Does that special status magically remove the graffiti? Trust me, I get that the coin is somehow 'special', but does that justify the grade on the label, with a CAC sticker to boot? I am just trying to find out why. I can maybe understand the 'wear' I see as being part of the deterioration of the die before it was transitioned over to this 'one time coin', but I still dont see the surfaces as MS-65 quality both in regards to technical striking, and over all eye appeal. So I am trying to understand why on this particular coin. There has to be a story of some sort to go along with that grade.
1922 $1 PCGS MS65. Modified High Relief (J-2020, same die pair as the preceding coin). It has the number “3200” inked in the left obverse field indicating it was the last coin struck from the production run of 3,200 before the obverse die failed. It was struck on a normal production press.