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![]() By OSCAR SHAGNASTY Independent Philately News WASHINGTON, D.C. -- The new stamp that pays tribute to the Smithsonian Insitution is a phony, a U.S. Postal Service official has revealed. "Phony as a three-dollar bill," said Clayman Doubty. The attention-grabbing Smithsonian stamp was found to be a fraud after an investigation revealed it did not have a designation of cents, nor glue on the back. "So It didn't make sense," said Doubty, with a chuckle at his double entendre.. ============================================ PHONY STAMPS (Illegal to use to mail a letter.) http://simpler-solutions.net/pmachin...ads/ta20040712 http://mysite.verizon.net/edconrad/FOSSILS/TightFit.jpg ============================================ The Smithsonian stamp, claimed to be printed in tribute to the Institution's search for truth concerning man's intelligent design instead of evolution, is the second stamp declared a phony over the past few days. The attention-grabbing "Inverted Jenny" stamp found last month on the envelope of a Broward County, Fla., absentee ballot was declared a fake on Monday. But the stamp still may be preserved. The curator for the Smithsonian National Postal Museum in Washington has said he is interested in the stamp, even if it is a fake, because it's now a piece of history that also generated new interest in stamp collecting. "We always sort of assumed overwhelmingly the odds were against it being genuine, but it has done several positive things," said the curator of philately, Wilson Hulme. Two independent stamp organizations examined the Inverted Jenny in person on Monday. "We always sort of assumed overwhelmingly the odds were against it being genuine, but it has done several positive things," said the curator of philately, Wilson Hulme. Representatives from both the Pennsylvania-based American Philatelic Society and the California-based Professional Stamp Experts agreed the Broward stamp was a copy of the Inverted Jenny, famous for its blue upside-down biplane. The forged stamp has several differences from a real Inverted Jenny. Mercer Bristow, director of expertizing with APS, measured how many perforations per two centimeters the stamp had. A true Inverted Jenny has 11. This one had 10, Bristow said. The original Jenny stamps were printed in an engraving process. The one on the ballot was not engraved but probably a lithograph, he said. "Now that we see it, it's almost obvious," Bristow said. Then Randy Shoemaker, senior expert with PSE, looked at the stamp. The first giveaway, he said, was that the Jenny was taped on, as if it had no glue. "I think it was a philatelic prank," Shoemaker said. APS will issue a certificate that should follow the stamp, letting any future owner know it is a fake, APS Executive Director Peter Mastrangelo said. The stamp was similar to one known forgery the APS has on record from about 10 years ago, Bristow said. Where that forgery came from is unknown. Using a fake stamp is considered revenue fraud, said Debbie Fetterly, spokeswoman for the U.S. Postal Service in South Florida. But the case has been reviewed and ruled an isolated incident. It also lacks enough evidence for prosecution, postal inspector Blad Rojo said. County Commissioner John Rodstrom discovered the stamp last month after the Nov. 7 election while reviewing absentee ballots collected at a Fort Lauderdale warehouse. Days later, the stamp drew attention from across the country and overseas. Stamp experts said they thought the stamp was a fake based on pictures taken of the stamp last month. But Monday was the first time experts were able to see it in person. The Jenny stamps were printed in 1918. But a printing error left several sheets of the stamp with an upside down Curtiss Jenny biplane. Somehow, one sheet of 100 Jenny stamps got through postal inspectors. The last real Inverted Jenny was found in 1994, Bristow said. Five of the 100 are still missing. If it had been the real deal, the Broward stamp would have been worth about $300,000, depending on its condition. Now the stamp will go back into storage, as do the rest of Broward's absentee ballots. Supervisor of Elections Brenda Snipes said the envelope, which had no return address, must be kept for 22 months along with all the other absentee ballots. Afterward, all of the materials can be destroyed. Snipes said she was leaning toward donating it to the Smithsonian. "We want to do what is best," Snipes said. As for the other old stamps on the envelope, they looked real, APS's Bristow said, but probably not worth much more than their face values. |
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