Mass deportation over U.S. Citizenship renouncements avoided
12021-02-01T11:20:29-08:00Steve Kutay2a3698b64111c4575df6dabf06e183b410497fa3385022Wayne Mortimer Collins, Civil Liberties Attorney, prevents the Department of Justice from deporting en masse the people of Japanese descent who renounced their U.S. citizenship (7,222 Nisei and Kibei at Tule Lake renounced, whereas only 128 from all the other WRA camps renounced). The effort to restore citizenship took 22 years (all restored, except about 40-50 people). This 1958 letter by Wayne M. Collins, Attorney at Law, discusses the "Final Order, Judgement and Decree," which was brought to litigation on behalf of Tsugitada Kanamori, who had renounced his United States citizenship. According to the judgement, this renunciation is null and void and thus Kanamori will remain a citizen of the United States. He is therefore able to exercise all rights and privileges of United States citizenship.plain2021-02-01T11:41:52-08:0011/13/1945Letter from Wayne M. Collins, Attorney at Law, to Tsugitada Kanamori, May 19, 1958Steve Kutay2a3698b64111c4575df6dabf06e183b410497fa3
This page has tags:
1media/loy_des_sjs_fla_0376.jpg2021-01-03T21:42:38-08:00Steve Kutay2a3698b64111c4575df6dabf06e183b410497fa3Timeline: LoyaltySteve Kutay32A timeline of events associated with testing Japanese American loyaltiestimeline2021-03-29T22:52:22-07:00Steve Kutay2a3698b64111c4575df6dabf06e183b410497fa3