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New $100 Bills: Government Reveals New Design (PHOTO)

First Posted: 06/21/10 06:12 AM ET   Updated: 05/25/11 05:15 PM ET

(WASHINGTON-- JEANNINE AVERSA and MARTIN CRUTSINGER, AP) The folks who print America's money have designed a high-tech makeover of the $100 bill. It's part of an effort to stay ahead of counterfeiters as technology becomes more sophisticated and more dollars flow overseas, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke says.

The makeover, unveiled Wednesday by Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, may leave people wondering if there's magic involved.

Benjamin Franklin is still on the C-note. But he has been joined by a disappearing Liberty Bell in an inkwell and a bright blue security ribbon composed of thousands of tiny lenses that magnify objects in mysterious ways. Move the bill, and the objects move in a different direction.

The new currency will not go into circulation until Feb. 10 of next year. That will give the government time to educate the public in the United States and around the world about the changes.

"We estimate that as many as two-thirds of all $100 notes circulate outside the United States," said Bernanke, who stressed that the 6.5 billion in $100 bills now in circulation will remain legal tender.

The $100 bill, the highest value denomination in general circulation, is the last bill to undergo an extensive redesign. The Bureau of Engraving and Printing began the process in 2003, adding splashes of color to spruce up first the $20 and then the $50, $10 and $5 bills. The $1 bill isn't getting a makeover.

The changes are aimed at thwarting counterfeiters who are armed with ever-more sophisticated computers, scanners and color copiers.

The $100 bill is the most frequent target of counterfeiters operating outside of the United States while the $20 bill is the favorite target of counterfeiters inside the country.

The redesigned $100 bill had originally been expected to go into circulation in late 2008 but it's introduction was delayed to give the government time to refine all the new security features.

The government has prepared education resources in 25 languages to inform the public about the design changes and is giving people a chance to view the new bills on its website.

"We wanted the changes to be very obvious, visible and easy to see," Larry Felix, director of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, said in an interview with The Associated Press.

The new blue security ribbon will give a 3-D effect to the micro-images that the thousands of lenses will be magnifying. Tilt the note back and forth and you will see tiny bells on the ribbon change to 100s as they move.

But that's not all. Tilt the note back and forth and the images will move side to side. Tilt the note side to side and the images will move up and down.

In addition, to the left of Franklin's portrait, will be an inkwell that will change color from copper to green when the note is tilted. The movement will also make a Liberty Bell appear and disappear inside the inkwell.

"As with previous U.S. currency redesigns, this note incorporates the best technology available to ensure we're staying ahead of counterfeiters," Geithner said.

Franklin will remain on the front of the $100 bill and Independence Hall in Philadelphia will remain on the back of the currency although both have been modified in ways aimed at making it harder to produce counterfeit copies of the bills.

"The new security features announced today come after more than a decade of research and development to protect our currency from counterfeiting," said U.S. Treasurer Rosie Rios, whose signature along with Geithner's will appear on the new currency.


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02:28 AM on 04/22/2010
Waste of paper and governkent officials
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01:44 AM on 04/22/2010
Cool. I like it. The world's biggest counterfeiter of US currency is North Korea. We ought to change our bills more often. Then again, if we printed our money on beef there is no way NK could keep up.
10:46 PM on 04/21/2010
I'd like to see a bill exchange. After a specific date, all old $100 bills not exchanged for new $100 bills, would be worthless. That would really mess with the counterfiters, money launderers, and drug kingpins.

For the grannies with money stashed in the mattress and cash in safe deposit boxes, in the U.S., there would be case-by-case exceptions for a period, say a year and for a limited amount, say, $250k. After the conversion period and the year exception period if you hold the old bills, you are SOL.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sherwoodfamily
08:20 PM on 04/21/2010
I'm upset - all that time waiting for this new technology and you can't multitask and it doesn't have a camera and.....oh, wait.

Wrong article. My bad.
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06:15 PM on 04/21/2010
"The Federal Reserve is run by the Federal Government. " is a lie .The Fed is a private entity .Do some research ,the above statement is dis-information.
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Jesse P. Steinberg
est un habitant.
06:03 PM on 04/21/2010
What a waste of paper.

We need to go back to a gold and silver standard. I'm stocking up on silver for whenever that day comes.
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ForVivi
Another button, another buttonhole.
03:44 AM on 04/22/2010
Senatorial candidate in Nevada proposes paying for health care with chickens:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/04/21/chickens-for-checkups-dem_n_546762.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ChangeNow
06:30 AM on 04/22/2010
Great idea : /

Try walking around with a chicken in your wallet. And what the heck is PETA going to say?
06:00 PM on 04/21/2010
Why does Sci-Fi movies NOT have paper currency? (Star Wars, Star Trek...) Just a thought.
06:00 PM on 04/21/2010
Not many of us will see that new $100 bill. I know that I don't have the liberty of walking around with $100 bills in my pocket.
05:06 PM on 04/21/2010
It's awesome! Private banks print it then lend it to the country at interest--so America is always in debt to the private banks. Sneaky private banks!

That lets the private banks run everything, in secrecy, through the equally private Federal Reserve.

Well, at least they've kept the American economy strong.

Wait, what? Oh, no!
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CubfanBudman
He Ain't Heavy, He's my Brother
05:11 PM on 04/21/2010
The Federal Reserve is run by the Federal Government. The Bureau of Engraving and Printing is run by the Federal Government.

You are quite confused. The 'End the Fed' propaganda is distributed by the Giant Banks in effort to do away with regulations.

You are supporting "Too big to fail" banks.
05:50 PM on 04/21/2010
Private banks do run everything with the kingpin Fed at the helm, the co-opted Treasury responding in kind, and "regulatory" agencies falling obediently in line behind them.

Being subject to the whims of the unaccountable Fed and the global banks it serves is truly insane. Abolish the beast before all of the underclasses are foraging for scraps of food in the streets.
04:57 PM on 04/21/2010
Is this worth the trouble? Look how much can be stolen electronically over the internet. No physical bill needed. Wouldn't this be a better pace to focus our resources? Will people even use bills in the not too distant future? Mainly criminals use the cash economy anyway. It's like worrying about petty thieves making off with a briefcase full of money as wall street execs drive by in armored trucks full of ill gotten gains.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jwwrox
High School Student
04:25 PM on 04/21/2010
"color copiers".

Wow that is really advanced!
04:22 PM on 04/21/2010
How many times are these guys going to redesign the American Currency?
It sounds like good job security for the bureau of Engraving and Printing personnel, but a complete waste of taxpayers redesigned money.
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ChangeNow
06:34 AM on 04/22/2010
The various Euro notes have had this kind of design since inception. Holograms, varying colors...

The better question is "what took them so long?"
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04:14 PM on 04/21/2010
Nothing short of hideous. Typical design-by-committee result.
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04:08 PM on 04/21/2010
Cool soon it will take one of these bills to buy a pint of milk.
End the FED.Stop the biggest Crime of Last Century.
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SeenItBefore
Ya want to super size that?
04:07 PM on 04/21/2010
Again?

Last time they did this, we could not pay for anything in Central America because everyone thought our 'new' currency was fake.

Oh well, anything to make the world a bit more confusing.