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Yes, it is illegal to purposely
deface money. However, the U.S. government will replace
worn out or damaged money if three-fifths of it is still identifiable.
Two-fifths will earn the bearer half the face value; less than that gets
nothing.
In any case, until the 100th anniversary of Abraham Lincoln's birth, there
wasn't a coin one could "deface." That was when the first U.S. portrait
coin, the Lincoln penny, was issued.
The one thing every American coin has had since the Revolutionary War
is a design with some symbol of liberty on it.
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