Jamul Indian Village, a federally recognized Kumeyaay nation located in San Diego County, issued a series of tribal cents in the mid-2010s as part of a broader wave of Native American community currency programs that followed the 2010 expansion of the Native American $1 Coin Act. The attribution of this piece to the Iroquois — a confederacy geographically and culturally remote from the Kumeyaay — reflects a common practice among tribal issuers of producing thematic series covering multiple Indigenous nations rather than restricting iconography to their own heritage.
These tribal issues occupy a legal gray zone: struck as novelty or collectible pieces, not as federally authorized coinage.
Jamul Indian Village, a federally recognized Kumeyaay nation located in San Diego County, issued a series of tribal cents in the mid-2010s as part of a broader wave of Native American community currency programs that followed the 2010 expansion of the Native American $1 Coin Act. The attribution of this piece to the Iroquois — a confederacy geographically and culturally remote from the Kumeyaay — reflects a common practice among tribal issuers of producing thematic series covering multiple Indigenous nations rather than restricting iconography to their own heritage.
These tribal issues occupy a legal gray zone: struck as novelty or collectible pieces, not as federally authorized coinage.