Word: counterfeiter
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...onion caught on around the South, but did not move outside the region unless Southerners felt the pull of wanderlust, taking with them strong opinions on what constituted a good onion: the Vidalia. Now stores from Manhattan to Miami, Los Angeles to Seattle, sell Vidalias, real and counterfeit. The growers and the Chamber of Commerce here say the real Vidalia is raised within a 35-mile radius of Vidalia. Growers who belong to the Chamber's tag program produce onions that are graded and approved by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and bear a tag with the trademark Yumion...
Banks and retailers face hosts of problems that drive up rates: borrowers who welsh on their debts, thieves who steal cards and go on shopping sprees, and more sophisticated criminals who make counterfeit charge plates. One top executive at a New York City bank estimates that about one-fifth of the 19.8% interest his institution charges on credit cards goes to cover loan losses and the expense of collecting tardy payments...
Losses from counterfeit cards alone are running about $30 million annually, but that is only a fraction of the roughly $400 million that will be taken this year in spurious credit-card transactions. Thanks to a 1971 federal law, a consumer's liability in theft or fraud is limited to $50 per card; the cost is usually absorbed by either the bank or the company issuing the card. Eventually, however, the losses drive up the cost of goods and consumer credit...
...both right and left. In July 1979 Agca pleaded guilty to the murder of moderate Turkish Journalist Abdi Ipekci; he escaped from prison five months later. In July 1980 Agca appeared in Sofia, Bulgaria. According to NBC, he spent seven weeks in the best hotels there, received a counterfeit Turkish passport and mingled with members of the Turkish Mafia, which has long run a thriving drugs-for-guns trade with the cooperation of Bulgaria's hard-line Communist regime. It was in Bulgaria, Kalb speculates, that the Soviets may have indirectly recruited the young killer. Kalb reasons that Agca...
...industrious copycats of Asia have long churned out counterfeit or cut-rate versions of name-brand Western products, including Levi's jeans, Samsonite luggage, Johnnie Walker Scotch, Rolex watches and even Rubik's Cube. Now the me-too factories of the Pacific rim have a new target: the popular Apple personal computer...