/ 2 November 2006

Mystery of the self-destructing euro bills

Hundreds of euro bills in Germany have mysteriously disintegrated in the past several months, apparently due to exposure to sulfuric acid, police and the German central bank said on Thursday.

Authorities in Berlin and the Bundesbank confirmed a report in the daily Bild that the state crime offices in the German capital and the south-western state of Rhineland-Palatinate have opened investigations after a number of bills began self-destructing.

The first case surfaced in June in Berlin when a €20 bill crumbled upon contact. Police first suspected a fluke but the number of “broken notes”, as investigators have dubbed the bills, continued to rise in August.

Bild, which splashed the headline “Acid attack on our money!” on its front page, said that chemists believe the bills may have been sprinkled with a sulfate salt that becomes sulfuric acid when it comes in contact with moisture, such as hand perspiration.

The bills then gradually disintegrate.

The Bundesbank said more than 1 000 bills are affected, mainly found in the north and the east of the country, and ruled out a printing defect. Serial numbers confirm the bills were produced by the Federal Printing Press.

“To date we do not have any indication that a crime has been committed,” a Berlin police spokesperson said, adding that it is possible that an accident led to the contamination of the bills.

Investigators told Bild that they suspect that would-be extortionists are behind the case, aiming to prove they can destroy currency at will. — AFP