WISCONSIN QUARTER VARIETY EXPLAINED Público Deposited

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 9, Number 4, January 22, 2006, Article 12

    WISCONSIN QUARTER VARIETY EXPLAINED

    On January 20 USA Today published an article about the
    Wisconsin quarter "extra leaf" varieties following the
    release of an investigative report on the subject:

    "The release of thousands of flawed Wisconsin state quarters
    that set off a buying frenzy, and speculations of foul play,
    was a mistake stemming from an ill-timed meal break, a
    government investigation has found.

    As many as 50,000 of the faulty coins, 50 times the amount
    earlier thought, entered circulation in 2004 after the coins
    were produced and bagged during an operator's break, according
    to the Treasury Department's Office of Inspector General. The
    flawed Wisconsin coins, which have sold for thousands of
    dollars, appear to have an extra leaf on the left side of
    an ear of corn.

    The quarters "were most likely produced as a result of
    machine or product deficiencies, not as a result of an
    intentional act," according to the report, obtained by
    USA TODAY through a Freedom of Information Act request."

    "No one was fired as a result of the incident. Mint
    spokeswoman Becky Bailey says by the time the final error
    was realized, the quarters were bagged and ready to be shipped.
    It would have been too costly to separate the blemished
    quarters from the good quarters by hand or to destroy them,
    Bailey says."

    To read the complete story, see: Full Story

    To read another story, in the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel,
    see: Full Story

URL da fonte Data de publicação
  • 2006-01-22
Volume
  • 9

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