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Home » Lufthansa » Lufthansa FAs Busted for Smuggling 63K Lbs of Euros into Germany
LufthansaNews

Lufthansa FAs Busted for Smuggling 63K Lbs of Euros into Germany

Matthew Klint Posted onApril 4, 2011November 14, 2023 6 Comments

Sometimes, you just have to ask, “How?”

a close-up of a coin

Six Lufthansa employees, including four flight attendants, have been arrested after sneaking in more than 63,000 pounds of out-of-circulation, €1 and €2 coins from China back to Germany over the last four years.

Euro coins have two color tones, gold and silver, and when the German Central Bank takes the coins out of circulation, the two colors (see picture to the left) are separated then sent to China to be melted down into scrap metal.

A wily group in China reassembled the coins rather melting them, then sent them back to Germany with four LH flight attendants serving as “mules.” Because FA’s don’t have baggage weight limits and can typically carry-on their bags and breeze through customs, they became the ideal method of transporting this discarded money. The FAs would then take the coins to the Bundesbank (only the central bank in Germany accepts damaged coins) and turn them in for bills. The bank typically does not count coin deposits under €1000 but will instead weigh the money bags without inspecting the coins. The scheme went off without a hitch for over four years.

But greed is a powerful thing and greediness eventually caught up to gang. 63,000 pounds of coins is roughly €20,000,000–no chump change, and apparently too sweet a deal to scale back on. Finally, the ruse was discovered when a German customs agent (now a national hero) noticed a FA struggling to carry her bag through customs and decided to inspect the bag. Busted.

But can you imagine transporting about 4,000lbs of coins per year, in your carry-on bags, hidden amongst your other belongings? I hope they have chiropractors in German prisons.

It’s odd that Chinese airport screeners never caught this (unless they were on the dole) and even odder that the central bank continued to accept bags of partially damaged coins for years.

But it does make for an interesting story.

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About Author

Matthew Klint

Matthew is an avid traveler who calls Los Angeles home. Each year he travels more than 200,000 miles by air and has visited more than 135 countries. Working both in the aviation industry and as a travel consultant, Matthew has been featured in major media outlets around the world and uses his Live and Let's Fly blog to share the latest news in the airline industry, commentary on frequent flyer programs, and detailed reports of his worldwide travel.

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6 Comments

  1. Gene Reply
    April 4, 2011 at 8:52 pm

    I bet mrpickles could imagine doing this.

  2. Nick Reply
    April 4, 2011 at 9:25 pm

    Depending on the number of trips these FA’s made to China, this was fairly easy, and only became a problem when one flight attendant became greedy and tried to take too much at once. Yes, it is 4,000 pounds a year, however divided up among a lot of trips, if the FA was traveling light otherwise, then the weight would not be a problem since they are used to dealing with heavy bags

  3. Lee Reply
    April 7, 2011 at 2:07 pm

    this is just a tip of iceberg. chinese are becoming a threat to world commerce. normality in china includes low regards for rule of law, if-you-can-make-a-buck-anything-goes mentality, and a very commercially smart people. i am not saying they are bad people. i am a chinese myself. but i can imagine the “wily” group of chinese has got lots of admirers in china over the year.

  4. Pingback: タイラー・コーエン 「『裁定機会』に魅せられて ~ただ飯なんてものはない~」(2014年7月7日)/「『裁定機会』に魅せられて ~私人による量的緩和は許すまじ~」(2011年4月6日) — 経
  5. Pingback: タイラー・コーエン 「『裁定機会』に魅せられて ~ただ飯なんてものはない~」(2014年7月7日)/「『裁定機会』に魅せられて ~私人による量的緩和は許すまじ~」(2011年4月6日) — 経
  6. Pingback: タイラー・コーエン 「『裁定機会』に魅せられて ~ただ飯なんてものはない~」(2014年7月7日)/「『裁定機会』に魅せられて ~私人による量的緩和は許すまじ~」(2011年4月6日) — 経

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