Since people seem to think that the off-topic section is for political discussion, something that is frowned upon, I have temporarily closed the section. ANY political discussions in any other forum will be deleted and the user suspended. I have had it with the politically motivated comments.
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rare inverted jenny stamp maybe in a sealed fla. ballot box

Sun Nov 12, 2006 9:53 am

for stamp collectors & aviation buffs alike.... in fort lauderdale florida an absentee ballot was recently mailed with what may have been 1 of the rare inverted curtiss jenny stamps that the u.s. postal service made & goofed up on back in the 20's. the stamp is at least worth $200.000 & the envelope it is affixed to can't be retrieved from the ballot box by law!! :shock: somebody definetely was asleep when they mailed their vote with that!!
Last edited by tom d. friedman on Sun Nov 12, 2006 11:56 am, edited 1 time in total.

Sun Nov 12, 2006 11:41 am

Given Florida's track record of election law compliance, I would think that retrieving the envelope and stamp will not be a problem. :?

August

Sun Nov 12, 2006 10:20 pm

The stamp was mailed making the value more like $20'000 to $100'000 from what the news story said. Costly mistake :shock:

Mon Nov 13, 2006 7:18 pm

Well, shoot! Maybe they were just anticipating the next stamp price increase.............

Tue Dec 05, 2006 12:51 am

MIAMI (Reuters) - A stamp that first appeared to be a rare 1918 "Inverted Jenny," used by a Florida voter to mail an absentee ballot, is a counterfeit, experts said on Monday.

The blue and red stamp, which took its name from an image of a biplane accidentally printed upside down, was spotted by a county commissioner in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, last month on an envelope that contained a ballot for the November 7 election.

The find caused a stir among stamp collectors. Only 100 of the misprinted stamps have ever been found, making them rare in the world of philately.

An Inverted Jenny stamp could be worth $300,000, experts have said. A block of four was traded recently for another rare stamp in a transaction valued at nearly $3 million.

Experts examined the stamp on Monday at the behest of the Broward County Elections office.

"To a trained philatelist, it's pretty obvious that it's a counterfeit," Randy Shoemaker of Professional Stamp Experts, a stamp grading service, told reporters at a news conference in Broward County.

Mercer Bristow, an expert with the American Philatelic Society who also examined the stamp, said both the printing method and the perforations on the edge of the stamp gave it away as a fake.

Image

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20061205/us_nm/usa_stamp_dc

Tue Dec 05, 2006 6:32 pm

case closed??
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