Are Your Sports Memorabilia Real Or Fake?
There is a huge interest in sports memorabilia, and
sports-related items include signed commemorative photos,
baseballs, footballs, basketballs, pucks and jerseys.
A Google search of companies hawking these items comes up with
almost 5 million businesses! Some of the items on offer cost
thousands of dollars. Where there are so many eager and gullible
customers, fraud is sure to appear.
A Sand Diego federal judge who recently sentenced several sports
autograph forgers to prison said, "Life, liberty and the pursuit
of the national pastime, has been undone". The prosecution
stemmed from an FBI investigation called Operation Bullpen,
which closed down a professional criminal organization that
forged and sold bogus autographs.
60 search warrants were served, more than 2 dozen people
arrested, and a warehouse with 10 million dollars worth of
forged merchandise was seized. The ring leaders received 3 years
in prison and forfeiture or assets to the IRS.
Both current and "vintage" items were involved. Any sports fan
who has a signed souvenir may now want to question its
authenticity. Phil Halpren, the assistant U.S. attorney who
worked to prosecute the forgers stated that fraud is so
pervasive in the sports memorabilia market that unless you
personally see an item being signed by the athlete, odds are
greater than fifty percent that it is fake.
The most athletes most well-known the the public are popular
with forgers, too. Halpren said, "If you are looking at a Mark
McGuire signature, it's almost a guarantee, 99.9 percent it is a
forgery."
Certificates of authenticity can be fabricated just as easily as
the collectible item they supposedly validate, so this is no
protection. Vendors are fighting back in an effort to maintain
the integrity of the market.
Disney, which owns ESPN, will begin next year to auction signed
sports memorabilia online. Disney says it will authenticate the
signatures with holograms encrypted with the item's identifying
information and package seals, videotaping the entire process.
Sophisticated forgers can even produce holographic seals which
appear, on casual inspection, to be real. However, most forgers
are amateurs, and the more sophisticated the anti-forgery
system, the less likely criminals are to attempt to copy it.
Baseball and football are most popular in America, but a few
famous hockey players such as Wayne Gretzky and Bobby Orr are
popular targets for forgery as well. With all the items
available, both off and on the internet, fans can avoid a lot of
fraud by using common sense.
For example, a baseball autographed by Babe Ruth selling for
$500 is obviously a fake, because such a price is unbelievably
low, too low for real market conditons.
Also, it pays to know a little bit about the development of
baseballs and pens. If you see baseballs supposedly signed in
the '20s and '30s with Sharpie pens, these are obviously fake,
because these pens were not invented yet in that era. To quote
Phil Halpren : "I have seen Babe Ruth balls signed on a Bobby
Brown American League President ball.
So, you know, he was president in the early '80s. That's
impossible to have been done. But someone did it." So, while
it's enjoyable to own a piece of sports history, the motto to
follow is : buyer beware.
Unless you are a professional trader who knows how to
authenticate merchandise, don't buy an item strictly for its
potential resale value, because you may be disappointed by what
you eventually get for it.
Buy an item you personally like and intend to keep, and don't
spend thousands of dollars. This ensures that you will be happy
when you look at your purchase, without the lingering doubt that
you have wasted a large sum of money on something of dubious
value.