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  2. Emerich Juettner (January 1876 – January 4, 1955), also known as Edward Mueller or Mister 880, was an Austrian-American immigrant known for counterfeiting United States $1 bills and eluding the United States Secret Service for a decade, from 1938 to 1948. [1]

    • The Beginning
    • The Scheme
    • The Search
    • The Tip
    • The Capture
    • The Payoff

    Back in 1890, a 13-year-old boy named Emerich Juettner boarded a ship in Austria and set off through choppy seas for the promise of a better life. He settled in New York City and soon found work as a picture frame gilder. But his true passion was the art of invention: Throughout his 20s, he spent late nights in a tenement apartment concocting vario...

    Juettner assessed his skills: In his youth, he’d acquired an “elementary knowledge” of metal engraving. During his time as an aspiring camera inventor, he’d also dabbled in photography. What could he make of that? As it so happened, this was just the résumé for a career in counterfeiting. At the time, replicating the look and feel of US currency wa...

    The day after Juentter began his operation, the Secret Service, which handled counterfeiting cases at the time, received a curious $1 bill that had been passed off at a cigar shop on Broadway and 102nd Street. It was like nothing they’d ever seen. First off, no self-respecting counterfeiter had ever taken the time and trouble to replicate $1 bills ...

    On a chilly afternoon in January of 1948, 7 schoolboyswere rustling around in a vacant lot in the Upper West Side and uncovered something strange. Buried in the snow, among a pile of car tires, old bird cages, and a rusty baby carriage, were two zinc engraving plates and“30 funny-looking dollar bills.” While shopkeepers all over the city had accept...

    Agents busted into the brownstone, expecting to find a criminal mastermind. Instead, they were greeted by a jovial 73-year-old— “5’3” tall, [with a] lean hard muscled frame, a healthy pink face, bright blue eyes, a shiny bald dome, a fringe of snowy hair over his ears, a wispy white mustache, and hardly any teeth.” It was Emerich Jeuttner, the old ...

    Shortly after the trial, St. Clair McKelway, a New Yorker reporter, covered Juettner’s saga in a 3-part series (1, 2, 3). This drew international attention to the case and led to an Academy Award-winning film (“Mister 880”) in 1950. Through the optioning of his life rights, Juettner ended up making more money from the film than he had in his 10 yea...

    • Zachary Crockett
  3. Apr 10, 2010 · The mystery man, the subject of the large and relentless decade-long manhunt, was 73-year-old Emerich Juettner, better known as Edward Mueller, a senior citizen who had given up his job as an...

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Mister_880Mister 880 - Wikipedia

    The film is based on the true story of Emerich Juettner, known by the alias Edward Mueller, an elderly man who counterfeited just enough money to survive, was careful where and when he spent his fake dollar bills, and was therefore able to elude authorities for ten years, despite the poor quality of his fakes and growing interest in his case.

  5. Jul 23, 2021 · Emerich Juettner, also known as Edward Mueller, who lived near Broadway and W. 96th St. in Manhattan, eluded the counterfeiting laws from 1938 to 1948, longer than any other “maker of the...

  6. Emerich Juettner (January 1876 – January 4, 1955), also known as Edward Mueller or Mister 880, was an Austrian-American immigrant known for counterfeiting United States $1 bills and eluding the United States Secret Service for a decade, from 1938 to 1948.

  7. Apr 3, 2011 · Born in Austria, Mueller, whose real name was Emerich Juettner, had learned some of the engraver’s trade in his native country before immigrating to America in the 1890s. He settled into an ...

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