The story behind the coin
By law, the U.S. Mint can only honor so many things in a year. Congress hands out commemorative coin programs the way it hands out holidays — a tight quota, fought over hard. In 2021, one of the two slots went to the people who police the country, and to the museum built to remember the ones who died doing it.
The authority traces to the National Law Enforcement Museum Commemorative Coin Act, folded into the sprawling year-end spending bill H.R. 1865 and signed into law on December 20, 2019 (Public Law 116-94). It cleared the Mint to strike a three-coin set in 2021: a $5 gold piece, a silver dollar, and this copper-nickel half dollar — the affordable entry point of the program.
The money had a destination. Every coin carried a surcharge — a fixed donation baked into the price — of $5 on each half dollar (and $35 on the gold, $10 on the silver), paid to the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund. That fund had spent nearly two decades building a museum, and it had a building to pay off.
That building is the quiet star of this story. The National Law Enforcement Museum opened on October 13, 2018, in Washington's Judiciary Square — and you would almost walk past it, because most of it is underground. From the street you see only two glass pavilions; the 57,000-square-foot museum sits beneath them, next to the wall of carved names that is the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial. The coin was built to help endow what the building holds.