Same PCGS Cert#, Same PCGS Label Type, Different Auction, Different Coin!?! What's going on here???
renomedphys
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So, today I received this coin in the mail. Prior to bidding on the coin, I did a Cert Verification and found the coin had appeared in a Heritage Auction, which led me to believe that Teletrade's photos were just not that flattering. Now I have the coin in hand, and although there is no doubt about the coin matching the TT photo, it is obviously not the same coin that appeared in the Heritage auction three years ago.
PCGS' database would lead you to believe that this exact coin had appeared in all the previous auctions, and now resides in my collection.
I would be very interested in what PCGS' take on this is. Although the coin I received is a nice one, it is honestly not that much better (if at all) from several 67's I've owned, and it makes me wonder whether or not I'm dealing with a FAKE.
PCGS' database would lead you to believe that this exact coin had appeared in all the previous auctions, and now resides in my collection.
I would be very interested in what PCGS' take on this is. Although the coin I received is a nice one, it is honestly not that much better (if at all) from several 67's I've owned, and it makes me wonder whether or not I'm dealing with a FAKE.
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Certainly does not look like the same coin to me. The Heritage coin appears much nicer than the TT image.
Not sure how this happens... hopefully someone with some experience in this matter can help.
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I say same coin because of one marker which is the tiny spot just under the 4 in the date.
Nothing about the slab says FAKE, but it sure is unnerving to think that a clever counterfeiter could place a nice 66 into a 68 holder and sell it on Teletrade.
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Matt’s Mattes
In honor of the memory of Cpl. Michael E. Thompson
<< <i>I don't think they are the same either. Each coin has a single decent sized hit on the O of ONE on the reverse... but they are in different places???
Not sure how this happens... hopefully someone with some experience in this matter can help. >>
I must agree here... I also see differences in the Heritage E and N in "CENT;" bothering, isn't it?
<< <i>They aren't the same coin. ... However, there are hits are in different spots. >>
After careful observation, they are most definitely not the same coin.
-Paul
Edit: Perhaps it's just imaging but something smells funny
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That teletrade coin is a really good fake...
Also, a vertical die crack on bust of Lincoln on the HA coin that does not appear on the TT coin.
<< <i>HA one exhibits a nice die crack across Lincoln's skull. TT does not. Not the same coin IMO. Also, TT exhibits two marks above "LIBERTY" on obverse that the lighting should've caught on the HA picture considering the position of the luster bands. >>
That die crack and the one from the top of Lincoln's head to the rim right past W sealed it for me too.
The look of the Heritage coin is much much better than the TT coin.
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edited to include pic
No matter how bad the lighting of the HA picture, no way it drowned out that gash.
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continues down through Lincolns shoulder and off into the rim. Not the same coin.
bob
I still say same coin.....and here's what I think happened.
The Heritage pics make the coin look more vibrant and original looking with a bit of color. The TT pics make the coin appear bright and somewhat washed out looking with at least a couple of extra spots here and there.
I say the coin was at sometime after the last Heritage sale sent in for either a downgrade review or reholder service and the coin may have been treated with something at that time and then reholdered into a newer gen. holder retaining the original serial number.
In honor of the memory of Cpl. Michael E. Thompson
The coins look different, none of the hits that I see are on both coins and the die crack only shows on one coin.
I don't think the pics can hide all traces of the hits so I'm thinking it's a different coin.
Very strange indeed!
Lance.
That said, I am very suspicious of the Teletrade coin, not so much because of the coin itself, but more because of the label. While the lettering seems to match a genuine label the barcode is not as well defined as has to be expected. I think what we have here is one of the better fakes that I have seen.
To the OP: Get another PCGS coin and tap with a pen or your finger on the side of the holder, than do the same thing with this coin from Teletrade. All known fakes of PCGS holders that I have seen have a noticeably different pitch (higher) compared to a genuine slab. If it sounds different I'm 99.9% sure that it is a fake, with the evidence we have so far I'm at least 95% sure.
Good luck,
Dennis
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<< <i>Not even close to being the same coin IMO. >>
+1
The TT coin looks 66 to me
I would also be interested in PCGS's take on this.
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mbogoman
https://pcgs.com/setregistry/collectors-showcase/classic-issues-colonials-through-1964/zambezi-collection-trade-dollars/7345Asesabi Lutho
Edited to add: I have also pulled the coin from my registry, at least until I get this figured out.
Empty Nest Collection
Matt’s Mattes
<< <i>So I guess the big question is: Do I send this coin back to Teletrade and let them sort it out, or do I send it to PCGS and let them sort it out? >>
PCGS will know if they have re-holdered it since it sold at heritage in Feb. 2009. You may be able to get that info with a phone call - I don't know. In any case, if they will confirm that the coin hasn't been re-holdered since then, the one from Teletrade is in a counterfeit holder. In looking at the label again, it doesn't look right. I would consult with PCGS on this and see what they advise...
mbogoman
https://pcgs.com/setregistry/collectors-showcase/classic-issues-colonials-through-1964/zambezi-collection-trade-dollars/7345Asesabi Lutho
<< <i>
<< <i>So I guess the big question is: Do I send this coin back to Teletrade and let them sort it out, or do I send it to PCGS and let them sort it out? >>
I would consult with PCGS on this and see what they advise... >>
Seems to me the best place to start as well.
Keeper of the VAM Catalog • Professional Coin Imaging • Prime Number Set • World Coins in Early America • British Trade Dollars • Variety Attribution
Please keep us posted.
<< <i>I would say definately not the same coin based on the photos. Does your coin "in hand" display just one or both of the reverse hits on the O in ONE? If just one then it is not lighting. If both marks are present then it my be a lighting thing.
Please keep us posted. >>
It was viewing it in hand that clued me in to that in the first place. There were missing hits that I expected to see based on the Heritage photo.
Empty Nest Collection
Matt’s Mattes
The defrauding party took a ~66 in a PCGS holder and swapped out the insert for a coin that has not traded in a few years?
The coin and the holder both look real to me.
I would seem that the party involved in this type of fraud would have to have a high level of numismatic knowledge to find coins that are so similar in appearance that one could think that the coin was merely overgraded.
I guess this type of fraud only adds to the adage, “buy the coin not the holder”.
<< <i>So I guess the big question is: Do I send this coin back to Teletrade and let them sort it out, or do I send it to PCGS and let them sort it out?
Edited to add: I have also pulled the coin from my registry, at least until I get this figured out. >>
Return the coin to Teletrade ASAP. This is not your problem and Teletrade is essentially "down the street" from PCGS.
TRUTH
Can anyone track down the current owner of the HA example?
In honor of the memory of Cpl. Michael E. Thompson
Either one of them is a fake, or PCGS made a mistake in reusing a certification number [edited to add, I see Tom arrived at a similar conclusion].
<< <i>I don't know what happened to end up with two apparently different coins with the same cert number, but it seems most folks are looking at this event as an example of intentional fraud or of a counterfeit. Might it also be possible that there had been a glitch at PCGS and two coins were given the same cert number? I would think PCGS might be able to help. >>
I can see two coins having identical certification numbers, but not for the same coin of the same grade. A cert number is randomly assigned, so a coin that is a Morgan dollar might have the same cert number of a Lincoln cent, if an error truly occurred. To have two identical coins of the identical grade of the same cert number is beyond chance.
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