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Posted by Editor on 8/25/11 • Categorized as Sports Memorabilia Industry News

Chad Richard Baldwin/Clackamas Co. Sheriff’s photo

Less than a week after a Florida man was arrested on charges of selling nearly three dozen fake Babe Ruth signed baseballs to Florida pawn and second hand shops, Clackamas County, Oregon  Sheriff’s Office detectives executed a search warrant at the Gresham  home of a 39-year-old man who is under investigation for selling  counterfeit autographs.

Chad Baldwin, 39, allegedly created  fake signed sports memorabilia including Babe Ruth and Roger Maris  autographed baseballs and sold them with phony certificates of  authenticity to unsuspecting buyers.

Detectives believe Baldwin used Craigslist to advertise the sales of  signed baseballs.  They say he included forged authentication  certificates from James Spence Authentication and PSA/DNA. All of the  collected authentication documents have been confirmed as forgeries.

Babe Ruth non-genuine signed baseballIn April of this year, Baldwin advertised a signed “Roger Maris” baseball  on Craigslist. Detective say he sold the baseball with a PSA/DNA  authentication certificate to a man in nearby Sherwood. It was  determined that the signed baseball was a fraud and that the  authentication letter was forged.

Also in April of this year, Baldwin put a “Babe Ruth” baseball with a JSA letter of authentication on Craigslist.  That baseball to a  Vancouver man and again, the sheriff’s office says the baseball and  authentication letter were confirmed as fraudulent.

It isn’t Baldwin’s first brush with the law.  13 years ago, he was convicted  of  robbing an armored car in  1997. He was sentenced to 7 1/2 years in prison for that crime and  ordered to repay more than $22,000 in restitution to the armored car  company.

He is under investigation for theft by deception, computer crimes,  identity theft and criminal simulation for the phony autograph scam.

On Tuesday, Clackamas County  Sheriff’s Office detectives executed a search warrant at  Baldwin’s  Gresham home. Investigators recovered evidence that leads them to  believe there are more victims.

The UACC has released a comprehensive new signature study on Neil Armstrong. Run — don’t walk — to get your copy today at Amazon.com.
I will first admit that I am not completely unbiased as I contributed one chapter to this study.
The study — commissioned by the Universal Autograph Collectors’ Club (UACC) – is quite comprehensive and includes contributions from a wide range of respected figures in the autograph collecting hobby. It has a multitude of authentic signature examples and will be helpful to any collector looking to learn, authenticate or purchase a Neil Armstrong autograph. It also includes a good deal of narrative and biographical information on Armstrong.
And it is a real “book,” not a flimsy pamphlet. I highly recommend this as it belongs on the reference shelf of any serious space or autograph collector.

Zipper’s Collecting Obsession, May 19,2011 posted by Steve.

NEIL ARMSTRONG SIGNED PSA/DNA PHOTO PERFECT 10 BOLD SIGNATURE: NEIL ARMSTRONG!! FULL PSA LETTER-SUPER RARE This NASA photo of Neil Armstrong is signed in blue felt tip pen by the famous astronaut. The photo is inscribed, “To Mrs. Margaret Havey – All Good Wishes – Neil Armstrong.” The signature has been authenticated by PSA/DNA with a full letter of authenticity and rates a perfect “10″.
Great piece located at: http://substancecollectables.com/other_sports and at a fraction of the price this piece is worth! Buy it Now and invest in a great piece of memorabilia History! You may never see another Genuine piece like this one for sale anywhere at this price!

Updated: Tuesday, 19 Jul 2011, 10:15 PM CDT Published : Tuesday, 19 Jul 2011,  10:15 PM CDT

The last space shuttle is scheduled to conclude its final mission on  Thursday.

If all goes as planned, Atlantis will touch down exactly 42-years after the  first human set foot on the moon.

That man was Neil Armstrong. And today, his autograph is worth thousands of  dollars. That is, if it’s the real McCoy.

Armstrong signatures are rare and valuable in part because he stopped signing  in 1994, says local collector Anthony Pizzitola.

“The first man on the moon is now the first astronaut in history to refuse to  sign autographs,” says Pizzitola. “For Nancy Pelosi, for children, Eagle Scouts  or anyone.”

When Armstrong stopped signing, says Pizzitola, the value of his John Hancock  skyrocketed. And forgeries flooded the market.

“There’s probably 25-percent real, 75-percent fake,” estimates the  collector.

Pizzitola has just compiled a reference guide called “Neal Armstrong: The  Quest For His Autograph,” which explains how to tell the genuine “Neil  Armstrongs” from the phonies.

He says he can understand why Armstrong stopped signing, since the pioneering  astronaut was always a reluctant hero.

“He never wanted to be the first man on the moon and have to carry the  baggage of the fame and the celebrity that went along with it.”

For a Real 100% Genuine 100% Authentic Piece of History and a real Authentic Neal Armstrong Photo go to: http://substancecollectables.com/inc/sdetail/9147/9188

Global Authentics + Steve Sipe and Mariano Rivera

Dec 11, 2011

Mariano Rivera is my favorite NY Yankee — he’s my Mickey Mantle. (Sorry Jete, I like you too, but you were a bit too much of a teen idol to be MY favorite.) So, I enjoy collecting Rivera signed items and peruse eBay almost daily. Over time, I’ve gotten a pretty good eye for what constitutes an authentic Rivera and what the clunkers look like.
For many months, there has been an endless stream of Mariano Rivera signed items with Global Authentics / Steve Sipe certificates. There are 20 – 30 of these on eBay at any given time and they all look strikingly similar. Here are a few examples of Global Authentics / Steve Sipe certified Mariano Rivera items:

Can anyone produce known authentic exemplars that compare well to the items above?
Just for comparison’s sake, here is a ball signed through Steiner Sports:

For your great memorabilia items to purchase go to: http://substancecollectables.com/other_sports

June 3 2004 article was written….

Kinda funny since I thought they were already at epidemic levels…
Here’s an article from ESports Collector’s Digest:


BOGUS ALI AUTOGRAPHS ON RISE, BOXER SAYS By Rocky Landsverk Muhammad Ali has signed perhaps a million autographs in his lifetime, and it has not been enough to meet demand. Ali and Harlan Werner, his long-time agent, have taken to the offensive to alert fans that there’s a serious problem with fake autographs of the sports legend.
“I’m not concerned about the value of my autograph; I’m concerned that my fans who are buying it are getting the real thing,” Ali said, responding via e-mail in an exclusive interview. “My team has been with me for several years and is doing the best they can to keep up with the forgers.”


Werner stresses that he’s not on an “everything is fake but what we sell” rampage, but said Ali wants fans to employ some common sense, because many of the offers available just can’t be valid.
“It’s not physically possible for Muhammad to sign 30,000-50,000 autographs a year, and that is an approximation of the number of signatures being pumped into the marketplace worldwide,” Werner said. “He wants the message to be out that fans and collectors should use common sense, know who they’re buying from, and be comfortable with who they’re buying from.”


And when he says worldwide, he means it. “This problem is worse in Australia, worse in Japan, worse in England than it is in the United States,” Werner said. “The noose is tightening (in the United States) and this stuff is being shipped abroad.”
Ali’s physical condition has worsened his autograph, something the forgers often utilize to their advantage. It’s hard to authenticate Ali’s signature, and not that hard to call a forgery “just one of Muhammad’s bad days.” Werner, however, said forgeries are still apparent to those who know Ali’s autograph.


“There are days when he can sign very large signatures, and there are days when you get very small signatures,” Werner said. “However, when he is sitting down and signing autographs, the characters are always similar and consistent. The inconsistency is in the size, and the signatures that are signed out in public are usually rushed and chances are you’re going to get a signature that’s less legible. Those less-legible signatures are more commonly counterfeited, and those signatures signed ‘Muhammad Ali aka Cassius Clay’ or just ‘Cassius Clay,’ those fake signatures are being pumped out in large numbers.”

For you true Genuine 100% Authentic Muhammad Ali autographed signed memorabilia you can feel safe and secure your getting the “Real Deal” and shop at www.substancecollectables.com

By JOHN BRANCH
Published: June 13, 2009

Aaron Houston for The New York Times

Riddick Bowe signed autographs at a flea market in New Jersey. The former heavyweight champion said he had $15 million when he retired in 1996.

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.—  Amid all the items to be discovered at the Meadowlands Flea Market on Saturday, past the kettle corn and between the $2 leather belts and the $1 bottles of shampoo, was a two-time heavyweight boxing champion of the world.

Aaron Houston for The New York Times

Riddick Bowe at a New Jersey flea market. He last boxed in December in Germany, but he has no bouts planned.

Riddick Bowe sat on a folding chair behind a card table that straddled two parking spaces, labeled in chalk as Nos. 264 and 265. Most people sauntered past, holding bargains in a bag or grilled meat on a stick, not recognizing the large man who waited for someone to come see him.

“The champ is here!” Darren Antola, who set up the autograph session, called out, like a carnival barker. “He beat Evander Holyfield two out of three times!”

Two women approached. Bowe always was boxing’s approachable heavyweight, the anti-Mike Tyson, witty and disarming. He called each of the women “sweetheart.”

One asked if he was still fighting. Bowe said he was, a reply based more in hope than reality. He beat a “crash dummy” named Gene Pukall in Germany last December, and has no other fights planned. He weighs about 300 pounds.

“Guess who I’m going to fight next?” he asked, excitedly. “You’ll never believe it.”

“Who?” the woman asked in return.

“Somebody I can whoop,” Bowe said. He smiled. She laughed. Then she bought an autographed picture for $35 that she intended to frame for someone named Pete. And Bowe, who said he had $15 million when he retired in 1996, thanked her.

A man working a stall behind Bowe watched.

“All those millions of dollars, and they’re gone,” the man said, and it was not in the form of a question, but a fact, readily apparent. “It’s a sad story.”

Bowe does not argue that. He is 41 (according to public records and news reports, although he insisted Saturday that he was born on Aug. 10, 1968, not 1967) and signed autographs because he has little money. He wants to fight again because he knows little else.

“What would I do without boxing? That’s the question, isn’t it?” he asked during a quiet moment under the canopy where he sat. He searched for the answer inside his head, which his own lawyers once argued was damaged from all the blows it absorbed.

“Boxing’s all I know,” he said finally. “At 40, what else am I going to do?”

Bowe’s version of the now-clichéd story of a heavyweight champion going from riches to rags  —  count Holyfield and Tyson among contemporaries with similar tales  —  is layered with bizarre episodes.

Bowe beat Holyfield twice, the loss in the middle of their trilogy coming after a parachutist landed beside the ring at Caesar’s Palace in 1993. Bowe had two strange 1996 victories over Andrew Golota, who was disqualified both times for low blows. The first, at Madison Square Garden, set off a riot in the ring.

Bowe retired. Things got stranger.

He joined the Marine Corps Reserves  and quit a few days into basic training. He spent 18 months in prison for interstate domestic violence after going to North Carolina to haul his now-former wife and their five children back home with him to Maryland. He filed for bankruptcy.

But Bowe was relentlessly optimistic as afternoon rain washed out the flea market and ended the signing early. His cellphone displayed a photo of his wife, Terri (they married in 2000) and their daughter, Morgan, who will be 4 in August. And his mind saw a rainbow with more paydays at the end.

Some people called out “Champ!” as they walked past Bowe on Saturday, and Bowe greeted them as if they were old friends passing on the street. Others stared from a distance, as if at the zoo. Some shook his hand but did not buy an autographed photo or boxing glove ($65), which Bowe signed, “Riddick ‘Big Daddy’ Bowe.” Twice someone said something about Muhammad Ali, and Bowe said that Ali was the greatest, “but I am the latest.”

Most of the time, there was no one talking to Bowe. But whenever a few people gathered, they multiplied in a hurry. Bowe, the magnet in the middle, charmed them all, and a man collected their cash.

A signing in Manhattan last week earned Bowe “$2,000 or $3,000,” he said. The take on Saturday was far less.

“Now you see why I’ve got to fight,” Bowe said. “Put the word out that Big Daddy’s got to do what he do.”

Bowe said he made $30,000 for December’s fight, when he weighed 271 pounds. A few offers followed, all for less money. Bowe found them insulting. Calls stopped coming, and Bowe stopped training.

Now he dreams of a string of 10 fights, in quick succession, against more crash dummies to bolster his record (43-1, with 33 knockouts) and rebuild his reputation. Then he envisions a title bout. George Foreman, after all, was 45 when he won a heavyweight championship, and Bowe considers himself both “younger” and “prettier.”

The more Bowe thought about it, the more he decided that the best approach may be to get in shape now so that people see that he is serious. He said he might start training Monday.

A man told Bowe that he felt sorry for Tyson, having had so much potential, so much money, only to piddle it away. It was an awkward few moments. The man did not realize he was describing the person in front of him. Bowe did.

“No matter what, God is on my side,” Bowe said later. “I’m not perfect, but I’m not the worst, either. God brought me this far. He’s not done with me yet.”

Before leaving, Bowe wanted something else to be known. He loves his wife and their little girl more than anything, he said. And he said thank you.

Thirty minutes later, Bowe was on the phone. One more thing.

“Any promoter who wants to put me on their card, I’m willing to fight,” Bowe said.

He said thank you. And he was gone, again.

Should be interested in placing into one of your fight cards you can contact me at 1(718)662-3252 or 1(718)896-0078 and ask for Milton Luban, I will contact Bowe and set things up.

If your looking to buy a piece of boxing History and would like to purchase a Boxing Glove signed By Riddick Bowe you can go to: www.substancecollectables.com

By Rachel Quigley

Last updated at 7:41 PM on 27th April 2011

He said he would be back, then he said he wouldn’t.

But it appears Arnold Schwarzenegger may be uttering that iconic phrase once again as he is being touted to star in the next instalment of the Terminator franchise – despite vowing that he would stand down as the futuristic cyborg after number three.

Rights to a fifth movie are currently being shuffled around Hollywood, with reports that Sony, Lionsgate, Universal and CBS films are all vying for ownership – especially now that the original terminator has put his name to it.

US actor and former California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger
April 1984, Los Angeles, California, USA --- Austrian-born American actor Arnold Schwarzenegger

Changing role: From the Terminator to the governator back to the Terminator again, Arnold Schwarzenegger will reprise his role as the futuristic cyborg

Director Justin Lin, on the verge of enjoying box office success with Fast Five, is rumoured to be directing it.

The Austrian body builder helped define the iconic action genre of the 1980s. He was last on our screens as the Terminator in 2003 with Rise of the Machines.

According to Deadline, the 63-year-old is heading up a package which will bring the series back to movie theatres in two instalments, 27 years after it was first started by James Cameron.

But it won’t come cheap.

Rumours are that the purchase price will be $25million and that does not include pay packets for Lin or Schwarzenegger.

circa 1966: Full-length image of Austrian-born bodybuilder Arnold Schwarzenegger
the former california governor

Shape up: A former Mr Universe, Schwarzenegger will have to get back to the gym to recreate his famous muscles as he has been looking out of shape in recent years at the ripe old age of 63

In Rise of the Machines, Arnie commanded a cool $30million, double that of his salary in Terminator 2: Judgement Day.

Schwarzenegger is following in the footsteps of his action hero friend Sylvester Stallone who reprised both Rambo and RockySchwarzenegger is following in the footsteps of his action hero friend Sylvester Stallone who reprised both Rambo and Rocky

The former California governor turned his back on Hollywood for politics eight years ago when he took office but – at the ripe old age of 63 – has decided to follow in the footsteps of all time action hero Sylvester Stallone, who recently resurrected Rocky and Rambo.

Despite bit parts in films and a recent cameo role in Stallone’s The Expendables, Schwarzenegger has committed himself to his political career.

But when the former Mr Universe announced in January that he was stepping down as governor, he also announced that he was considering a future in film.

His time as governor was blighted with controversy, more recently when he admitted to giving a friend of his son a more lenient sentence for manslaughter.

On his first day in office, he reduced the vehicle license fee on his first day in office, a move that vastly benefited car dealers who largely bankrolled his 2003 recall election campaign.

There were further moves favouring developers, casino Indian tribes, oil and chemical companies and many other big money contributors to his political funds.

His popularity in the polls had fallen steeply during his last term in government as the recession hammered the already broke state.

Speaking about his return to film, he told Austrian newspaper Kronen Zeitung: ‘In the future I have to adapt my roles to my age. Clint Eastwood also has done it in the same way. Extreme fighting or shooting is not possible any more.

‘I want to be more encouraged as an actor and I believe that I can manage this challenge. I am like a sponge, which is absorbing all the knowledge and always be willing to learn all new things.’

Fans of the franchise will welcome Schwarzenegger’s return with open arms, though there may be some raised eyebrows as to his ability to do the role, which will involve ‘extreme fighting and shooting’.

For Rise of the Machines, he was said to have worked out for six months, about three hours a day, before shooting started, by which time he had the exact same body weight and muscle measurements as he had 12 years previously while shooting the second instalment.

It remains to be seen if he can emulate the same success for this movie, but he has enough time to shape up as it will not be released for several years.

Long have fans of the movie wished for James Cameron to get back behind the camera, with the first film in 1984  considered the best. But the Titanic director has washed his hands of the franchise – though will reclaim the rights to it in 2018 by default.

The last Terminator film – Salvation in 2009, starring Christian Bale – received terrible reviews, though still managed to make $370million at the box office.

For all your signed Celebrity Gloves go to: www.substancecollectables.com

 

 

 

 

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