I am sorry to say but no! It is apparent that the sections of four $1 Bills were cut from a sheet of $1 Bills by an amateur. If the specimen had been cut at the U.S. Treasury's Printing Plant/Office, the edges would be straight and not curved. If the person who cut the specimen out would have used an Office Paper Cutter, it would have looked more real and could have gotten past the scrutiny of many a person and possibly some Collectors and Experts. However, since the Bills produced and cut from sheets at the U.S. Treasury's Printing Plant/Office are cut with an Industrial Cutter that cuts Bills from a stack of sheets which cuts them straight down, the Bill would not pass the inspection of a Third Party Grading Service such as PCGS. This is because that even with an Office Paper Cutter, the cut would be from one end through to the other end and not straight down through the paper and this will clearly show directional offsetting/upsetting of the fibers on the edges under a microscope.