Emily Carter
|
For The Dairy Corner,
on Route 1 in Scarborough, getting stuck with funny money has become an annual
occurrence.
Last week, it happened
for the third time in as many years, when an Old Orchard Beach man passed two
fake $20 bills though the counter window of the popular ice cream shop.
The counterfeiters, who
were caught quickly by police, also allegedly passed the fake bills at two
other Scarborough locations and possibly one in Windham. According to
Scarborough Detective Sgt. Rick Rouse, the only thing at all novel about the
transaction is that, for once, the counterfeiter was someone from Maine.
“It usually begins
about this time of year,” he said, on Monday. “You normally think that it comes
with the tourist crowd, but that’s not always necessarily the case.
“It goes on throughout
the season,” said Rouse. “A lot of times a business will be going through their
cash and find something [with] no clue who passed it to them.”
That’s exactly what
happened at the Dairy Corner, owned for the last 11 of its 32 years by Robin
Provencher. On Thusday, April 28, she discovered the fake bills in her receipts
from the previous day.
“It was fairly obvious,
if you know what you’re looking for,” she said, Friday morning, not long after
being told Scarborough police had cracked the case. “If you compared it to a
regular $20, they did kind of a sloppy job, so some white showed along the top
edge of one of them. The other was better. It fooled my counterfeit pen.”
According to Rouse, some
of the bills passed by Brenton Blais, 32, Old Orchard Beach, were lower
denomination bills bleached out and then printed over, probably on a home
computer, with the image of a $20. It
fooled Provencher’s pen – which lays down an certain colored line only if a
given bill is made of same linen/cotton blend as genuine currency. Paper money
isn’t really paper at all. In fact, it’s
a closer cousin to the shirt on your back than the page in your notebook.
Brenton Blais |
“The pen will indicate
it’s a real bill, because it is a real bill,” Rouse says of the bleaching
trick. “It just doesn’t tell you that it’s supposed to be a $1 and not a $20.”
According to Rouse, at
least one of Blais’ bills was printed on regular paper. That’s what first caught Provencher’s
attention, because “it just didn’t feel right.”
As luck would have it,
Blais drew the new girl on the counter.
Emily Carter, 18, was just two weeks into her first job handling cash
and admits she let the fake bills get by her.
“They were only in my
hand for, like, 2-3 seconds,” she said, flashing a broad smile. “But I bet I
could tell the difference now. It’s been a real learning experience.”
Still Carter became the
star witness – remembering what the culprit was wearing and what he drove – not
because she caught the graft, but because Blais has creeped her out.
"He was really
weird," she said. "He kept talking to me, just chit-chat, trying to
distract me, I guess. He kept going on about the tip jar, saying, ‘Oh, yeah, I
remember back in the day, working for tips,’ but then he didn't leave any money
in the jar."
Scarborough police were
with Provencher late Thursday morning, steeling themselves to review of an
entire day’s worth of security-camera footage – which can feature as many as
500 customers on a busy day – when Carter arrived to start her shift.
“When she came in she
said right away, I know who did it,” marvels Provencher. “I was like, ‘What?
You remember this?’ But she definitely got a vibe off of him.”
Once police knew where
on the tape to look, it didn’t take long to peg Blais as a familiar face.
“We’ve had him for
other charges going back to 2006, including drugs,” said Rouse. “And there’s a
[pending] case which involves a stolen check that was previous to this
[counterfeiting charge]. That kind of gave us the idea he was up to something.”
It didn’t hurt that
Blais can be seen on the security footage leaning in the counter window, an act
that prominently displayed the tattoo on his left arm.
Blais is alleged to
have also spent his counterfeit cash at Walmart. Following a complaint called
in by Dunkin’ Donuts Friday morning, Scarborough police stopped a vehicle “a short distance away.” Inside were Blais and Jennifer Wormell, 31,
also of Old Orchard Beach.
Found inside was a $2
plastic baseball cap Dairy Corner uses as sundae cups, which Blais can be seen
on tape buying with one of his fake bills.
“The helmet was in the
glove box and fell out when the officer was searching through it,” said Rouse.
Blais and Wormell were
each charged with aggravated forgery – a Class B felony punishable by up to 10
years in prision and/or a $20,000 fine.
Blais also has been charged with theft, which would normally be classed
as misdemeanor, given the value of items “purchased.” However, because of his prior record, Blais
could have this charge rendered a Class C felony, earning him the possibility
of an additional five years and/or $5,000.
There also remains the
possibility of additional federal charges levied by Secret Service, which
investigates counterfeit claims.
“They came out and took
a look at the case,” said Rouse. “We
have no idea what they’ll do with it.”
According to Rouse,
Blais was out on bail by Monday and faces a late-June arraignment hearing.
Scarborough police believe Blais and Wormall made the bills themselves, and may
have passed them in Windham, as well as at the three Scarborough
locations. A second, as-yet-unidentified
woman, seen at the Walmart with Wormall, also may be involved, Rouse said.
For Carter, the
experience is one she’ll remember, although she might have hoped for more.
"I was a little
disappointed," she said, laughing, while waiting on customers. "I was
expecting to go in [to the police department] and have people file past. But
they just came here [to Dairy Corner] and showed me pictures."
"I told her, it's
not like on TV," said Provencher, sharing in the laugh.
However, it's not
really a joking matter. Provencher has
ordered a bill-scanning machine, and, until it arrives, has retrained her
employees to hold bills to the light, to look for the telltale security strip
woven into the fabric of more recent press runs.
"It's upsetting to
think that someone would do that to a small business, but I guess they really
don’t care" said Provencher, knowing she’s lost forever the $40 Blais
tricked her out of.
"Forty dollars is
a lot of money when you consider than an ice cream cone costs $2,” she says.
“If it happened more often, it would definitely impact then business."
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