Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Officials call for Iowa driver to change custom ‘M3INKPF’ license plate

The Iowa Department of Transportation Drivers requires those who request vanity license plates to explain their meanings.

Iowa Car License Plate
An Iowa passenger vehicle license plate, 2024. Credit: Sir Henry E. Warren Esquire via Wikimedia Commons.

At least three complaints to Iowa’s Department of Transportation have resulted in an official request for the owner to change a license plate with characters resembling the title of Adolf Hitler’s autobiography.

The Des Moines Register reported on Tuesday that an individual possessed a plate on their BMW reading “M3INKPF,” which some drivers interpreted as Mein Kampf. While in a German prison, Hitler wrote an infamous manifesto about his life using that title; it was published in 1925 and has sold millions of copies.

BMW has acknowledged its Nazi connections during World War II.

After an image of the vehicle circulated online, some users offered explanations for the signage, saying it referenced a BMW model and that the factory utilized a software called WinKFP.

The Iowa Department of Transportation requires those who request vanity license plates to explain their meanings. The person in question wrote, “bmw-m3 for me ink my personal friends at a tattoo artist.”

The slain man’s brother was admitted to the hospital in moderate condition.
Anthony Albanese downplayed the hecklers’ reception, saying the overall atmosphere was “incredibly positive.”
Two divisions continue to dismantle the Iranian-backed group’s infrastructure in Southern Lebanon, as another division prepares to join the fight.
Meanwhile, Washington has issued a short-term authorization permitting the sale of Iranian oil currently stranded at sea.
“This is a war crime, but it is not surprising because the Iranian regime is a terrorist regime,” Defense Minister Israel Katz says at a damaged kindergarten.
The U.S. military has thus far struck over 8,000 targets across the Islamic Republic, including 130 enemy vessels, according to CENTCOM chief Adm. Brad Cooper.