... AsiaNews doesn't have to be a conspiracy theory website for them to sensationalize something they don't really understand.
The italians simply released the facts of what they seized - as in, what was written on the face of those documents. The secret service would be called in any of these cases. Just because they were called doesn't mean the thing is real.
Moreover, if you've been to italy, you'd know that the financial police's usual task is checking receipts and stamping forms at the border; they probably aren't well versed (on the street level) on the different US treasury instruments (or whether the fed issue bonds). So when they see the big number, they freaked out, and called their superiors. See? no conspiracy or ill-intent needed.
The only mildly interesting question would be what the japs were really up to with this; God knows they can't borrow against it or anything as you've suggested. It doesn't work like that. Those bonds will never clear upon deposit (because... there's no such thing). As of now they probably aren't in a whole lot of trouble (I don't believe there's a law against forging a non-existent bond and not use it). But the minute they try to deposit the thing, they are screwed.
The italians simply released the facts of what they seized - as in, what was written on the face of those documents. The secret service would be called in any of these cases. Just because they were called doesn't mean the thing is real.
Moreover, if you've been to italy, you'd know that the financial police's usual task is checking receipts and stamping forms at the border; they probably aren't well versed (on the street level) on the different US treasury instruments (or whether the fed issue bonds). So when they see the big number, they freaked out, and called their superiors. See? no conspiracy or ill-intent needed.
The only mildly interesting question would be what the japs were really up to with this; God knows they can't borrow against it or anything as you've suggested. It doesn't work like that. Those bonds will never clear upon deposit (because... there's no such thing). As of now they probably aren't in a whole lot of trouble (I don't believe there's a law against forging a non-existent bond and not use it). But the minute they try to deposit the thing, they are screwed.
Quote from Max Respect:
Random Crapital,
I looked at photos of known counterfeit securities - they don't look like the ones in the Italian photo.
Furthermore, the Asia news article of June 8, 4 days after the arrests, states,
"As soon as the seizure was made the US Embassy in Rome was informed. Italian and US secret services were called in to assist the Italian financial police."
And " the counterfeit work is such that the fake bonds are undistinguishable from the real ones."
It also notes that as of 4 days after the arrest, Italian police, with the help of US Secret Service, were STILL trying to determine if they were real or fake.
Maybe AsiaNews and Japan Today and the Kyodo News Service are really just "conspiracy theory" sites. Maybe not.
But I sure didn't see any tin foil on those Italian police hats...
And if AsiaNews is legit, and their article is correct, then there ARE "real" bonds of that denomination, which would, like the Japanese passports, take only minutes to determine if they were genuine. It's been over a week now. If the bonds were fake, THEY WOULD KNOW IT, and it would have been announced by now.
The Italians get to keep 40% or about $53 Billion, so if the bonds are real, they're not gonna sweep this under the rug.
