Episode 5 Fake Britain


Episode 5

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Transcript


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Welcome to a world where nothing is quite as it seems.

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Welcome to Fake Britain.

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Police!

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-Get down on the floor now!

-Put your hands behind your back now!

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Here, at the Fake Britain house,

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we'll reveal the fakes that are flooding the market,

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conning people like you and me

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and making money for the criminals.

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We'll investigate the fraudsters

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who are selling us something that isn't real

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and could be dangerous.

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And we'll help you avoid falling for a fake.

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Today on Fake Britain...

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Police crack open a counterfeit champagne case

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where the fakers are making a killing.

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We think there's probably about £33,000 there in that bag.

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We're given one of the most advanced fake £2 coins ever

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from the one place you'd never expect - a high street bank.

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It's certainly the best £2 counterfeit that I've seen.

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The fake chairs putting child safety at risk.

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I feel sick to my stomach that that's in my house.

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And the fake carbon monoxide detectors

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that could cost you your life.

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The claims of compliance with the standard, in this instance,

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with these particular products, is fake.

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Britain is the world's largest export market for champagne.

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Each year, we consume around 30 million bottles of the stuff.

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It's big business and the fakers are desperate to get

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their share of the fizz in this lucrative market.

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So, not surprising then, that the police, Revenue & Customs,

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Trading Standards and even Europol mounted a joint operation

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to crack down on the burgeoning champagne fakery.

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But even they were surprised at what they found.

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-It's daybreak.

-OK, guys, can I have your attention, please?

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Detective Inspector Simon Harsley

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from the South East Regional Organised Crime Unit

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is here to talk champagne.

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All this stuff's been smuggled in.

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It runs into millions of pounds that are owed to Revenue & Customs.

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They're planning a dawn raid

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on a wholesaler that's trading in fake bubbly.

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We hope to find some counterfeit alcohol

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and a quantity of alcohol that's duty-evaded,

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ie. smuggled into the country.

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Briefing over. Now it's time to get going.

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Can I task you with getting some prisoner transport to Team 3?

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Team 3, please.

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Just ahead of Simon, his team are swooping

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on three separate locations connected to the business.

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We're executing the warrants now at two warehouse locations,

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so we're looking to secure the warehouses

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and really see what we've got there and contain everything,

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so it's a question of getting in there quickly

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so no evidence is destroyed.

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First up, Simon arrives at the main warehouse and business premises.

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The owner isn't here, but police suspect

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some of his employees could be illegal immigrants.

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After questioning, one of them is arrested

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-on suspicion of immigration offences.

-Hi, please step in the van.

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A quick update.

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We've obviously gained entry. Pretty sparse, really.

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Not much there, as far as I can see.

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So, not much by the way of champagne,

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although the team soon discovers wine by the caseload

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and they suspect this has been smuggled in

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without the duty being paid.

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But there's soon another surprise.

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There's a whole hoard of other fake or illegal goods

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uncovered by Trading Standards - generators, chainsaws,

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angle grinders, even a couple of compactors to tarmac the drive.

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The machinery you can see doesn't fit the British standard.

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There's no instructions.

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This machinery shouldn't be in this country,

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being sold on the open market, and, potentially, it's dangerous,

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so that's why it's being taken out of here.

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These fakers certainly aren't whiter than white.

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Counterfeit washing powder also seems high on the for sale list.

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It's quite a common occurrence,

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washing powder, being quite expensive in this country,

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that the leading brands are actually faked abroad and then imported.

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And it doesn't stop there.

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As well as chainsaws, Trading Standards uncover power drills

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that don't appear to meet European standards.

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All of these products potentially putting British customers in danger.

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There's another surprise in store for Simon's team -

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and it still isn't bubbly.

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OK, what we've just got out the safe is quite an amount of cash,

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as you can see, that we've seized

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and that will be coming with us back to the police station.

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We haven't counted it, so it's difficult to estimate what it is,

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but you can see there, they're neatly bundled up.

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We think there's probably about £33,000 there in that bag.

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That's been seized and we're taking that away with us.

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So, a big blow for the fakers and it gets worse for them.

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The director of the company has been arrested at his home address.

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That's where lead officer, DI Harsley, is heading now,

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as his team has made an intriguing discovery.

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I'm getting some messages

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that there's a slightly strange scenario there,

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in that there is a shop or something very similar,

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that's accessed via his back garden.

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I believe some Trading Standards officers have an interest in this

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and I just need to see what the situation is.

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DI Harsley arrives to oversee the search of the home

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and the nearby shop.

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I'm at the front door. Can you let me in, please?

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The fake champagne the team have been looking for could be hidden in here.

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I've just been inside the home address.

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We've got a very unusual scenario.

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We've got an alcohol store next door which actually feeds an off-licence,

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the frontage of which goes onto an entirely different street.

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We clearly want to have a look in the off-licence,

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we clearly want to have a look in the alcohol store.

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The search has commenced.

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And it's in the alcohol store that Simon's team have finally found

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what they're looking for - bottles of fake and duty-evaded champagne.

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That's good news for the investigators here from Europol.

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They've been tracking counterfeit champagne across Europe

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and they suspect these fakes may have links

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to an organised crime group in Italy.

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The main suspect has been ordering the fake champagne from Italy.

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It's processed by an organised crime group, located in Italy,

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manufacturing and selling the bottles.

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They were production sized,

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they were manufacturing the labels, the corks, everything,

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so that the bottle can really look identical to the genuine one.

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And these show the telltale signs of being fake.

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The labelling and the branding don't seem consistent

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with the genuine product, so that's coming with us

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and we'll look to get that tested

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and look for an expert opinion on that.

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It's not only fake champagne on offer here

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that could pose a risk to public health.

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Bottles of counterfeit vodka are also taken away.

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But there are more places to search.

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The police know of another warehouse down the road

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that's used by the business.

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And when they get there, they find more than 135 pallets

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of smuggled alcohol, including fake vodka.

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This is what over £200,000 of duty and VAT evasion looks like

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and Simon's spotted the signs of duty evasion on the labelling.

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There's a bottle of vodka here with a label on it.

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This alcohol is destined for a market outside the UK,

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therefore no duty's been paid on it.

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What is happening is that the label is peeled off -

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and an example of that has been found within the warehouse -

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and a counterfeit label has been placed on the bottle

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to indicate that the UK duty has been paid,

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which is intended to deceive, of course.

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We know that that is a counterfeit label.

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You've got some whiskies as well. You've got a similar scenario.

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And with many of the bottles,

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you can actually see the sticky of the original label

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outside the parameter of the label that's been put on there.

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But even sophisticated fakers, with links to organised crime,

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can slip up.

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Looking at the label, I'm not even sure

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that's placed on the bottle straight,

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but that is a counterfeit label. We can tell from the markings there.

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But to seize all of these pallets of duty-evaded alcohol,

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the team will need help by the lorry load.

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The entire contents of the warehouse have been seized

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by Her Majesty's Revenue & Customs and, of course,

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the police will look into the counterfeiting side

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and any counterfeit labels,

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anything that's being sold that's a counterfeit product

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and actually look at what's being sold to the general public.

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So, yeah, a good day.

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And so the first of six 40-foot HGVs,

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carrying the seized alcohol, sets off.

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It's another win in the battle against the fakers.

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The company was later wound up

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with debts of around £8 million in unpaid taxes

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to Her Majesty's Revenue & Customs.

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Coming up, we reveal the sophisticated fake £2 coin

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that came from a high street bank.

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It's good enough to fool the public and concern the experts.

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If experts are having difficulty,

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consumers have no hope of being able to tell the difference.

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It's a normal £2 coin, isn't it?

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Every year, around 50 people lose their lives

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to carbon monoxide poisoning.

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The gas can be released from appliances like a faulty cooker,

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boiler or wood-burning stove, but you can't see it or smell it.

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It's known as the silent killer.

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These devices should protect you and your home -

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carbon monoxide detectors.

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And these ones claim to meet the European standard,

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but their claims are fake.

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Rely on one of these to protect you,

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and you could be putting your life at risk.

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Every year,

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4,000 people end up in hospital

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with carbon monoxide poisoning. Around 40 of those people die.

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With rising awareness of the dangers,

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more of us are buying carbon monoxide detectors

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to protect ourselves from the deadly gas.

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The fakers know there's profit to be made in safety devices.

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They're selling carbon monoxide detectors

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carrying fake safety claims that could put lives in danger.

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Gordon Samuel discovered the importance of these detectors

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soon after his daughter, Katie, got married.

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She was hugely popular.

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She was hugely attractive and pretty and she was very intelligent.

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She was just the most wonderful daughter.

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She was very, very happy in her job

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and it was the beginning of married life.

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One evening, Katie decided to run a bath.

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When her husband arrived home from work,

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he noticed something wasn't right.

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When he rang the bell and she didn't answer, he became quite concerned

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and opened the door with his key

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and he saw that the cat was unconscious...

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..in the kitchen.

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He called for her and she didn't answer.

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And he rushed into the bathroom

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and he found that she had been overcome

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by very, very lethal carbon monoxide fumes.

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Without Katie's knowledge,

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her boiler had been leaking lethal levels of carbon monoxide.

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A young doctor came into the room

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and said, "I'm really sorry." And it was just...

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..one of those moments in life that you just don't want to remember.

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To say that I miss her now is just a huge understatement. I just...

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I can't articulate...

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..how much we miss her.

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Katie died just weeks after her wedding day.

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It later transpired that she did, in fact,

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have a carbon monoxide detector

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but it had been left, unopened, in its packet.

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If they had known, they would have activated the alarm

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and if the alarm had sounded and she was...

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and they, all of us, were aware of what carbon monoxide was,

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she would have had a chance. She would probably have lived.

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Gordon went on to set up a charity in Katie's name,

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campaigning for ALL homes

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to have a carbon monoxide detector installed by law.

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But the fakers know there's profit to be made

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out of safety-conscious consumers.

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Fake Britain has discovered that detectors are being sold online

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that could be dangerous.

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We decided to buy several detectors

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that were advertised as meeting European safety standards.

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We then sent them for testing at BSI, the British Standards Institution.

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Expert Graham McKay thinks that the dangers of carbon monoxide

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are closer to home than we might think.

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Many, many combustible appliances

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have the capability to produce carbon monoxide

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if they're not adjusted properly or installed properly.

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It kills somewhere in the region of 25 to 50 people a year in the UK.

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It's very hard to diagnose because the symptoms in mild cases

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are very often confused with a cold or the flu.

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The detectors we bought were advertised

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as meeting European safety standards

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but, at first glance, Graham's concerned.

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The product itself doesn't contain any of the warnings

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or information that the standard requires.

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It doesn't even tell me the name of the manufacturer.

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It doesn't have, crucially, the end-of-life information.

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Carbon monoxide alarms have sensors that have finite lives,

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so it's important that you know when to replace it.

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They won't last forever.

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Graham's also unimpressed by the incorrect advice

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-given in the instructions.

-It tells you not to install in kitchens.

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Kitchens are probably the biggest source

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of carbon monoxide-producing appliances in the UK,

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from cookers, boilers, water heaters.

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They are typically in kitchens.

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When a genuine carbon monoxide detector goes off for the first time

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after detecting high levels of the gas, its job isn't over.

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The detector must continue working and go on to detect further leaks

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in the future, in order to pass the European standard.

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Graham needs to see if these are genuine detectors,

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so he'll simulate a catastrophic carbon monoxide leak from a boiler.

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This test mimics a scenario whereby maybe you have a release

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of a high level of carbon monoxide into your home.

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Your alarm will detect that and go off, which is great.

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You'll then ventilate the space and take other preventative action.

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Eventually, you'll go back into that space,

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thinking everything's OK and you need your alarm to operate again.

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First, the detectors are exposed to a dangerously high level

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of carbon monoxide - 5,000 parts per million -

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enough to render a person unconscious and kill them within minutes.

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ALARMS BEEP

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So far, so good. The detectors have passed the first part of the test.

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But, if their safety claims are fake,

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the sensors inside these detectors could actually be of poor quality.

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Some cheaper sensors can be physically damaged.

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They can be poisoned, effectively, by these very high levels.

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If the alarm has been damaged, you could be putting yourself at risk,

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because the alarm is no longer functioning.

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The detectors are rested.

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Then they're exposed to carbon monoxide at lower levels.

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It's time to see whether they will pass the European standard

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by going on to detect the silent killer gas once again,

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having already done so.

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They'll have to detect the gas and sound their alarms within 90 minutes.

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90 minutes later, and counting, they've failed to respond.

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Two of the alarms didn't respond at all

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and one of the alarms has entered an erratic error mode,

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where it beeps occasionally but it's not going into a full alarm mode

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because it's not beeping continuously.

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The conclusion is that the high dose of CO has actually damaged them

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and affected their ability to accurately detect the gas.

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The performance of every carbon monoxide detector

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bought by Fake Britain was found to be unpredictable.

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The claims of compliance with the standard, in this instance,

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with these particular products, is fake.

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They don't comply and they obviously don't comply.

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We showed our findings to Gordon Samuel,

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who lost his daughter to carbon monoxide poisoning.

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It's very, very upsetting

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that these are finding their way onto the market.

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These fake carbon monoxide detectors cost us about £10 each.

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Campaigners like Gordon say that by spending just £10 or £20 more,

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customers can buy a reliable detector that they can really trust.

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You should be buying properly branded alarms,

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alarms that are compliant,

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alarms that come from reliable sources,

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or you're putting our life at risk

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and you're putting your loved ones' lives at risk

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and you'd be a fool to buy something like this

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when the real thing's available and it could save your life.

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Take a look at these. Yes, two £2 coins.

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First made by the Royal Mint back in 1998,

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there are two different metal components,

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so it's complicated to manufacture and very difficult to counterfeit.

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The problem is, this one wasn't made by the Royal Mint.

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It was made by a faker.

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A leading expert has told us it's the best he's ever seen.

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So, how many are out there, who's making them

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and could you tell the difference?

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Previously, on Fake Britain, we've seen huge hoards of fake coins.

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Here, police were raiding the premises of criminals

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-churning out £1 fakes.

-Coin bags. Loads.

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An estimated one in thirty £1 coins is fake.

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The Royal Mint is so concerned, they'll soon be introducing

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this new 12-sided pound coin to combat the counterfeiters.

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But now the fakers are turning their attention to the £2 coin.

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And that's a problem for Andy Brown.

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His company services coin-operated machines across the country.

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In the last year, he's seen an increase

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in the number and quality of the new £2 fakes.

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It's a far cry from how the coin-fakers started out.

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This was one of the early fakes that we found,

0:20:200:20:23

which is really just a lump of lead-tin alloy

0:20:230:20:26

and then spraying it gold to make it look like a genuine coin.

0:20:260:20:29

That was then.

0:20:290:20:30

Now, fake £2 coins are getting much closer to the genuine article.

0:20:300:20:35

The fakes have got much better.

0:20:350:20:37

They can now be accepted in some of the vending machines

0:20:370:20:39

and car park machines that are out in the field.

0:20:390:20:41

For us, the concern is to try and stop the fakers

0:20:410:20:44

before they really start getting going.

0:20:440:20:47

Today, Fake Britain has asked Andy to see if he can find

0:20:480:20:51

any of the latest fake £2 coins in circulation.

0:20:510:20:55

He's going to his local bank to withdraw £2,500-worth of £2 coins.

0:20:550:21:00

He expects to find some fakes amongst all 1,250 of them.

0:21:030:21:07

We're going to put them through the coin validator to see if any of them

0:21:070:21:11

get rejected and then we can check to see whether they're counterfeits.

0:21:110:21:14

This coin validator is identical

0:21:140:21:16

to anything you'd find inside a ticket or vending machine.

0:21:160:21:20

It takes 16 different measurements of the coin,

0:21:200:21:23

including its width and weight, to work out if it's genuine or not.

0:21:230:21:27

Any coin outside the validator gets rejected out of a different slot

0:21:280:21:32

and generally would be returned back to the customer,

0:21:320:21:34

if he was putting it in the machine.

0:21:340:21:36

None of the coins from the bank have been rejected by the validator.

0:21:370:21:41

But Andy knows the latest fakes are good enough to beat the machine.

0:21:410:21:45

So, using his experience and a keen eye,

0:21:450:21:48

he and a colleague sift through the coins

0:21:480:21:50

to try and find anything unusual.

0:21:500:21:53

Halfway through the batch, Andy spots something out of the ordinary.

0:21:580:22:03

We've discovered a coin that looks a bit different to all the rest.

0:22:030:22:07

It's a 2011, which is one of the years

0:22:070:22:09

that we've got a number of counterfeit coins for already.

0:22:090:22:13

This may look convincing,

0:22:140:22:15

but there's a simple test to tell the fake from the real thing.

0:22:150:22:19

If we go to a genuine coin, one of the quick and easiest tests

0:22:190:22:23

to discover whether a coin is counterfeit,

0:22:230:22:25

is to hold it up with the £2 at the top and the date at the bottom

0:22:250:22:30

and then spin the coin on its axis.

0:22:300:22:32

The Queen's head should be facing upwards,

0:22:330:22:36

what we would call 12 o'clock.

0:22:360:22:37

And on the fake, when we turn the head round,

0:22:370:22:40

it's more like it's at 3 o'clock,

0:22:400:22:42

so that one is definitely a counterfeit coin.

0:22:420:22:45

But it's only by using a microscope

0:22:450:22:47

that Andy can uncover the signature markings of a fake.

0:22:470:22:50

Now I've got the counterfeit and a genuine coin side by side

0:22:520:22:55

and we're just checking the rim inscription

0:22:550:22:57

to see what difference there is there and straightaway,

0:22:570:23:00

when we look at the mint marks, the one on the bottom is a genuine coin.

0:23:000:23:03

You can see the nice mint mark, which looks really well stamped.

0:23:030:23:07

The one on the top is the counterfeit with the poor mint mark.

0:23:070:23:10

As we go round the edge, the lettering is all totally different,

0:23:100:23:14

the text is very poorly done.

0:23:140:23:16

Particularly, the letter S is a very distinctive letter

0:23:160:23:19

on this counterfeit, and the A's,

0:23:190:23:21

which has got like a circle in the centre of it.

0:23:210:23:24

Next, Andy takes his find downstairs for computer analysis

0:23:260:23:30

to have a more detailed look at the properties of the fake £2 coin.

0:23:300:23:34

There you are. I'd like you to try and calibrate that one for us.

0:23:350:23:39

Here, he can measure the probability of the coin

0:23:390:23:42

beating a vending machine in the outside world

0:23:420:23:45

and there's no stopping this £2 fake.

0:23:450:23:47

It beats the coin validator again and again -

0:23:470:23:50

30 times out of 30 and beyond.

0:23:500:23:53

We've now inserted the coin over 100 times

0:23:550:23:57

and we've still got 100% acceptance rate.

0:23:570:24:00

Even genuine coins get rejected now and then, due to their imperfections.

0:24:010:24:06

But it seems this fake could be better than the real thing.

0:24:060:24:09

We would expect a genuine coin to have

0:24:090:24:12

something like a 95% acceptance rate,

0:24:120:24:14

so it's quite concerning that we've got a counterfeit coin

0:24:140:24:18

that's giving us 100% acceptance rate.

0:24:180:24:21

That is a bit of a worry, isn't it?

0:24:230:24:26

The performance of the fake he's found today

0:24:270:24:29

could have much wider implications for Britain's coinage.

0:24:290:24:33

Some vending operators deposit their money into a bank

0:24:330:24:36

via a cash centre. So, if this coin can be accepted by a validator,

0:24:360:24:39

it would generally be accepted as a genuine coin in a sorting machine,

0:24:390:24:43

so they won't be able to take them out of circulation.

0:24:430:24:47

It's thought that there are hundreds of thousands

0:24:470:24:50

of fake £2 coins in circulation.

0:24:500:24:53

But with the latest fakes able to fool a machine,

0:24:530:24:55

can they also fool consumers?

0:24:550:24:58

It's a normal £2 coin, isn't it?

0:24:580:25:00

It looks like the genuine article. A normal £2 coin.

0:25:000:25:04

If you're walking the streets

0:25:040:25:06

and you're exchanging this very quickly,

0:25:060:25:09

-you wouldn't know the difference.

-It's the same weight, I think.

0:25:090:25:14

If someone came in and gave me this as a £2,

0:25:140:25:17

I'd think it was an actual £2 and accept it, yeah.

0:25:170:25:21

This is dangerous, actually.

0:25:210:25:23

Fake Britain wanted to know

0:25:230:25:25

what the experts make of the new high-end £2 fakes.

0:25:250:25:29

We arranged for Andy to take it to the Goldsmiths' Company,

0:25:310:25:34

an assay office in the heart of London

0:25:340:25:36

that's tested and hallmarked precious metals for nearly seven centuries.

0:25:360:25:41

Every year, they check and approve a selection of Britain's coinage.

0:25:430:25:48

Goldsmiths' Dave Merry is here to analyse Andy's fake £2 coin.

0:25:480:25:52

-Been a busy man, by the look of it!

-We have, yes.

0:25:530:25:56

-This is one we found last week which is of a much better quality.

-Yeah.

0:25:580:26:01

It's been accepted by most of the vending machines.

0:26:010:26:03

Blooming hell, you can see why, on that.

0:26:030:26:06

Dave Merry's immediately impressed by the look of the coin,

0:26:060:26:10

but you can also tell a lot about a coin by how much it weighs.

0:26:100:26:13

So, Dave puts the fake £2 coin to the test, using his scales.

0:26:130:26:18

The Royal Mint's published weight for a genuine £2 coin is 12g.

0:26:200:26:25

We've just weighed the counterfeit one

0:26:250:26:28

and, again, we're getting a reading of 12g.

0:26:280:26:30

It's remarkably close to a genuine Royal Mint coin.

0:26:300:26:36

The weight of the fake £2 coin matches that of a real one,

0:26:380:26:42

but Dave wants to know exactly what the fake is made of

0:26:420:26:44

and, to do that, he'll have to X-ray it.

0:26:440:26:47

The great thing about this bit of kit is it will give you

0:26:470:26:50

a readout and percentages of all those different elements

0:26:500:26:53

that go to make up a coin.

0:26:530:26:56

A genuine £2 coin is bimetallic,

0:26:560:26:59

meaning it's made up of two different copper-nickel alloy metals.

0:26:590:27:02

This makes the outer rim gold and the inner part bright silver.

0:27:020:27:07

The bimetallic feature was introduced by the Royal Mint

0:27:090:27:11

to make it harder for the fakers to copy coins.

0:27:110:27:14

First, Dave shows us the composition of the inner part of a genuine coin.

0:27:160:27:20

It's just over 70% copper and nearly 30% nickel.

0:27:200:27:24

Now, how about the composition of the fake?

0:27:250:27:28

We can see, straightaway, we've got 68% copper, 31% nickel

0:27:310:27:36

and there's a trace element of iron in there.

0:27:360:27:38

This is a very good fake.

0:27:380:27:41

The figures look much closer

0:27:430:27:45

than I've seen previously for other fake coins.

0:27:450:27:48

That coincides with what we've seen with the validators,

0:27:480:27:51

where it's been accepted by some of the validators,

0:27:510:27:53

so it would seem that the metal content is, obviously,

0:27:530:27:56

fairly close to that of a genuine coin.

0:27:560:27:58

The outer yellow ring of a genuine £2 coin also contains the metal zinc.

0:27:580:28:04

The fakers have even managed to get that into their fake.

0:28:040:28:08

We've got nickel, copper and 14.2% zinc,

0:28:080:28:11

so we've got the added element there now,

0:28:110:28:14

which wasn't in the middle part, which is the zinc.

0:28:140:28:17

So, a really good-quality fake.

0:28:170:28:19

All the figures are fairly close to that of a genuine coin.

0:28:190:28:22

Yeah, very, very close.

0:28:220:28:24

The fakers have cracked the Royal Mint's bimetallic safety measures.

0:28:240:28:29

If experts are having difficulty,

0:28:290:28:30

consumers have got no hope of being able to tell the difference.

0:28:300:28:34

We showed the results of our tests on the fake £2 coin

0:28:340:28:37

to Robert Matthews, a former Assay Master of the Royal Mint.

0:28:370:28:42

This is certainly the best £2 counterfeit that I've seen.

0:28:420:28:46

Robert's concerned about the implications

0:28:480:28:50

of the huge amount of effort that's gone into this fake £2 coin.

0:28:500:28:54

It is worrying that this counterfeit and the alloys used

0:28:550:28:59

point to a sophistication

0:28:590:29:01

which tends to point towards organised crime being used.

0:29:010:29:06

Once organised crime is starting to get involved,

0:29:060:29:08

we are going to have more and more of a problem.

0:29:080:29:11

We reported our discovery

0:29:110:29:13

of this sophisticated fake £2 coin to the Royal Mint.

0:29:130:29:17

They told us they...

0:29:170:29:19

They also told us that forgers would require...

0:29:240:29:27

Difficult to produce, but they are being produced in their thousands.

0:29:330:29:39

Recently, over 550,000 bimetallic euro coins were seized

0:29:390:29:43

in the port of Naples on the way from Shanghai.

0:29:430:29:46

Experts are worried that shipments of similar £2 fakes

0:29:470:29:50

could be arriving on our shores.

0:29:500:29:53

The £2 counterfeiting is entering a new stage

0:29:530:29:57

and this should be tackled now, whether it means changing the coin.

0:29:570:30:01

We need to be thinking seriously now

0:30:010:30:03

about how to increase the security of the £2 coin.

0:30:030:30:06

Coming up, we go back in time to see the fake collectible coins

0:30:080:30:11

that are also duping members of the public.

0:30:110:30:14

Children's chairs are hugely popular, especially when they feature

0:30:220:30:26

favourite film and cartoon characters like this one.

0:30:260:30:30

They're in homes up and down the country,

0:30:300:30:32

but you wouldn't want your child to settle down

0:30:320:30:36

and watch TV or read a book in this.

0:30:360:30:38

Safety claims on the chair's label are fake.

0:30:380:30:41

This could put your home and family in danger.

0:30:410:30:45

The authorities have been battling for years

0:30:450:30:48

to take dangerous furniture with fake fire safety labels out of shops.

0:30:480:30:53

Furniture like this puts homes and lives at risk.

0:30:530:30:57

But now the fakers are targeting children

0:30:570:31:00

with colourful but dangerous chairs

0:31:000:31:02

that fail to meet flammability standards.

0:31:020:31:05

Phil Soderquest and his team from Northumberland Trading Standards

0:31:050:31:09

have made worrying discoveries during recent raids of local shops.

0:31:090:31:13

Here we have the chairs that we have actually seized to date.

0:31:130:31:18

We have Peppa Pig, there are various coverings here from Toy Story,

0:31:180:31:23

all intended to be attractive for smaller children,

0:31:230:31:26

young children within the household.

0:31:260:31:28

They give the customer the impression

0:31:280:31:30

that they are a genuine product

0:31:300:31:32

when, in reality, they are a fake product.

0:31:320:31:35

Phil's team discovered some obvious flaws

0:31:360:31:39

with these fake children's chairs.

0:31:390:31:41

There were no manufacturer's details or batch numbers on the labels.

0:31:410:31:44

It would be a legal requirement for that batch number to be present.

0:31:440:31:49

We can then identify from the batch number,

0:31:490:31:51

the exact location, date, it was manufactured.

0:31:510:31:55

But, within this particular label, there is no provision or inclusion

0:31:550:31:58

of the information regarding the batch itself.

0:31:580:32:01

So, we would view this label to be illegal

0:32:010:32:03

when fitted to this piece of furniture.

0:32:030:32:06

Northumberland Trading Standards were concerned

0:32:060:32:09

about the safety of the fake chairs, so they sent some for testing.

0:32:090:32:13

But 400 miles further south, on the Isle of Wight,

0:32:130:32:16

Gemma Evans had found a similar children's chair online.

0:32:160:32:20

She planned to buy it for a gift for her two-year-old daughter, Abigail.

0:32:200:32:24

I was pregnant again

0:32:260:32:28

and so I wanted Abigail to have a special something for her.

0:32:280:32:32

I saw the chair online

0:32:320:32:34

and it looked like a really pretty little armchair.

0:32:340:32:37

It looked comfortable and sweet and pink, which she loves.

0:32:370:32:41

Gemma went ahead and bought the chair for £40.

0:32:420:32:45

But the chair that arrived wasn't what she'd expected.

0:32:450:32:49

The material doesn't fit very well.

0:32:500:32:52

All the wading up here is very lumpy and bumpy

0:32:520:32:56

and it just doesn't fit the chair at all and it's all quite loose here.

0:32:560:33:02

The picture on the internet shows Minnie Mouse there

0:33:020:33:05

and a lovely design but it's all cut...

0:33:050:33:08

Like, the main Minnie Mouse picture there is all cut off.

0:33:080:33:12

And on closer inspection,

0:33:120:33:14

Gemma became concerned about the safety of the chair.

0:33:140:33:17

When I first opened it up,

0:33:170:33:19

I straightaway noticed all the staples that are down here

0:33:190:33:24

that are exposed, all the way across the top, both sides.

0:33:240:33:29

If she was to get something in there,

0:33:290:33:31

she could pull one of those out and cut herself.

0:33:310:33:34

They shouldn't be exposed like that.

0:33:340:33:36

And on the arms of the chair here, there's hardly any padding at all.

0:33:360:33:40

It's really hard and if she was to fall against that,

0:33:400:33:44

she'd hurt herself quite a lot, I think.

0:33:440:33:47

Back at Northumberland Trading Standards,

0:33:510:33:53

further tests had revealed that the safety claims

0:33:530:33:56

on the labels of the chairs they'd seized were fake.

0:33:560:33:59

Whilst the labels honestly stated

0:33:590:34:01

that the cover fabric was not match-resistant,

0:34:010:34:04

they claimed the chairs were safe from fire,

0:34:040:34:07

due to the presence of an interliner.

0:34:070:34:09

It states that it meets the requirements

0:34:110:34:13

of the 1988 safety regulations

0:34:130:34:15

by inclusion of a fire-resistant interliner.

0:34:150:34:18

An interliner is a specific product,

0:34:190:34:22

manufactured to be flame-retardant to reduce the spread of flame.

0:34:220:34:26

When we peel back the layers on this chair itself,

0:34:270:34:30

you'll see there is no interliner present

0:34:300:34:32

in the construction of this chair.

0:34:320:34:34

Concerned about the lack of interliner beneath the cover fabric,

0:34:360:34:40

Trading Standards decided to carry out the standard match test

0:34:400:34:43

that furniture has to pass to meet the UK's legal fire regulations.

0:34:430:34:48

After setting the chair alight,

0:34:480:34:50

the flames should self-extinguish within two minutes.

0:34:500:34:53

One minute in, the fire has taken hold.

0:34:560:34:59

This is a very worrying event in that the outer material,

0:34:590:35:03

the cover fabric itself is not flame-retardant.

0:35:030:35:06

It supports combustion. That combustion leads to a major fire.

0:35:060:35:10

Two minutes in, and then beyond the legal time limit,

0:35:110:35:14

the flames continue to rage out of control.

0:35:140:35:18

The manufacturers have clearly disregarded

0:35:180:35:20

all of the safety requirements in producing furniture

0:35:200:35:23

and we can quite clearly see the consequences here from this.

0:35:230:35:27

This has become a very significant fire

0:35:270:35:29

which could have been in anybody's house

0:35:290:35:31

because the manufacturer's have placed counterfeit goods

0:35:310:35:35

on the market and are putting lives at risk by doing so.

0:35:350:35:39

We showed the results of Trading Standards' tests

0:35:400:35:43

on their fake sofas to Gemma Evans,

0:35:430:35:45

who'd bought a similar fake chair for her two-year-old daughter, Abigail.

0:35:450:35:49

Oh, my goodness.

0:35:490:35:51

I can't believe that it just went up so quickly.

0:35:550:35:59

In just two minutes, gone, that's it, nothing left,

0:35:590:36:03

nothing at all, just wire mesh.

0:36:030:36:06

I feel really angry that I've been lied to, basically.

0:36:060:36:12

I feel sick to my stomach that that's in my house

0:36:120:36:15

and that she could be sat on that chair and anything could happen,

0:36:150:36:19

that she's in that danger with just a simple armchair.

0:36:190:36:23

As Trading Standards continue to investigate

0:36:240:36:27

the source of their fake chairs,

0:36:270:36:29

Gemma has her own plans for her daughter's fake.

0:36:290:36:33

The more I think about the chair, the more I want it out of my house.

0:36:330:36:36

I hate it now. I just want it out.

0:36:360:36:38

Earlier, we saw how sophisticated fake £2 coins

0:36:430:36:47

are fooling consumers and experts alike.

0:36:470:36:50

This is certainly the best £2 counterfeit that I've seen.

0:36:510:36:55

But the fakers aren't just targeting modern coins.

0:36:550:36:59

Now they're cashing in on collectible coins.

0:36:590:37:02

Famous finds like the Staffordshire gold hoard in 2009,

0:37:020:37:07

and a recent discovery of ancient coinage,

0:37:070:37:09

worth over half a million pounds, in Buckinghamshire,

0:37:090:37:12

have reignited interest in collectible coins.

0:37:120:37:15

Avid collector Richard thought he'd found

0:37:160:37:18

a rare Celtic coin for sale online.

0:37:180:37:21

The coin itself is about 2,000 years old,

0:37:220:37:25

made about 50 years either side of the birth of Christ.

0:37:250:37:29

I didn't know the dealer

0:37:290:37:31

but he'd sold 2,000 coins previously on eBay,

0:37:310:37:35

so he was obviously an experienced dealer.

0:37:350:37:38

Richard went ahead and spent over £300 for the coin,

0:37:390:37:43

which was advertised as ancient Celtic.

0:37:430:37:46

But on closer inspection, Richard realised something was wrong.

0:37:460:37:51

When I got my viewing glass out, I looked very carefully and in detail.

0:37:510:37:56

There was a sort of unevenness

0:37:560:37:59

and the suggestion of one or two bubbles in places.

0:37:590:38:03

I was absolutely convinced it was a fake.

0:38:030:38:07

So, he sent the coin off

0:38:080:38:09

to one of the UK's leading experts in Celtic coinage.

0:38:090:38:13

The expert said the coin had very poor detail.

0:38:150:38:20

He said that the colour of the gold was unconvincing

0:38:200:38:23

and there were a few very small scratches.

0:38:230:38:27

He said that the scratches looked recent

0:38:270:38:29

and were designed to look like plough scratches.

0:38:290:38:33

So, everything was wrong.

0:38:330:38:36

Fortunately, Richard eventually got his money back.

0:38:360:38:40

But one of Britain's leading coin dealers, Nigel Mills,

0:38:400:38:44

knows of others who haven't been so lucky.

0:38:440:38:46

As a representative of the coin industry's trade body,

0:38:460:38:50

the British Numismatic Trade Association, or BNTA,

0:38:500:38:53

he's concerned about the growing number of fake collectible coins

0:38:530:38:57

now being sold on the internet.

0:38:570:38:59

I think the collecting market

0:38:590:39:01

is having a real issue with fakes online

0:39:010:39:04

because you close down one website and another two spring up.

0:39:040:39:08

Nigel patrols the internet to hunt down sellers

0:39:100:39:12

of fake collectible coins and shares his evidence

0:39:120:39:15

with the auction sites that the fakers are using.

0:39:150:39:18

There's quite a few coins on this site that are suspect

0:39:180:39:21

and it's one of the sites that we are monitoring at the moment.

0:39:210:39:24

We've seen quite a few fakes being sold on here.

0:39:240:39:27

It's not long before Nigel finds a suspect Roman coin

0:39:270:39:31

that's advertised as dating from around 200 AD.

0:39:310:39:36

This looks like a fake of a silver denarius of Commodus.

0:39:360:39:39

It's got all the signs of being a modern reproduction.

0:39:390:39:42

You've got a raised pimple here, blurry design and no detailing.

0:39:420:39:46

But the fakers aren't only targeting ancient collectible coins.

0:39:500:39:54

Specialist auctioneers are also finding modern fakes too,

0:39:540:39:58

some supposedly worth thousands of pounds.

0:39:580:40:01

Auctioneer Christopher Webb keeps a collection

0:40:010:40:04

of the latest fake coins in what's commonly known as a black museum.

0:40:040:40:08

This is an interesting counterfeit.

0:40:090:40:12

It is a genuine South African Kruger pond of 1898,

0:40:120:40:17

but it has had a false '99 stamped on the bottom,

0:40:170:40:21

which is a very rare issue.

0:40:210:40:23

An original would be £32,000.

0:40:230:40:27

This forgery is only worth about £250.

0:40:270:40:30

But the biggest number of fakes seem to be coming from the Far East

0:40:310:40:34

and even low-value items are being targeted,

0:40:340:40:37

like this Victorian half crown.

0:40:370:40:39

A genuine one is not particularly valuable.

0:40:410:40:44

Possibly, in this condition, £20 or £30.

0:40:440:40:47

Here we have a Chinese copy.

0:40:470:40:49

The detail on the forgery is really quite good.

0:40:490:40:53

The forgers have managed to replicate even the patina,

0:40:530:40:57

the colour of the old coin.

0:40:570:40:59

With fake coins like this mainly being sold online,

0:40:590:41:03

Fake Britain wanted to see how easy it was to get hold of one.

0:41:030:41:06

We found this silver denarius, listed as being from around 200 AD,

0:41:080:41:12

and took it back to Roman coin specialist Nigel Mills.

0:41:120:41:16

I don't like the overall colour and, in fact,

0:41:180:41:20

this particular coin has been chemically treated,

0:41:200:41:23

subjected to dirt being applied into the recesses of the detail

0:41:230:41:27

to make out that it's a recent find. Very clever.

0:41:270:41:31

It would fool a lot of people but I have no hesitation

0:41:310:41:34

in suggesting that this is a modern forgery.

0:41:340:41:37

But it's when the coin is weighed that its true nature is confirmed.

0:41:390:41:43

Roman denarii are very precise in their weight,

0:41:440:41:47

so this should be around 3.1 grams.

0:41:470:41:50

And it's light. It's nearly 2.8 grams.

0:41:520:41:55

It is 10% lighter than it should be. That would not be the case.

0:41:550:41:58

And when a genuine Roman denarius coin is put alongside the fake,

0:41:580:42:03

the differences are clear to see.

0:42:030:42:06

Comparing the coins side by side,

0:42:060:42:08

you can clearly see the difference in quality,

0:42:080:42:10

particularly on the beard and the hairlines.

0:42:100:42:12

They're much sharper on the genuine example.

0:42:120:42:15

If you bought this coin, you'd be spending good money on bad.

0:42:160:42:21

For a genuine Caracalla denarius, in this quality,

0:42:210:42:24

you'd expect to pay £35 to £40.

0:42:240:42:26

This forgery is only worth £1 as a novelty item.

0:42:260:42:30

Nigel has some words of advice for collectors buying coins online.

0:42:310:42:36

The best thing to do is to either go to a coin show

0:42:360:42:38

where you'll see a whole selection of dealers selling products,

0:42:380:42:42

or go to a British Numismatic Trade Association dealer

0:42:420:42:45

and see what the originals look like and then you can compare them

0:42:450:42:48

to the items that you've found online, but do be careful.

0:42:480:42:51

That's all from Fake Britain. Goodbye.

0:42:570:42:59

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