Only in America would last year’s shocking image out of Del Rio, Texas, of a Border Patrol agent on horseback chasing down a Black Haitian migrant like a modern-day slave patroller become a collector’s coin sold on eBay. According to reports, the coin, which includes the phrases “Reining it in since May 28, 1924” and “Yesterday’s border is not today’s border” and “You will be returned” is being shared among Border Patrol agents, who are known to have shared similar memorabilia in the past. In 2019, agents were circulating a coin mocking migrant children.
Only in America would last year’s image of a Border Patrol agent chasing down a Black Haitian migrant become a collector’s coin.
Last week The New York Times quoted a spokesperson for the U.S. Customs and Border Protection saying, “The images depicted on this coin are offensive, insensitive and run counter to the core values of C.B.P.” That spokesperson said the agency intends to investigate whether any CBP employee created, sold or bought the coin and would send cease-and-desist letters to those responsible for the unauthorized use of the Border Patrol logo.
Still, considering the history of inaction from CBP and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) after promising to investigate the apparent violence against Haitian migrants in Del Rio in September, there is little expectation that a CBP inquiry into yet another racist coin will mean anything. When the images sparked global outrage, President Joe Biden’s condemnation was immediate, indicating that maybe the United States would finally admit part of its immigration enforcement policy is indeed racialized—whether it is against Haitians, Mexicans, Central Americans or other migrants from the Global South.
“I promise you, those people will pay. There will be an investigation, underway now, and there will be consequences. There will be consequences,” Biden said in September. “It’s an embarrassment, but beyond an embarrassment, it is dangerous. It’s wrong, it sends the wrong message around the world, it sends the wrong message at home. It’s simply not who we are.”
Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, however, defended the actions of Border Patrol agents in Del Rio, saying in September that they had acted “heroically”; even so, he told a congressional committee that an “all-encompassing” investigation into the horseback images would “be completed in days.” According to what DHS shared last November, an inquiry was still happening, but so far, the public knows nothing regarding the status of that investigation.
Those delays suggest the coin investigation won’t be a priority either, no matter what CBP is saying.
Americans must come to terms with the Border Patrol’s deeply racist history and the truth that some modern-day Border Patrol agents think of themselves as warriors in the fight against the so-called great replacement. The Biden administration has called on Congress to add more funding to investigate white supremacist beliefs at immigration enforcement agencies. The coins being circulated and bought are proof that such beliefs not only exist but also are celebrated.
Ironically, 50 percent of those Border Patrol agents are Latinos. Then again, perhaps it’s not so ironic. As much as CBP would like to tout its diversity numbers, it’s no secret that Latinos are diverse ideologically and that some are allies to white supremacy. A place like Border Patrol can feel like home.








