OP also stated "I bought this coin directly from the mint in a box of 250 coins and this was found. So it is not a fake." So, again, I ask, what...
Being 1 gram overweight, I'd guess someone dropped solder on it.
I can see that it's 200x. Looks like serious die deterioration.
It came in a box from the mint? Again I ask, what was the box supposed to contain?
Jon, post a picture of it next to a dime.
Your pick looks like an unstruck cent. But 1.5 inches (38.65 mm) in diameter? 1 ounce? What was the box of 250 coins supposed to contain? Cents?...
IMO, well within tolerances.
2012? I think 2013 is snake. APMEX has the 2012 for about those prices. I don't know if they were colorized at the mint or in the aftermarket.
Bureau of Engraving and Printing, an arm of the US Treasury Department. Here's where you can buy their specialty products:...
+1. There are some pieces that command a premium, also.
Weight, dimensions and pic. Without those, we cannot tell you anything more than that you have a slug with no value.
Ahhhh! Relief.
Green, is that a spot on Lady Liberty's dress near the rear foot on the 2006?
Tim, do you really spend all of your free time searching for numismatic fraud?
If you do, you'll pay full price.
I think the raking over the coals is not so much his valuation of the coin, but its over-exposure.
All will be revealed in due time. It always happens. Always.
Nothing there.
Hey, Redwin, you should have taken that 7 million before the market was flooded.
See how easy it is when you play by the rules, Tim? When you are the visiting team you have no say in making the rules.
Separate names with a comma.