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Counterfeiting on rise in United States

WASHINGTON, Feb. 27 (UPI) -- The U.S. Secret Service says counterfeit currency worth $62 million entered circulation in 2006, representing a 10-percent jump over 2005, USA Today reports.

The documents obtained by the newspaper said the increase represents a 69-percent increase in bogus bills since 2003, many of which are produced with inexpensive home computers and printers.

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Of all counterfeit currency caught in 2006, 54 percent of it was created using home digital technology, compared with 1996, when 1 percent was done digitally, the report said.

The $20 bill remains the most frequently counterfeited bill, and in 2003, the bill became the first to feature a color other than green. Other features such as a watermark and color-shifting ink have since been added and new $10 bills and $50 bills have been issued to thwart counterfeiters.

Secret Service spokesman Eric Zahren said the amount of fake money in circulation is just a fraction of 1 percent of genuine currency, the report said.

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