Swiss Cops Investigate 8-Year-Old Boy for Trying to Use Toy Money
The boy will have his name in police records until the year 2032.

An 8-year-old Swiss boy was investigated by the police for asking if he could use play money to make a purchase in a village shop.
Note that that kid wasn't even trying to palm the cash off as real, which would have been pretty tough: It was a euro printed on plain paper decorated with blue Chinese characters. No doubt some day this may be a reality in Europe. But that day has not yet come.
The fake money was given out at a recent carnival in the town of Sissach, Switzerland. There is a Chinese tradition where family members burn paper versions of everything from mansions to money to Marlboros, so that their ancestors will enjoy them in the afterlife. That's what these euros" were. And, for the record, euros aren't even the currency in the northern Basel-Landschaft region, where this occurred. That area trades in Swiss francs.
But who gives a flying yodel about such trifles? Store manager Tanja Baumann told reporters that even though the money was obviously fake, she had to call the cops because, "It is our store policy. We were instructed to do so by the headquarters in Winterthur."
In any event, the incident didn't end there. The cops were dispatched to the young miscreants' house the next day. This was no tip of the hat, Boys, you're not going to do that again, right? The visit lasted three hours. What's more, reports The Guardian:
They brought along stills from surveillance footage, including one of the boy and the girl standing at the till, the report said…
The brothers had their mug shots taken.
Then their house was searched for more toy money.
A police spokesman said, "We were informed that children with a bundle of counterfeit euro notes tried to buy goods. There was therefore suspicion of counterfeit money being put into circulation."
The boy will have his name in police records until the year 2032.
The Guardian reported that "the investigating officer had to determine whether the fake money was used deliberately and whether the children were punishable by law."
Apparently that's what it takes to close a case in Switzerland. And you thought their clocks were cuckoo.
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...the investigating officer had to determine whether the fake money was used deliberately and whether the children were punishable by law.
Use that fake money to fund the Swiss police.
There's some holes in that idea.
That's a cheesy remark.
Abolish central banks and their monopoly on money issue.
Twelve years to close a case where there is video evidence?
Talk about union work rules.
Swiss precision.
My last pay check was $8750 just ecom working 12 hours for every week. My neighbor have found the estimation of $15k for a long time and she works around 20 hours for seven days. NSa I can not trust how direct it was once I tried it information...... Click here
>>she had to call the cops
nope. lines can be drawn.
Sounds like the cops need an 8 hour course on identifying obvious play money, and permission to fine storeowners and others who waste their time with frivilous crap. At least they didn't try out their chokehold techiques on the kids, or shoot their dog.
"It is our store policy. We were instructed to do so by the headquarters in Winterthur."
Ve vas just following ze orders.
What happened to barter? value received for value given...who determines value? The store had the right to refuse that form of value, but to call the police? a toxic store.
Now, if would have been NAZI gold that would have been ok. Too much?
"Too much?"
Nah, just right.
And here I thought the Swiss were the last sane people on Earth.
For there to be a last sane people on Earth there would first have to be a first sane people on Earth. Evidence is lacking.
When it comes to money, the Swiss do not fuck around. What does one expect from a country built on banking. The Swiss want to keep the international world assured that their money is as secure as the Swiss reputation for banking secrecy and that their monies mere existence would never be divulged to an account holder's home country ever.
Don't trust bankers.
That hasn't been true since the 1980's. A Swiss banker will roll over for American law enforcement so fast that they were used as experimental proof of frame-dragging.
Someone probably should have turned those Swiss Cops into Swiss Cheese....
Are they going to prosecute Hasbro for printing approximately $67 billion of fake money per year in Monopoly games alone?