In this interview piece — separate from the other interviews — Burger shares pictures, maps, and
even counterfeited money from his time in the concentration camp.
Not exact matches
* To the point, where
counterfeit money was often accepted as real,
even though it was known to be
counterfeit (Stephn Mihm, A Nation of Counterfeiters: Capitalists, Con Men, and the Making of the United States, Harvard University Press, 2009).
Private school students have been caught printing
counterfeit money to cover gambling debts, running mini prostitute rings; private school administrators have been caught stealing
money, sleeping with students, and
even committing murder.
It isn't clear to me whether printing stuff that looks like
money is illegal in the absence of intent to pass it off as
money in commerce, or if
counterfeiting is
even a crime until you deliver it to someone in commerce.