Albuquerque Journal

Coin memorializ­ing treatment of Haitian migrants in Texas decried

- BY MICHAEL WILNER AND JACQUELINE CHARLES

A controvers­ial moment captured last fall on the United States’ southern border of an officer on horseback in Del Rio, Texas, has been memorializ­ed on “a challenge coin” that is circulatin­g among border patrol officers.

Images of the incident led to a public outcry and national scandal, with President Joe Biden demanding accountabi­lity for the officers and the Department of Homeland Security launching an independen­t investigat­ion into the treatment of migrants there. Nearly a year later, the results of the investigat­ion still have not been made public.

The unofficial coin, a token of memorabili­a, embraces some of the most controvers­ial elements of the scandal, where video footage appeared to show white border agents using their reins as whips against Black migrants.

For some, the images invoked grim reminders of slave patrols and, for others, the historical mistreatme­nt of Haitian refugees in the U.S.

“Reining it in since May 28, 1924,” the coin reads on one side. “Yesterday’s border is not today’s border.”

Images obtained by McClatchy and the Miami Herald also show a warning on the rim of the coin: “You will be returned.”

Forty-one of the coins were sold recently on eBay for $15.19 a piece. Advocates have also come across images of yellow and black coasters showing a man on horseback with his reins in the air, chasing a family of three.

It was not immediatel­y clear how many of the coins were made or distribute­d.

Customs and Border Protection’s Office of Profession­al Responsibi­lity is investigat­ing the creation of the coins and whether anyone at CBP is selling them. Any who are will face “appropriat­e action,” said Luis Miranda, a CBP public affairs officer, who said the agency’s chief counsel will also “send a cease-and-desist letter to any vendor who produces unauthoriz­ed challenge coins using one of CBP’s trademarke­d brands.”

“The images depicted on this coin are offensive, insensitiv­e and run counter to the core values of CBP,” Miranda said. “This is not an official CBP coin.”

“I thought that I have seen everything, but this level of hypocrisy and disrespect is unpreceden­ted, outrageous and intolerabl­e,” said Marleine Bastien, a longtime Haitian and immigratio­n advocate in Miami.

“President Biden promised to get to the bottom of this, but there was not any action or repercussi­ons,” Bastien said. “Now, the Border Patrol is … making a mockery of the suffering of Black refugees. They are so proud of their criminal behavior that they immortaliz­ed it with a coin. I am calling on the Biden administra­tion to step up and investigat­e this affront and to hold those responsibl­e accountabl­e.”

 ?? PAUL RATJE/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A ‘challenge coin’ circulatin­g among U.S. Border Patrol agents and for sale on eBay depicts an agent on horseback trying to stop a Haitian migrant.
PAUL RATJE/AFP/GETTY IMAGES A ‘challenge coin’ circulatin­g among U.S. Border Patrol agents and for sale on eBay depicts an agent on horseback trying to stop a Haitian migrant.

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