12021-03-29T15:19:06-07:00Steve Kutay2a3698b64111c4575df6dabf06e183b410497fa3385021Minori Yasui was brought back to Portland from the Minidoka camp to hear Judge Fee announce the result of his 5-month deliberation. He ruled that the statute of March 1942, which made it a criminal offense to disobey General DeWitt’s orders, was unconstitutional when applied to American citizens. However, the judge held that Minori must be deemed to have renounced his American citizenship because of his employment at the Japanese Consulate. As an alien enemy, Minori was subject to the curfew, which he deliberately violated. Judge Fee sentenced Minori to a year in prison and fined him the maximum of $5,000. His lawyer, Earl Bernard, filed an appeal.Pages 17 through 20 of this pamphlet identifies the major cases against Japanese Americans including that of Minori Yasui.plain2021-03-29T15:19:06-07:0011/16/1942Democracy and Japanese Americans, 1942-01-02Thomas, Norman, 1884-1968Steve 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