We at Acrimoney love financial fiction. Oh, but wait. Today’s story isn’t fiction.

A Facebook friend sent this link to examiner.com. Details have been percolating through the Internet all week about Treasury bonds found in Como, Italy.shades

Two Japanese nationals were detained in northern Italy last week by Italian police. These men were found with “249 U.S. Treasury bonds each worth $500 million, plus 10 Kennedy bonds and other U.S. government securities worth a billion dollar each,” according to the International Business Times.

Not so fast. Nobody ever moves mountains of cash in physical form. It never happens.

This morning, the US Treasury confirmed the bearer bonds are fake. In fact, Reuters reported there are only $105 million in Treasury bearer bonds outstanding. That’s $105 million in total, not $105 billion. And over the last two years, authorities have confiscated $800 million in fake bearer bonds throughout the Como area of Northern Italy.

Bold cons. $134 billion is Madoff times two.

We know a different side of Como. It ranks as one of the most alluring tourist destinations on the planet. It’s home to an extraordinary lake and movie sets from Casino Royale, Star Wars II, and Ocean’s Twelve.

One of our readers says about the region, “If I can’t go to heaven when I die, Como is my second choice.”

That’s why Acrimoney is issuing a travel advisory. Those can’t miss opportunities in Como, Italy— $134 billion in US bearer bonds— are too good to be true. You heard it from us.