NUMISMATIC REPLICA RUCKUS 上市 Deposited

文章內容
  • The E-Sylum: Volume 9, Number 43, October 22, 2006, Article 13

    NUMISMATIC REPLICA RUCKUS

    Responding to Dick's Johnson's comments in his earlier item on coin
    replicas, Tom DeLorey writes: "My opinion on numismatic reproductions
    is not just derived from working in a coin shop for 20+ years, but also
    from four years in Coin World's Collectors Clearinghouse and 5-1/2 years
    at the American Numismatic Association sending out hundreds, if not
    thousands, of form letters beginning with a variation on "We regret
    to inform you....." I doubt if any of the recipients considered the
    letter to be an uplifting educational experience.

    One time while working at Coin World I read a story in a Detroit
    Newspaper about a family in Michigan that had been torn apart by a
    Blake & Co. $20 replica that a girl had found on her uncle's property,
    that the uncle had been incorrectly informed was "very valuable" and
    was now refusing to share with the girl. The girl's father was suing
    his brother, and everybody in the family had chosen one side or the
    other.

    I called the reporter to tell him that the Blake was very common in
    replica form, and he told me somebody else had seen the article and
    told the family the same thing, but their response was that they had
    already spent so much in legal fees they were going to see the case
    through.

    The U.S. Treasury used to have a rule that photographic reproductions
    of U.S. currency had to be either 75% or less of actual size or 150%
    or greater, in order to prevent the reproduction from being confused
    with and/or used as actual currency. The same rule would certainly
    make numismatic reproductions more easily identifiable, but would
    probably never be followed because it would make the reproductions
    harder to sell for a profit."

    [Tom also noticed a typo in Dick's submission that I he and I both
    missed. Dick wrote: "He, perhaps like others, may be a little
    short-sided on the subject of numismatic copies however." Tom adds:
    "My sides, though perhaps a bit wider than I would like, remain of
    average height." -Editor]

    Last week I wrote: "It seems to me that Tom's point was that even
    copies that Dick would categorize as "good" can and are used by
    unscrupulous people to cheat collectors. If I could paraphrase Dick's
    arguments, it would be, "Copies don't cheat people, people cheat people."

    David Ganz writes: "Both domestic (U.S.) counterfeiting laws and
    the Hobby Protection Act respectfully disagree with the conclusion.
    The act applies to study copies placed or acquired in commerce and
    those bought or sold. Doubt it? Send one to the Secret Service
    for a look-see and see if you get it back."

來源網址 發布日期
  • 2006-10-22
體積
  • 9

人际关系

NNP作者