The government immediately forced Japanese Americans who were suspected of collaboration with Imperial Japan due to their Japanese heritage out of their homes and into relocation camps. They were forced to live in these camps by the American government simply because of their race. The government’s fear of Imperial Japan led to its incarceration of thousands of innocent Japanese Americans. This thought process and therefore insidious behaviors were due to the slow and manipulative nature of weeding out the perpetrators thought to be involved. These people were suspected by neighbors, reported on by friends, even family, in a dark protection of themselves. Specifically, the Devils book Miller discusses as the faustian agreement to hand over these people (Companion Text, 29). The ultimate fabrication and finalization to this insidious plan. These people faced an unjust penalty despite their innocence and were left without a country. America was the country in which they spent most of their lives and were grateful for their freedom, but it turned on them and began treating them as the