In the Korematsu v. United States case, a Japanese-American man by the name of Fred Korematsu challenged the ruling of the internment of the Japanese people after Pearl Harbor. Fred Korematsu opposed the presidential Executive Order 9066 and military statutes that gave power to the military to exclude Japanese citizens from areas that were believed to be important national defense areas that Japanese spies could leak information to the Military of Japan. The places where the American soldiers would take the Japanese-Americans were called internment camps. These camps were not nearly as bad as what Hitler put the Jewish people in when they were in Germany. While the internment camps the Japanese people