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Replies: 22 / Views: 3,270 |
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Valued Member
United States
441 Posts |
Hello, family.. I am sooo mad right now. I just asked this seller where he got this Lincoln, he says he had it since he was a kid. I know my 1922 Lincolns. My husband purchased it, but once I had it in hand I knew something was up. A google image search turned up this exact obverse tied to (Not Allowed).com. This seller has a sold list of some very high dollar items, and I am becoming suspicious and very furious.. before I jump the gun and report this guy, will somebody confirm what I am seeing here? There is no way this is an authentic Lincoln Cent, am I right? 
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Valued Member
United States
334 Posts |
I am no pro but I do know I would not buy it. Numbers look very strange.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3540 Posts |
RUN AWAY from this fraud.
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Valued Member
 United States
441 Posts |
Right. I actually thought the auction pics were pretty decent, yet they certainly did not tell the tale like my pictures do. We only paid a couple bucks, so what. But he said he had it since he was a kid. What should I do? His sold items list has several coins that look wrong, but he's been a member since 2003 and has 500 feedback, 375 as a seller. If I report him, then what? Could this guy really be buying fakes from China and selling them from $hundreds a-piece and nobody has noticed? Isn't that a very serious crime? What is the right thing to do? I feel sick thinking about it!
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1192 Posts |
I would report it as fake coins.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
7375 Posts |
I would either keep the coin or return it. Like you say, you only paid a couple of bucks for it. As far as the other coins, we have a Counterfeit Reporting forum, and there are some CCF members that are warriors against counterfeits. I suggest that you post any listings for counterfeit coins in that forum.
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Valued Member
 United States
441 Posts |
Thank you, edweather. Warriors against counterfeits is exactly who I am seeking.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1602 Posts |
Yes, I know exactly where he got this and unless he's about 15, he hasn't had it "since he was a kid". What can we do?
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Moderator
 United States
54282 Posts |
No way it is a genuine coin. 
Show your financial support of the Coin Community Family (click here)See my topic on Mexican Numismatic Medals (click here)
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Forum Dad
 United States
24161 Posts |
If this was ebay please post a seller link.
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Forum Dad
 United States
24161 Posts |
Quote: As far as the other coins, we have a Counterfeit Reporting forum, and there are some CCF members that are warriors against counterfeits. I suggest that you post any listings for counterfeit coins in that forum. Please don't post ended items there though.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
7375 Posts |
Yeah, when I said 'listings,' I meant current listings, but will say so in the future.
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Valued Member
 United States
441 Posts |
Gee, I apologize if I mixed this up. For the record, I am officially unclear about where I should have started this topic and what actions were taken as a result of the other thread I started in the counterfeit reporting forum. I get the notion that forum is strictly for reporting active counterfeit listings, rather than active counterfeit sellers. Is that correct? Thing is, Seller-in-Question has one currently active listing that certainly deserves consideration, and since none of you probably need me to tell you what an uncirculated 1914-D Buffalo auctions for, I think you will agree that it wouldn't do to let that ride. I would like to know what I can do from this point. I have a whole lot of dirt on this guy and the more I learn, the more distressing this all becomes. For starters, he changed his ebay user name in 2014, see here. I found an old discussion on another coin forum about him selling counterfeits on ebay under the old name. I have certain information finding skills, and.. well, long story short, I hate to say it, but it appears this may be a person that has at least one published article about identifying counterfeit coins, documented in a respectable numismatic publication. The way I see it, that presents a number of long-term problems in the coin collecting community. I CAN say for sure that this man IS experienced with coins. I don't know, it just seems right to me that if it were verified, it would be very relevant information to someone. Advice, anyone?
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Pillar of the Community
United States
7375 Posts |
The 14-D Buffalo he currently has listed sure looks fake to me, but I just don't know enough about them. I would post the current listing in the US Classic Coins Forum, and ask for help on it, as to whether anyone thinks it's counterfeit or not, and go from there. If nothing else the we've been made aware of the seller, and I'm sure they will hang themselves with their own rope in the future. Yeah, I saw the seller changed their name, went private, and used to sell books on how to detect counterfeit coins. The whole thing is weird.
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
11951 Posts |
This is a very interesting post .. it makes me happy seeing others watching out for sellers .. selling fake coins.
I will watch for the 1914 D Buffalo post
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Forum Dad
 United States
24161 Posts |
It's fake, already reported. My contact is on a plane right now though.
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Replies: 22 / Views: 3,270 |