CHUD.com Community › Forums › CULTURE, HUMOR, & FREE FORM › Misc. Culture › Canadian spare change sparks alarm
New Posts  All Forums:Forum Nav:

Canadian spare change sparks alarm

post #1 of 6
Thread Starter 
http://www.thestar.com/News/article/211189


Quote:
TED BRIDIS
Associated Press

WASHINGTON – An odd-looking Canadian coin with a bright red flower was the culprit behind the U.S. Defence Department's false espionage warning earlier this year, the Associated Press has learned.

The odd-looking – but harmless – "poppy coin" was so unfamiliar to suspicious U.S. Army contractors traveling in Canada that they filed confidential espionage accounts about them. The worried contractors described the coins as "anomalous" and "filled with something man-made that looked like nanotechnology," according to once-classified U.S. government reports and e-mails obtained by the AP.

The silver-coloured 25-cent piece features the red image of a poppy – Canada's flower of remembrance – inlaid over a maple leaf. The unorthodox quarter is identical to the coins pictured and described as suspicious in the contractors' accounts.

The supposed nanotechnology actually was a conventional protective coating the Royal Canadian Mint applied to prevent the poppy's red color from rubbing off. The mint produced nearly 30 million such quarters in 2004 commemorating Canada's 117,000 war dead.

"It did not appear to be electronic (analog) in nature or have a power source," wrote one U.S. contractor, who discovered the coin in the cup holder of a rental car. "Under high power microscope, it appeared to be complex consisting of several layers of clear, but different material, with a wire like mesh suspended on top."

The confidential accounts led to a sensational warning from the Defence Security Service, an agency of the Defence Department, that mysterious coins with radio frequency transmitters were found planted on U.S. contractors with classified security clearances on at least three separate occasions between October 2005 and January 2006 as the contractors traveled through Canada.

One contractor believed someone had placed two of the quarters in an outer coat pocket after the contractor had emptied the pocket hours earlier. "Coat pockets were empty that morning and I was keeping all of my coins in a plastic bag in my inner coat pocket," the contractor wrote.
These guys must've been zonked on a little too much Timmy's. Or reading too much Michael Crichton.

Seriously, though, sorta paranoid.

And they are nice coins.
post #2 of 6
Blast! You beat me to it by a minute.
post #3 of 6
You mean this quarter:



Nanotechnology?
post #4 of 6
Yes, if I wanted to spy on someone I'd bug a piece of coinage too. Coins don't tend to change hands very often at all. You don't need to be a leading intelligence historian to see how cunning a plan this really is.
post #5 of 6
Well, to be fair, everyone knows CSIS is about as effective as FEMA, so they really could be nano-bot super quarters that let you have 50,000 health on Gauntlet.
post #6 of 6
Sure, go ahead and laugh now. I just thank god my country is in such a safe neighborhood, away from these monsters.
New Posts  All Forums:Forum Nav:
  Return Home
  Back to Forum: Misc. Culture
CHUD.com Community › Forums › CULTURE, HUMOR, & FREE FORM › Misc. Culture › Canadian spare change sparks alarm