000 heist at a jewelry store in Pineville.
In Lake Charles, banks are trying to catch fake bills before they circulate further. However, when those fakes appear in deposits, it is businesses that lose out.
Detectives are investigating several recent cases involving the props, which look and feel almost identical to real money.
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