Although Japanese Americans posed no threat to the national safety, many white Americans felt threatened by their …show more content…
From city courts to the Supreme Court, three Japanese Americans boldly fought for the rights of Japanese Americans across the country. Yasui, a Japanese American lawyer from Oregon, was known for the Yasui v. United States case. Before the case, Yasui worked for the Japanese Consulate, in Chicago. Shortly after the announcement of Executive Order 9066, Yasui returned to Oregon, where a curfew had been established. Blatantly defying the curfew, which he deemed unreasonable, Yasui was arrested. During his hearing, a small court decided he had forsaken his U.S. citizenship by working for the Japanese Consulate and learning the Japanese language. In 1943, Yasui’s case made it to the Supreme Court, which ruled he remained a U.S. citizen, yet the curfew he violated was deemed valid. Of the few cases involving Japanese internment, this one remains extremely relevant in the history books ("Top 3 Supreme Court Cases Involving Japanese Internment.”