Mitsuye Endo resists removal of Japanese American civil servants
1media/csufccop_jaoh_0266_19420712_thumb.jpg2021-03-24T20:55:58-07:00Steve Kutay2a3698b64111c4575df6dabf06e183b410497fa3385021Mitsuye Endo, a twenty-two-year-old typist at a Sacramento Department of Motor Vehicles office, first resisted by protesting against the efforts of the California State Personnel Board to remove Japanese American civil servants. Then, San Francisco lawyer, James Purcell, filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus after Mitsuye had been sent to the Tule Lake WRA camp and later Topaz. U.S. District Court Judge Michael J. Roche began an all-day hearing and then held on to the writ for almost a year, delaying and subsequently denying it. Purcell appealed.plain2021-03-24T20:55:58-07:007/12/1942Photogrpah of Mitsuye EndoSteve Kutay2a3698b64111c4575df6dabf06e183b410497fa3
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1media/crt_des_sac_jaac_2104.jpg2021-01-03T21:44:22-08:00Steve Kutay2a3698b64111c4575df6dabf06e183b410497fa3Timeline: CasesSteve Kutay39A timeline of events associated with court cases involving Japanese American incarcerees.timeline2021-06-07T21:48:28-07:00Steve Kutay2a3698b64111c4575df6dabf06e183b410497fa3