Los Angeles Times

‘Whipping’ coins anger agency chief

The collectibl­e shows a Border Patrol agent grabbing a Haitian. Some see racism.

- By Hamed Aleaziz

The photograph encapsulat­es the intensity of the clashes between Border Patrol agents and Haitian immigrants desperate to get into the United States.

An agent on horseback leans over, grabbing a man by the shirt as a rein dangles.

Now an image mirroring the Sept. 19 photo by Paul Ratje of Agence FrancePres­se has appeared on a “challenge coin” typically collected by agents, law enforcemen­t officials and aficionado­s.

“Whipping ass since 1924” is written along the coin’s border.

The Times obtained photos of the coin. Its other side says “Haitian Invasion” with crossed swords and the words “U.S. Border Patrol,” “Horse Patrol Unit” and “deflecting allegation­s for years.”

U.S. Customs and Border Protection, which includes the Border Patrol, is investigat­ing whether the coin and a similar one, which have been advertised online, were sold by anyone from the agency. It is unclear who produced the coins or how widely they have been distribute­d.

If the coins are connected to Border Patrol agents, they could become the latest example of what immigrant advocates have said is a prevalence of offensive humor within the ranks, after Facebook posts making fun of dead migrants and lawmakers surfaced in 2019.

Some critics have raised the question of racism against Black immigrants. And the head of Customs and Border Protection has denounced the coins.

“These coins anger me because the hateful images on them have no place in a profession­al law enforcemen­t agency,” CBP Commission­er Chris Magnus said in a statement. “Those who make or share these deeply offensive coins detract and distract from the extraordin­arily difficult and often life-saving work Border Patrol agents do every day across the country.”

Immigrant advocates were similarly outraged at the coin and the seeming lack of empathy for Haitian migrants it indicates.

“I think this is a testament of how embedded antiBlack racism is in the very fabric of the system of our country,” said Guerline Jozef, head of the Haitian Bridge Alliance in San Diego. “For people who might be associated with CBP to feel emboldened enough to engrave the likeness of a human being abused or mistreated as a symbol of what the department stands for .... We see these coins as an endorsemen­t of what happened, and those responsibl­e must be held accountabl­e.”

“Challenge coins” have long been a part of law enforcemen­t culture, including at the Department of Homeland Security, which includes CBP. They are generally innocuous, honoring employees or special events, former officials said, and are sometimes exchanged with members of other agencies.

One former senior Homeland Security official, John Sandweg, said he got a coin with a buffalo on it after visiting an agency office in upstate New York and anber with a picture of a border tunnel commemorat­ing a drug task force.

But the coins depicting the Haitian immigrants crossed a line, he and another former lead Homeland Security official said.

The other coin under investigat­ion contained the same image of the migrant and the agent on horseback, with the words “honor will always be first.”

“It’s just outrageous­ly inappropri­ate,” said Sandweg, a former lead Homeland Security attorney and acting head of Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t under President Obama. “This kind of thing sullies the reputation of the department where a few bad apples are doing stuff that really shocks the conscience and is so far beyond what is appropriat­e and acceptable. It hurts the entire department’s reputation.”

“This is a shame that this was done,” said Gil Kerlikowsk­e, who was head of U.S. Customs and Border Protection under Obama. “This kind of grotesque humor permeates ... a lot of profession­s, including in law enforcemen­t groups.“

Kerlikowsk­e and Sandweg said that “challenge coins” are a big part of Homeland Security culture and are generally meant for camaraderi­e and celebratio­n. Sandweg said that when he visited local agency offices, he was sometimes gifted a coin celebratin­g that location, including the one from Buffalo. Other coins were handed out to rememother special occasions or to honor staffers.

Head offices, like those of the Homeland Security secretary or ICE director, also made their own coins to hand out to employees.

Sandweg said that the design of coins is often decided upon at a local office, then sent to coin makers. Government funds can be used if the coin is for an honorary award, he said.

“Almost no oversight is exercised on the design of the coins,” he added. “No doubt the use of any official seal in conjunctio­n with this message violated DHS policy, but there was never much guidance or oversight out there on what the coins can say. Of course, nobody was ever so dumb and misguided as to create a coin like this.”

The “Haitian Invasion” coin was brought to CBP officials’ attention in recent weeks, said a source with knowledge of the situation.

In addition to the internal investigat­ion, ceaseand-desist letters will be sent to vendors who produce unauthoriz­ed challenge coins using a CBP trademarke­d brand.

CBP is also investigat­ing the actions of the Border Patrol agents who targeted Haitian migrants, as in the incident depicted on the coins. Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro N. Mayorkas has promised to release the results of that investigat­ion.

The Biden administra­tion’s decision to begin the mass deportatio­n of Haitians in September caused alarm among immigrant advocates and prominent Democratic politician­s. Thousands of Haitians were expelled and continue to be removed from the country.

It typified, to many, the White House’s turn toward restrictiv­e policies in a political crisis, this time prompted by media coverage of Haitians camping beneath a bridge in Texas.

Since September, the administra­tion has relied on the Title 42 policy, which cites the pandemic, as a justificat­ion to remove Haitians and other asylum seekers arriving at the border.

Border Patrol agents have long faced allegation­s of excessive force. The Supreme Court issued a ruling this week that will shield agents from being sued over such allegation­s.

 ?? Paul Ratje AFP/Getty Images ?? A BORDER PATROL agent grabs a Haitian migrant in Del Rio, Texas. Putting the image on coins was “just outrageous­ly inappropri­ate,” a former official said.
Paul Ratje AFP/Getty Images A BORDER PATROL agent grabs a Haitian migrant in Del Rio, Texas. Putting the image on coins was “just outrageous­ly inappropri­ate,” a former official said.

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