I sold a counterfeit coin. What do I do?

In Jan. 2005 I sold a PCGS VG8 1902-Micro O Morgan Dollar. At the time believed to be a rare and desirable variety. Here is the EBAY auction listing:
My Jan. 2005 1902-Micro O auction listing
Yesterday, PCGS declares this coin and many of its bretheren to be a counterfeit. The article is discussed in another thread here, but this is the direct link to the PCGS article.
PCGS Article declaring coin to be a counterfeit.
My question is...what should I do with regard to the Jan. 2005 sale?
My Jan. 2005 1902-Micro O auction listing
Yesterday, PCGS declares this coin and many of its bretheren to be a counterfeit. The article is discussed in another thread here, but this is the direct link to the PCGS article.
PCGS Article declaring coin to be a counterfeit.
My question is...what should I do with regard to the Jan. 2005 sale?
Greg Hansen, Melbourne, FL Click here for any current EBAY auctions Multiple "Circle of Trust" transactions over 14 years on forum
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Comments
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Stand behind your merchandise and provide a full refund. Then send the coin to PCGS under their guarantee.
<< <i>I'd say you do nothing - PCGS, after all, did authenticate the coin. Sounds like their problem. The buyer can take it up with them. >>
09/07/2006
Free Trial
PCGS does have a Grading Guarantee and their article announcing their finding makes very clear that those who wish to turn their coins in, will be reimbursed at what they determine to be the fair market value.
I have not been contacted by the buyer...I have no idea if the buyer is even aware of this finding by PCGS yet. I didn't know anything about it until reading the other thread on the board. I will be notifiying him/her in the very near future, however, and would like to have a plan of action in mind when I contact them. Never had this one happen to me before.
Greg Hansen, Melbourne, FL Click here for any current EBAY auctions Multiple "Circle of Trust" transactions over 14 years on forum
that was an interesting read, much like one of the "Breaking Vegas" shows on Discovery Channel.
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PCGS has certified 95 of these contemporary counterfeit micro O coins in the past: 26 1896-Os; 31 1900-Os; and 38 1902-Os. For anyone who currently owns a PCGS graded example of these contemporary counterfeit micro O Morgans dollars, PCGS will reimburse the owner for the current market value of the coin(s) under the terms of the PCGS Grading Guarantee. Anyone who wants to take advantage of the PCGS Grading Guarantee for their micro O Morgans should contact PCGS customer service
Take the high road. Notify the buyer and tell him/her of what you have learned. The buyer can submit to PCGS themselves or they may opt to return the coin to you for a refund and you can send it to PCGS. But that choice is up to the buyer. Either way you can sleep better at night, knowing you did the right thing.
Also, you will have a customer for life. That is more important than the $$.
Good luck.
Cameonut
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What a joke it would be if I bought it back, and it turned out to be a rarer collectible five years from now as one of the 'few surviving samples' of the variety that fooled the pros and managed to get slabbed. Oh well, my head is spinning, so I'm out for the night. Again thanks to all for your input.
Greg Hansen, Melbourne, FL Click here for any current EBAY auctions Multiple "Circle of Trust" transactions over 14 years on forum
<< <i>or even disagree with PCGS view as to the authenticity and keep the coin. >>
They had one of the coins tested for metal content, and it's the wrong composition.
Russ, NCNE
BTW, although unlikely, it's still possible that some real examples of these coins exist. Keep an open mind...
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<< <i>Great discovery by PCGS!
BTW, although unlikely, it's still possible that some real examples of these coins exist. Keep an open mind... >>
I acutually have several of each date. I'll be checking them tonight!
Must have been PCGS. Other tests were inconclusive. High in silver, but so was the control coin, proving zippo.
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If I was the buyer and you contacted me, I'd simply keep the coin.
peacockcoins
If you don't, the buyer might try to sell the coin later, and then find out the story, then blame you (albeit unjustly) for pulling a fast one. It's not unheard of for sellers to get a bad rap even when it's unjustified!
I wouldn't be surprised if the buyer declines an offer to sell it back to you, for fear that you could sell it for even more and cutting him out. But even if that happens, you've made all reasonable efforts to make the buyer whole and no blame could be placed on you.
New collectors, please educate yourself before spending money on coins; there are people who believe that using numismatic knowledge to rip the naïve is what this hobby is all about.
• PCGS had recently a large number of micro O coins submitted.
• PCGS examined them thouroughly and found evidence they are counterfeits.
• PCGS then determines that ALL micro O coins of those dates are counterfeit, not just the coins in the recent onslought.
Am I missing something or is PCGS extrapolating a bit here? Perhaps the variety itself is genuine but the recent rash of them that was submitted was a counterfeit hoard.
<< <i>They had one of the coins tested for metal content, and it's the wrong composition. >>
Gee, I wonder how they did that?
Anyway -- if an AT coin in a PCGS slab can fetch $2550 on Ebay, imagine what this coin might sell for someday to the right buyer!
But yet again I disgress -- Greg take the high road, inform the buyer of the PCGS article, offer a refund and let them decide what to do!
TPN
Let the buyer make his own mind up, but offer to refund his full purchase price, including shipping. There should be no time limit for coins that are not genuine.
Tom
I would first contact PCGS and ask them what they would cover for a VG-8
If they'll cover the $1,250 he paid from the eBay auction as an invoice I would contact him and tell him to contact PCGS
If PCGS won't cover the whole $1,250 then you'll have to work out something else with the buyer??
But I think knowing where the coin stood with PCGS would be the first step, and then go from there.
I'm sure PCGS would cover what he paid because they're the ones that gauranteed it was authentic.
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since 8/1/6
WH
<< <i>I'd say you do nothing - PCGS, after all, did authenticate the coin. Sounds like their problem. The buyer can take it up with them. >>
Spoken like a true jack ass.
Do you have a duty to inform him after the sale has been completed? You sold the coin as is. He has had the opportunity to examine it and inform himself as to whether it meets his expectations. In this case, you were no more informed than he was about there being fakes to watch out for. I would argue that you do not have a duty to inform. This is expecially true in as much as it is an arms length business transaction with a good that does not endanger anyone except economically. It would be another matter altogether if we were talking about the recall of a dangerously defective car, for example.
My conclusion is that you may inform the buyer or not as you please, but if he requests a return, you should accept the return and refund the purchase price and shipping costs.
Alternatively, he may seek to collect from PCGS directly.
Interestingly, many in the numismatic community likely will still collect these curiosities. They are such good copies that they have circulated with genuine silver dollars since they were made. As with some Colonial issues, collectors strive to complete their sets and include circulating counterfeits of many issues. When the copy is good enough to fool the rank and file, the imposter has no trouble traveling in the circle of genuine coins.
You absolutely must attempt to contact the buyer. Tell him of this information coming to light, share with the buyer a link with to this article. The buyer may choose the road with the last paragraph and decide to keep the coin as collectible anyway. After all how rare are these things going to be when PCGS starts buying them back? But you have to share the info. Worse case scenario - you end up buying it back and PCGS buys it back from you. Best case the guy keeps it.
NoEbayAuctionsForNow
K S
Even as much as I agonized over my 4 month old sale...looks like my problem isn't as big as some. I see one EBAY auction of an 1896-O ended last night, AFTER the article came out. Sold for pretty good money too. That auction is here: 1896-O Micro O Ended one day after article out.
There are also several CURRENTLY PENDING auctions with coins affected by this finding:
1900-Micro O current auction affected by finding.
Current auction for 1896-O micro O on EBAY
Another current auction for 1896-O micro O on EBAY
Current auction for 1900-O micro O on EBAY
1902-Micro O current auction affected by finding
Plus, as I mentioned on the other thread addressing this topic there has been a surge of recent sales of these micro-O coins. Looks like lots of sellers have decisions to make. As I mentioned on the other thread...since the coin dealer community is pretty close, and several have good contacts at the grading services, I hope no one was taking advantage of inside information about the ongoing investigation to dump these coins. I just find it odd, the high number of these coins that suddenly were on the market within the last 6 weeks. Oh well, I guess thats their moral delema, not mine. Here are a sampling of the recent auctions:
Recent auction of 1900-O micro O on EBAY
Recent auction of 1902-O micro O on EBAY
Recent auction of 1902-O micro O on EBAY
And those are just the certified ones. There are others that were sold raw. Just running a basic EBAY search for completed Morgan auctions using 'micro' as the search term turned these up. I don't know the sellers of the current auctions and don't really have the time to monitor these sorts of things. I hope someone will notify EBAY and the sellers of the current auctions of this news, so they can take the auctions down or put the appropriate disclaimer in them.
Greg Hansen, Melbourne, FL Click here for any current EBAY auctions Multiple "Circle of Trust" transactions over 14 years on forum
it's up to collectors to keep up w/ the latest, & pcgs has done their part to publicize the situation.
besides, i bet these c/f's are going to be HOT commodities.
K S
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
Rob
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It will be interesting to see if any of the more prevelant 1899 or 1880 micro O's show up with the counterfeit diagnostics. As I understand it, PCGS believes that legitimate micro O's were made by the mint for both of those dates. I have several 1899's which I have checked and cannot find the counterfeit markers on.
Greg Hansen, Melbourne, FL Click here for any current EBAY auctions Multiple "Circle of Trust" transactions over 14 years on forum
<< <i>Doesn't pcgs have some kind of a guarantee?
PCGS does have a Grading Guarantee and their article announcing their finding makes very clear that those who wish to turn their coins in, will be reimbursed at what they determine to be the fair market value.
I have not been contacted by the buyer...I have no idea if the buyer is even aware of this finding by PCGS yet. I didn't know anything about it until reading the other thread on the board. I will be notifiying him/her in the very near future, however, and would like to have a plan of action in mind when I contact them. Never had this one happen to me before. >>
Market value = 0
Thank You
SilverDollar
That's just flat out wrong. I will be contacting PCGS customer service later today and will post anything of interest that I learn. But to suggest they are going to say the market value is zero is irresponsible. I believe they will step up to the plate in a very fair manner. We'll see how it plays out.
Greg Hansen, Melbourne, FL Click here for any current EBAY auctions Multiple "Circle of Trust" transactions over 14 years on forum