wellsyuk wrote:Rotten Tanx wrote:Bus and train passes. Printing them, mailing them, logging them, handing them out, etc
2 days a week dealing with the ones that people buy, 3 days a week dealing with the people who get them for free due to recently starting a new job. You wouldn't believe how pissed people get if there is a hiccup in their application for a free rail card or bus pass.
I once (yonks ago) got arrested for forging a weekly bus pass. Stupidly I gave my name to the conductor who spotted I'd fiddled the date using my crafty skills with scissors and glue - 3 months later a policeman knocks on the door and takes me down the nick for a caution..
I suppose that wouldn't happen to you.
When I was attending the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (back before the days of the mag-striped CTA Transit Cards) there was a gang of skinhead students at the school who used to forge CTA monthly bus/train passes. They'd manufacture them in the print shop after hours and sell them to the students for like $20 each.
They were incredibly good likenesses of the real thing. Being an impoverished student at the time, I bought one every month and used it several times a day for like 2 years without any problems.
Then one day the head of the school's Printmaking Department issued an announcement to all students that the administration had been informed of a forgery ring operating out of the school. He offered to let the matter drop as long as the students responsible quit their illegal activities. So the skins stopped doing their business on the school's equipment and instead took all their ill-gotten earnings, bought a stat camera and a press and set up shop in their loft space.
They continued to produce counterfeit passes for maybe a year more and then I heard that their place got raided, they all got arrested and had all their gear confiscated.